Tag Archives: Kyrgyzstan

Kyrgyzstan ranks last for mining business

MARCH 5 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Canada-based Fraser Institute has ranked Kyrgyzstan as the worst place to do business for mining companies in its annual report, media reported. Their assessment highlights the problems that Western gold mining companies have had in protecting their assets in Kyrgyzstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 175, published on March 12 2014)

Kyrgyzstan elects new mufti

MARCH 4 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — A religious council in Kyrgyzstan appointed Maksat Hajji Toktomushev as its seventh grand mufti in four years. Toktomushev is best known for issuing a fatwa against same-sex relations in January. His election highlights the issue of human rights in Kyrgyzstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 174, published on March 5 2014)

The Kyrgyz som falls against the dollar

MARCH 4 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan’s som currency fell sharply in value against the US dollar. A Conway Bulletin correspondent in Bishkek reported that some banks had stopped selling US dollars and that black market traders were selling the Greenback at inflated prices.

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(News report from Issue No. 174, published on March 5 2014)

New opposition party emerges in Kyrgyzstan

FEB. 26 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — A new opposition party in Kyrgyzstan called the United National Opposition Movement (UNOM) launched itself in Bishkek with a relatively pro-West agenda. The UNOM said Kyrgyzstan should hold a national referendum before it joined the Russia-led Customs Union. Kazakhstan and Belarus are members of the Customs Union.

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(News report from Issue No. 174, published on March 5 2014)

Kyrgyz police interrogates opposition members

MARCH 11 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — Police in the southern Kyrgyz city of Osh interrogated the city’s powerful former mayor Melis Myrzakmatov over his involvement with holding illegal rallies. Mr Myrzakmatov is considered a potential figurehead for opposition forces. Kyrgyz PM Jantoro Satybaldiev sacked him as Osh mayor in December.

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(News report from Issue No. 175, published on March 12 2014)

Russia considers buying airport in Kyrgyzstan

MARCH 5 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — For visitors to Kyrgyzstan’s main civilian airport, Manas, catching sight of US warplanes taking off in the distance used to be part of arriving in Bishkek. Not anymore.

As the NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan continues these glimpses of the US military have become increasingly rare. It is quitting its airbase next to Manas civilian airport from where it has flown missions to Afghanistan since 2001.

Given Russian opposition to the facility, Kyrgyzstan’s leaders had few choices but to call time on the co-called Transit Center.

And this seems to suit locals.

“I have no problem with America but I don’t think we needed this base,” said Askar Bolotbayev, a Bishkek resident.

“It doesn’t provide us with electricity, it isn’t something we can export. We somehow survived before it and we will survive after it, too.”

Yet, with the centre worth roughly $200m to the anaemic Kyrgyz economy, Kyrgyzstan is keen to fill a hole by turning their main airport into something bigger and better.

Dair Tokobayev, an official at Manas airport, told local press that the government wanted to transform Manas into a regional transit hub.

But not without Russian backing, of course. Russian energy company Rosneft is reportedly considering buying a 51% stake in the airport.

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(News report from Issue No. 174, published on March 5 2014)

Final US military plane takes off from Kyrgyz base

FEB. 25 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — The final US aerial re-fuelling tanker supporting military missions in Afghanistan took off from the Manas airbase outside Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, the US military said. According to US data, re-fuelling tankers have flown 33,000 missions from Manas. The US military is quitting Manas this year.

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(News report from Issue No. 173, published on Feb. 26 2014)

Kyrgyzstan prosecutes former president

FEB. 14 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan said it would prosecute former President Kurmanbek Bakiyev and his two sons in absentia for the attempted murder of a British businessman in 2006. Bakiyev fled Kyrgyzstan after a coup in 2010. He lives in Belarus. Last year a court in Bishkek sentenced him to 24 years in jail for an assassination.

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(News report from Issue No. 172, published on Feb. 19 2014)

Kyrgyz police detains Syria-linked extremists

FEB. 17 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — The governments of Central Asia and the South Caucasus have been warning for months that their own security is being compromised by the civil war in Syria.

Local Islamic radicals travel to Syria for training and combat experience, they have said, and then return home eager to attack and bomb government targets.

Now Kyrgyzstan, which has been fighting an increase in attacks by the Taliban-linked Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) over the past few years, has said it captured six radicals who had recently returned from Syria.

The Kyrgyz National Security Council said that the six men were arrested in Osh in the south of the country and had been planning a series of attacks.

Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan have also recently raised serious concerns about the flow of extremists into and out of Syria, and Uzbekistan and Tajikistan have said they are concerned about radicals linked to Afghanistan.

A few days earlier, the Kyrgyz national security council said five Kyrgyz men had been killed in Syria and that 50 or so were based in Syria full time. The inference from the Kyrgyz Security Council is that they may be dealing with this problem for some time to come.

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(News report from Issue No. 172, published on Feb. 19 2014)

Kyrgyz parliament ratifies mining deal

FEB. 6 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan’s parliament ratified a deal to split control of the Kumtor gold mine 50:50 with Canadian miner Centerra Gold. The deal is vital to Kyrgyzstan as Kumtor is its single biggest economic asset. Protests over the ownership have forced Centerra Gold to cede increasingly large stakes in the mine to Kyrgyzstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 171, published on Feb. 12 2014)