Tag Archives: government

Kyrgyz opposition threatens President

NOV. 22 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Omurbek Tekebayev, one of the opposition figures in Kyrgyzstan being investigated for allegedly setting up offshore accounts in Kyrgyzstan, said that he had started collecting signatures to impeach president Almazbek Atambayev. Mr Tekebayev is a member so the Ata Meken party which walked out of a government coalition in October over Mr Atambayev’s plans to hold a referendum in December that would extend the powers of the PM.

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(News report from Issue No. 306, published on Nov. 25 2016)

Turkmen President’s son wins parliamentary seat

NOV. 23 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The son of Turkmen president Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov, Serdar Berdymukhamedov, has won a seat in the country’s parliament, local television reported, a possible first step towards inheriting the presidency from his father.

Turkmen TV broadcast Serdar Berdymukhamedov being congratulated after winning a by-election three days earlier. He had previously worked in a senior management position in the foreign ministry.

Little is known about Serdar Berdymukhamedov. Eurasianet ran a story earlier this year which said that as well as holding down government jobs he also owns a “a cotton-spinning plant, a mineral water factory and a chain of hotels”.

Earlier this year, Mr Berdymukhamedov tweaked the country’s constitution so that he could remain in power for life. He also extended the length of presidential terms to seven years from five years.

Succession has become an enduring issue in Central Asia. In September, Islam Karimov, who had ruled Uzbekistan for 25 years died. His daughter had been his preferred successor but was sidelined two years ago, paving the way for PM Shavkat Mirziyoyev to take over. In Kazakhstan, President Nursultan Nazarbayev dodged the issue of a family succession during an interview with Bloomberg this week.

Mr Berdymukhamedov took over in 2007 as Turkmenistan’s president from Saparmurat Niyazov. The only country in the region which has successfully completed a power handover within a family is in Azerbaijan, where Ilham Aliyev became president in 2003 after his father Heydar.

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(News report from Issue No. 306, published on Nov. 25 2016)

Kazakh police arrests senior officials

NOV. 17 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The deputy head of the government’s Baiterek development corporation, Aslan Jakupov, was arrested with two other people for taking bribe of a around $80,000 over a house-building contract in Pavlodar, media reported. Media said that Aslan Jakupov is the son of a senior Kazakh MP. The case shows just how ingrained corruption is in Kazakhstan. The prosecutor said that Mr Jakupov was suspected of taking a series of bribes from construction companies in deals across the country.

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(News report from Issue No. 305, published on Nov. 18 2016)

 

Kazakh Central bank puts Nazarbayev on bank note

ALMATY, NOV. 15 2016, (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s Central Bank unveiled a new 10,000 tenge bank note depicting a portrait of President Nursultan Nazarbayev, for the first time, next to an image of Astana, the capital city he built on the Kazakh steppe.

Mr Nazarbayev’s critics immediately criticised him for using the bank notes to embellish what they say is already a flourishing personality cult. Daniyar Akishev, head of the Kazakh Central Bank, though, brushed aside complaints and said the bank note was designed to celebrate 25 years of independence from the Soviet Union.

“All Kazakhstan’s achievements since independence are inextricably linked to the first president of the Republic of Kazakhstan, Nursultan Nazarbayev,” he said.

Kazakhstan has been producing eye catching banks notes for years. It won the International Banknote Society’s banknote of the year award in 2012, 2013 and 2014. It’s colourful notes have generally included a historical figure one one side and a modern monument on the other, a meshing together of old and new.

Mr Nazarbayev, president since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, has worked hard to create a united nation with a Kazakh identity. He has used monuments, slogans and banknotes to achieve this.

Many, though, say that his own personal brand, though, has grown too imposing. In 2011, Almaty city government unveiled a statue outside a park of a suited Mr Nazarbayev sitting on stone.

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(News report from Issue No. 305, published on Nov. 18 2016)

 

Kyrgyzstan’s Atambayev orders investigation into corruption by rivals

BISHKEK, NOV. 13 2016,  (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyz president Almazbek Atambayev appeared to be taking his revenge on opposition groups who quit the government last month over his plans to hold a referendum in December that would change the country’s constitution.

Media reported that he had held a meeting with the head of the National Security Committee, Adil Segizbayev. At the meeting Mr Segizbayev told Mr Atambayev that the government of Belize had passed on information that a handful of Kyrgyz politicians had helped Maxim Bakiyev, the hated son of deposed former Kyrgyz president Kurmanbek Bakiyev, set up bank accounts in the Central American country.

