Tag Archives: Kyrgyzstan

Russia increases fuel duty to Tajikistan

MARCH 25 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russia has increased the tax on fuel exports to Tajikistan by 5.3%, media reported. Tajikistan imports nearly all its fuel from Russia. Last year Russia imposed a duty on oil exports to Tajikistan for the first time in 15 years. Russia has previously used tax on fuel to Kyrgyzstan to leverage influence.

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(News report from Issue No. 33, published on March 28 2011)

Russian influence grows in Kyrgyzstan

MARCH 24 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russia said it would scrap tax on fuel exports to Kyrgyzstan and agreed to invest $750m in Kyrgyz hydroelectric projects, local media reported. Russia and the US are vying for influence in Kyrgyzstan where they both control an airbase.

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(News report from Issue No. 33, published on March 28 2011)

Tajik President says to hoard food

MARCH 25 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – In a thinly veiled warning that food prices in Tajikistan will continue to rise and that supplies are running low, local media quoted President Emomali Rakhmon telling people in a northern province to hoard food over the next two years. Food prices have soared in Central Asia, worrying governments which fear unrest. Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan have been worst hit.

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(News report from Issue No. 33, published on March 28 2011)

Kyrgyzstan to sell gas firm to Russia

MARCH 19 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russian news agencies quoted Kyrgyz PM Almazbek Atambayev as saying during a meeting with Russian PM Vladimir Putin that Kyrgyzstan was ready to sell 75% of its gas company, KyrgyzGas, to Russia. Russia and the US are competing for influence in Kyrgyzstan, where they each have an airbase.

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(News report from Issue No. 32, published on March 21 2011)

SCO defence ministers meet in Kazakhstan

MARCH 17 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Defence ministers from the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) member states — Russia, China, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan — met in Astana to coordinate policy until 2013. The SCO, a military and economic group, has increased its activities over the last few years and some analysts have even referred to it as a potential counterbalance to NATO.

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(News report from Issue No. 32, published on March 21 2011)

Putin gets his mountain in Kyrgyzstan

MARCH 14 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyz President Roza Otunbayeva signed a decree renaming a 4,446m mountain after Russian PM Vladimir Putin. Kyrgyzstan also has mountains named after the founder of the Soviet Union Vladimir Lenin and former Russian President Boris Yeltsin. Parliament voted on the name change in February.

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(News report from Issue No. 31, published on March 14 2011)

Kyrgyz president visits the White House

MARCH 7 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – In a sign of just how crucial Kyrgyzstan is to US policy in Central Asia and Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan’s President Roza Otunbayeva met with US President Barack Obama at the White House. The Manas airbase outside Bishkek is a major re-supply hub for the US mission in Afghanistan. Kyrgyzstan has said it wants to impose a $40m fuel tax on the base.

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(News report from Issue No. 31, published on March 14 2011)

Ethnic violence threatens to flare in Kyrgyzstan

MARCH 1 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Hundreds of Kyrgyz torched the house of an Uzbek they accused of organising the murder of a local official, media reported. The attack in a town near Osh in the south of Kyrgyzstan roused fears of a repeat of ethnic violence that killed 400 people in June 2010.

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(News report from Issue No. 30, published on March 7 2011)

Food inflation hits Central Asia and stirs unrest

FEB. 21 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Fires last year in Russia, floods in Australia and bulk buying by wealthy countries have pushed up wheat prices around the world, angering people and worrying governments. In Central Asia and the South Caucasus some are warning of growing unrest.

On Feb. 11 in his state-of-the-nation address, Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili said his government would start handing out food vouchers to every family in the country and on Feb. 18 the Kazakh government promised to spend $87m building up its reserves of wheat.

But the most vulnerable countries are Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan where people have had to endure the steepest spike in wheat prices in the world on top of soaring inflation and instability.

In comments which would have resonated in Bishkek and Dushanbe, the head of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick said on Feb. 15 of the food price rises: “There is a real stress point that could have social and political implications across Central Asia.”

The World Bank has estimated that in Kyrgyzstan wheat accounts for 40% of the average person’s calorie intake while in Tajikistan the figure is even higher at 54%.

And social tension may already have flared.

In Dushanbe, media quoted a government official reassuring people that the country had enough food supplies and denying that there would be any unrest linked to a lack of food.

Local media in Kyrgyzstan reported that the government is preparing to tap into their emergency wheat reserves to feed 340,000 low income families but a Conway Bulletin correspondent in Bishkek said teachers and other state employees plan a demonstration on Feb. 23 to protest against rising food prices.

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(News report from Issue No. 28, published on Feb. 21 2011)

Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan show booming wheat prices

FEB. 15 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – The price of wheat has jumped by 54% in Kyrgyzstan and 37% in Tajikistan since June 2010, the World Bank said. The Kyrgyzstan price rise is the largest in the world. Wheat makes up around 50% of people’s diets in both countries.

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(News report from Issue No. 28, published on Feb. 21 2011)