Category Archives: Uncategorised

New hotels planned in Georgia

APRIL 17 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – US hotel company Carlson Rezidor, owner of the Radisson and Park Inn brands, said it plans to open another two hotels in Georgia. One of the hotels will be built in Tbilisi and the other in the mountainous Svaneti region.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 228, published on April 22 2015)

German man produces Georgian wine

ASURETI/Georgia, APRIL 5 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Manfred Tikhonov moved from Berlin to Georgia in the early 2000s and for the last 11 years he’s been making wine in Asureti, a former German village 40km south east of Tbilisi. (April 22).

Tikhonov, 67, spends his days slowly restoring his German-style timber Fachwerk house, built in the 1870s, and making wine the Georgian way, in clay vessels (kvevri) buried in the ground.

He has learnt everything about wine from his neighbours and produces up to 2,000 litres of wine a year. “It’s not enough to make profit,” he said. “But I get a pension from Germany.”

Asureti has long winemaking traditions. Formerly known as Elisabethal, it was founded in the early 19th century, when Russian Tsar Alexander I invited Germans from Swabia, a region in the southwest of Germnay, to settle. Tikhonov said Asureti Swabians were producing red wine for the high rank officials in Tsarist Russia and then the Soviet Union, until they were deported to Kazakhstan in 1941 when Soviet leader Josef Stalin worried that they may side with the advancing Nazi armies in World War II.

Barely any of them returned. The only reminders of the past are shabby Fachwerk houses, ruins of an Evangelical Church and overgrown gravestones engraved with old Swabian.

“Maybe one day I will also be buried here,” said Tikhonov, closing the graveyard gates.

Later, at home, Tikhonov poured a glass of his 2013 red. He apologised as this was not his best wine. There had been no running water and he had not been able to clean the clay vessels for the new grapes that year.

It has been hard to adapt to the local way of living. “Everything goes slower than I want,” he said. But he is not sorry to have exchanged buzzing Berlin to a quiet life in Asureti. “Free- range cows, chicken and dogs remind me of my childhood in the East Germany sixty years ago. Time stands still, and I love it.”

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 228, published on April 22 2015)

Tajikistan to build $100m theatre

APRIL 16 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) -Tajik president Imomali Rakhmon plans to build Central Asia’s largest theatre for $100m, media reported. Mr Rakhmon is partial to grandiose projects. Earlier this year he ordered work to begin on a new city in the desert. Dushanbe boasts one of the world’s tallest flagpoles.

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(News report from Issue No. 228, published on April 22 2015)

Azerbaijan’s will have to spend from oil fund

APRIL 22 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan’s government will have to dip into savings built up in its Oil Fund to prop up its ailing economy, economists have said.

They said the Azerbaijani government will not cut the state budget sufficiently despite a massive fall in the price of oil and gas.

“If the government does not cut budget spending the only real way to cover the deficit will be calling back State Oil Fund’s reserves abroad, or the government must have another big devaluation,” Samir Aliyev, an independent economist at the monthly Economic Forum magazine, told the Bulletin.

At Dec. 31 2014, the Oil Fund was worth around $37b.

The downturn in energy prices since last summer has hit Azerbaijan hard. It devalued its manat current by a third this year.

Rovshan Agayev, an independent economist, also told the Bulletin that even during the financial crisis of 2008 the government did not increase spending from the National Oil fund.

“This is a result of mismanagement of the state budget money for many years,” he said.

The independent MP Vahid Ahmedov told RFE/RL it was acceptable for the government to use cash from the fund, created in 1999, to prop up the economy.

“What was the Oil Fund is created for?” he said. “To save some money for the future generation and as well as to help the economy in crisis times.”

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 228, published on April 22 2015)

Georgia legislation targets IS recruitment

APRIL 16 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – In a move designed to stop young Muslims heading off to Syria to fight for the radical group IS, Georgia plans to outlaw membership of any foreign group considered to be a terrorist organisation.

