Tag Archives: politics

Georgian president blocks parliamentary bill

JAN. 24 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Georgian president Giorgi Margvelashvili vetoed a bill passed through parliament, which is dominated by the Georgian Dream coalition that he represents, that he said would damage the independence of the courts. The proposed bill had focused on changing the process through which court judges are appointed. Mr Margvelashvili and the Georgian Dream have increasingly rowed over governance issues.

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(News report from Issue No. 314, published on Jan. 27 2017)f

 

 

Georgian MPs force debate on gas deal with Russia

JAN. 23 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Opposition MPs in Georgia’s parliament have forced a debate on Feb. 3 on the terms of a new gas deal struck with Russia at the beginning of the year, piling pressure on energy minister Kakha Kaladze to reveal details of the new arrangement. Under the deal, Georgia will pay for gas from Russia directly, rather than take a 10% cut of the volume that Russia sends to Armenia. Mr Kaladze has refused to give out details of the deal but his opponents have called it a risk to national security.

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(News report from Issue No. 314, published on Jan. 27 2017)

Comment: Nazarbayev announces constitutional changes, writes Hagelund

JAN. 27 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — In an unusual step, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev took to the airwaves to announce constitutional changes, suggesting the septuagenarian has fired the starting gun for his succession. Proposed amendments to Kazakhstan’s constitution were received with scepticism by the Kazakh people; yet they include changes that will prove significant.

Planned limits on presidential power have little immediate impact as Nazarbayev’s personal, informal influence determines the rules of the game. However, in the post-Nazarbayev era, formal institutions are likely to play an increasingly influential role.

Nazarbayev is setting the scene for his successor to be less powerful. This likely reflects recognition on his part that no individual has the authority or legitimacy to succeed him as a strongman (or –woman) ruler. While the proposed strengthening of parliament will not result in a multi-party democracy, a form of pluralism already exists with elite factions supporting differing policies.

Verisk Maplecroft considers intra-elite differences the only plausible source of a more competitive political environment in the immediate post- Nazarbayev era, but they equally raise the potential for instability. Elite factionalism is currently mediated by the president, but with a less powerful successor facing a potentially more vocal and influential government and parliament, the scene is set for more overt elite clashes.

In the absence of strong state institutions, clashes over policy – or of personalities – risk undermining government stability. A particular cause for concern is therefore Kazakhstan’s weak rule of law, specifically the little emphasis Nazarbayev put on the importance of the judiciary in refereeing the balance of power between different branches of government.

A more complex collective system of government would be a step-change in the political landscape for businesses after a quarter of a century of

relative stability. Collective government implies less clarity around who the power brokers are, particularly as the system is established and elite jostle for power.

When the time comes, navigating Kazakh politics will, in all probability, prove challenging. Policy and political volatility is bound to increase without a single power broker to mediate between different factions of the ruling elite.

By Camilla Hagelund, senior Europe analyst at risk consultancy Verisk Maplecroft

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(News report from Issue No. 314, published on Jan. 27 2017)

Kyrgyzstan increases fines for swearing in public and drinking

JAN. 24 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyz president Almazbek Atambayev signed into law a decree that increased fines handed out to people who swear on the street and drink in office blocks, media reported.Police officers can now hand out fines of 15,000 som ($200) for swearing in public and 10,000 som for drinking in the workplace.

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(News report from Issue No. 314, published on Jan. 27 2017)

Kazakh President promises to empower Kazakh parliament

ALMATY, JAN. 25 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — In a televised address to the nation lasting 9-1/2 minutes, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev described how he wanted to bring in a series of reforms that would shift power from the president to parliament.

The main proposals focused on how the government was formed. Currently,Mr Nazarbayev appoints all the key positions in government and the state’s main agencies. This was a task that he said he wanted to hand over to the PM. He also said that he wanted parliament to have more say over social and economic issues.

“The point of the proposed reform isina serious redistribution of powers and democratisation of the political system as a whole,” he said during this address in both Kazakh and Russian with his trademark formal and deadpan delivery.

The speech, though, was short on detail and lacked a timeframe for the proposed changes. Although the aim of the speech appears to be to burnish Mr Nazarbayev’s credentials as a democrat and to ease concerns that he doesn’t have a succession plan, the main reaction was derision.

In Almaty, Mikhail, 29, said: “This is another imitation and an attempt to shift the responsibility for worsening living conditions.”