Mr Segizbayev did not give any names out but in accompanying photos of documents linked to the case, the names of former justice minister Almanbet Shykmamatov, former general prosecutor Aida Salyanova and MP Omurbek Tekebayev are all clearly visible. They form the core of a group of MPs in the Ata Meken party who pulled down Kyrgyzstan’s coalition government last month. They have said the allegations, which haven’t shifted into charges yet, are unfounded.

Mr Atambayev can’t stand for another term as president next year and his rivals worry that he is tinkering with the constitution so that he can take over as an empowered PM once he leaves the presidency.

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(News report from Issue No. 305, published on Nov. 18 2016)

 

EXPO bridge collapses in Kazakhstan

NOV. 16 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A decorative bridge linking two pavilions in Kazakhstan’s headline EXPO-2017 project collapsed, only a few months before the exhibition is scheduled to open. Media reported that nobody was injured, unlike Kazakh pride. President Nursultan Nazarbayev has set much store in using EXPO-2017 to promote the country.

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(News report from Issue No. 305, published on Nov. 18 2016)

 

Kazakh beer king imprisoned for funding coup

ALMATY, NOV. 8 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A closed court in Astana sentenced Tokhtar Tuleshov, the self- styled beer king of southern Kazakhstan, to 21 years in prison for attempting to stage a coup against Kazakh leader Nursultan Nazarbayev.

Prosecutors had said that Tuleshov had financed a series of anti- government protests in April and May that focused on land ownership. The breadth of the protests and their leaderless nature unnerved Mr Nazarbayev. Police arrested the protest organisers and charged Tuleshov, detained in January for unrelated charges of illegally owning weapons and fraud, with financing the demonstrations.

Tuleshov made his millions through the Shymkentpivo brewery, one of the biggest in Kazakhstan, in the southern city of Shymkent.

His supporters say that he has been framed and point out that it is not possible for him to have paid for the protests from prison.

An ostentatious and dapper figure, Tuleshov used to drive through the scruffy streets of Shymkent in a chauffeured Rolls Royce. Birthday parties for his daughter were lavish affairs with pop stars flown in to sing and guests dressing up in outlandish fancy dress.

The trial was held behind closed doors with journalists only allowed into the courtroom for the final verdict. Human rights activists have said that the arbitrary and closed nature of the trial worried them and could set a precedent.

Analysts have also speculated that Mr Nazarbayev and other senior members of the government from the central and northern tribes in Kazakhstan used Tuleshov to send a warning to high-ranking members of the southern tribe not to challenge their dominance.

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(News report from Issue No. 304, published on Nov. 11 2016)

Kyrgyz parliament approves new government

NOV. 9 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan’s parliament approved the composition of a new government, still dominated by Pres. Almazbek Atambayev’s Social Democratic Party, after a row over a referendum next month led to the collapse of the previous coalition. Two parties, Kyrgyzstan and Bir Bol, have entered the coalition and been given ministerial positions.

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(News report from Issue No. 304, published on Nov. 11 2016)

Uzbekistan ratifies ILO treaty on assembly

OCT. 28 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — In an apparent bid to improve its international business image, Uzbekistan ratified a UN convention that protects workers’ freedom of association and businesses’ rights to form lobby groups.

Acting President Shavkat Mirziyoyev signed into law Convention no. 87 of the International Labour Organisation (ILO), a UN agency, which had originally been drawn up in 1948.

It is the 154th country, and the last in Central Asia and the South Caucasus, to ratify the Convention. Notably, the US, China and India are among the countries which have not ratified the Convention.

And for Uzbekistan this is something of a landmark. It has been the focus of criticism from international human rights activists, who denounced repression of the opposition and the lack of independent platforms for alternative dialogues.

Many Western clothing companies boycott Uzbek cotton because of its links to forced labour.

Foreign companies have also complained about the difficulties of operating in Uzbekistan, considered one of the most repressive countries in the world, and the ratification of the ILO convention may improve their lobbying potential.

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(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)

Armenian President to see out term

NOV. 1 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Armen Gevorgyan, chief of the presidential staff in Armenia, said that, despite the country’s prospective transition from a presidential to a parliamentary democracy, President Serzh Sargsyan will continue to rule until his term, his second and final one, ends in 2018. Last December, a referendum approved the switch in the country’s form of government. Next year, Armenians will vote in parliamentary elections with a new electoral law. In the Central Asia/South Caucasus region, Georgia and Kyrgyzstan have switched to parliamentary systems of government.

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(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)