Current legislation does not deal with this issue and the authorities want more power to arrest both those people heading off to Syria to join IS and people who have returned to Georgia.

The focus in Georgia of IS recruitment is the Pankisi Gorge, on the border of Russia’s North Caucasus region.

Pankisi, which lies 2-1/2 hours drive from Tbilisi to the northeast, on the border with Chechnya, has a population of 10,000 and the majority of them are Kists, an Islamic ethnic group similar to Chechens.

Media reports have said that 20 to 80 men have headed out of the Pankisi Gorge to fight for IS in Syria.

Tbilisi rules with a light touch in the Pankisi Gorge which has a history of producing radical Muslim fighters dating back to the Chechen wars of the 1990s and the early 2000s.

Khaso Khangoshvili a member of the the Council of Elders, the 35-people body that de facto governs Pankisi, believes that the stricter laws will help.

“The new law will improve the situation, but the government should care more about the economy of our region,” he told the Bulletin.

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(News report from Issue No. 228, published on April 22 2015)

Nazarbayev to travel to Iran in show of support

APRIL 15 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev will visit Tehran later this year, signalling Kazakhstan’s eagerness to embrace Iran after the United States agreed to relax sanctions imposed on it.

Yerlan Idrissov, Kazakhstan’s foreign minister, made the announcement at a joint press conference with his Iranian counterpart, Mohammad Javad Zarif, in Astana.

“We expect the visit of President Nazarbayev to Iran and we hope that this visit will contribute to the development of our relations,” he said.

Mr Zarif was visiting Kazakhstan less than two weeks after agreeing a deal with the US in Lausanne, Switzerland, that could scrap sanctions on Iran in return for extra American oversight of the Iranian nuclear programme.

The US has said Iran wants to develop a nuclear weapon. Iran has insisted its nuclear programme is for civilian use only.

Mr Nazarbayev has visited Iran previously. He was one of the few international leaders to attend the inauguration of Iranian president Hassan Rouhani in 2013.

For Kazakhstan, Iran is an important consumer market, particularly for grain and steel products. Kazakhstan exports its products to Iran by ship across the Caspian Sea.

At the press conference in Astana, Mr Idrissov also said Kazakhstan supported Iran’s potential membership of the Russia and China-ed Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), an economic-security organisation focused on Central Asia.

Iran is already an observer member of the SCO. Russia has also said that it supports SCO membership for Tehran, a proposition that will alarm NATO and the US.
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(News report from Issue No. 227, published on April 15 2015)

Erdogan flies to Astana

APRIL 15 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Turkish president Tayyip Erdogan flew to Astana for a state visit. He is due to hold talks with Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayev on Thursday which have been billed as important. Turkey is an influential regional power.
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(News report from Issue No. 227, published on April 15 2015)

Kazakhstan murder trial starts in Vienna

APRIL 14 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) –  An ex-Kazakh spy chief and a member of the presidential guard went on trial in Vienna accused of murdering two bankers in 2007 (April 14). The chief suspect in the case, Rakhat Aliyev, former son-in-law of Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayev, was found hanged in his prison earlier this year.
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(News report from Issue No. 227, published on April 15 2015)

Mortgage holders protest in Kazakhstan

APRIL 10 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – In a rare anti-government protest in Kazakhstan, dozens of homeowners demonstrated in Astana about the extra pressure they are under to meet US dollar denominated mortgage repayments, media reported. The Central Bank cut the value of the tenge by about 20% this year and is under pressure to do so again as the rouble remains low.
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(News report from Issue No. 227, published on April 15 2015)

Floods hit central Kazakhstan

APRIL 15 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) –  A rise in snowmelt, triggered by an increase in temperatures, has caused rivers to burst their banks, media reported. The Karaganda oblast’s emergency department said nearly 2,000 homes had been flooded.
ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 227, published on April 15 2015)