And analysts said Mr Nazarbayev appeared eager to disengage from difficult social and employment policies but retain control of duties linked to foreign policy and security. “It’s almost like he wants to pass off responsibility for the really hard stuff,” said Bruce Pannier, a Central Asia analyst at RFE/RL.

Not everybody was downbeat.

“That sounds great, nonetheless these reforms require strengthening of mass media and freedom of speech,” said Galym, 26.

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(News report from Issue No. 314, published on Jan. 27 2017)

Uzbekistan releases 40,000 prisoners

JAN. 24 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — In possibly the biggest mass amnesty by a former Soviet state, Uzbekistan pardoned 40,000 prisoners. The amnesty focused on inmates imprisoned for minor crimes, foreigners, women, young offenders and people over the age of 60. Human rights groups accuse Uzbekistan of locking up political prisoners. No notable political prisoners were released. Central Asian countries use amnesties to mark anniversaries and to release pressure on their prison populations.

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(News report from Issue No. 314, published on Jan. 27 2017)

Uzbek investigators interview Gulnara Karimova

JAN. 14 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Uzbek prosecutors interviewed Gulnara Karimova at her home in Tashkent, where she is under house arrest, about money laundering, media in Switzerland reported by quoting her lawyer.

This is the first news of Ms Karimova since her father, former Uzbek president Islam Karimov, died in September. In November a report surfaced on opposition news website that she had been poisoned.

The German-language business newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung published an interview with Ms Karimova’s lawyer, Gregoire Mangeat, who said that he had flown to Tashkent for the interviews held on Dec. 9/10.

He said that she was in good health but had been under pressure from the two state prosecutors to admit to various crimes.

“She was very combative and showed an amazing resistance to the arbitrary situation,” he said. “She bravely endured the confrontation with the three Uzbek prosecutors in military uniform. Twice, however, she burst into tears.”

Mr Mangeat also said that Ms Karimova’s living conditions were inhumane and designed to make her crack.

“My client is held in a small annex of her former house in the centre of Tashkent. The rest of the house has decayed,” her said. “Gulnara Karimova is completely isolated.”

Ms Karimova had been viewed as a potential successor to her father but in February 2014, as prosecutors from Europe and the United States started investigating telecoms companies who had paid her bribes worth hundreds of millions of dollars for access to the Uzbek market, she was placed under house arrest. Since then, very little has been heard of the once self-style fashion diva, pop star, roaming ambassador and business leader.

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(News report from Issue No. 313, published on Jan. 20 2017)

Azerbaijan’s court jails activist

JAN. 16 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — A court in Azerbaijan sentenced Elgiz Gahraman, a 31-year-old opposition youth activist, to 5-1/2 years in prison for drug-related offences. The New York- based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said that in August 2016 Gahraman had been taken by police to a station in Baku, beaten and forced to sign a confession that he had been carrying heroin and intended to sell it. HRW has accused the Azerbaijani authorities of using bogus charges to imprison people it considers to be troublemakers.

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(News report from Issue No. 313, published on Jan. 20 2017)

Georgians doubt authenticity of UNM split

TBILISI, JAN. 20 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — On the streets of Georgia’s capital city, the UNM’s split was received with scepticism. Georgians are generally weary of the political infighting.

Giorgi, a PhD candidate in Finance, said the split will make the opposition weaker.

“Instead of accepting election results, Saakashvili’s loyalists were planning to declare election results as fraud and fight back from the street,” he said.

“The breakaway section chose the pragmatic way to oppose the ruling party using their parliamentary mandates. However, this move made the opposition weaker.”

Ani, a civil servant, said she doubted the real reason behind the split. “We need to be careful, overall it is still the UNM. Not sure that this is a real split and not a political game again”, she said.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 313, published on Jan. 20 2017)

Georgians feel upbeat about future

JAN. 20 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — >> There is a new public opinion poll out in Georgia, produced by the National Democratic Institute (NDI). Is this important?

>> In a word – yes. This is one of the rare and generally reliable snapshots of public opinion that is produced in Georgia. Most other polls are biased towards whoever has commissioned it and their political allies.

>> So what did this one tell us?

>> The data is a result of surveys done in November, shortly after a parliamentary election that the Georgian Dream won easily. These results are reflected in the poll data which showed that for the first time since August 2014, more people felt that Georgia was going in the right direction. It was a close run thing, though, with 36% of respondents saying that Georgia wasn’t changing one way or the other, 32% saying it was moving in a positive direction and 27% saying that things were getting worse. This compares well to March 2016 when 40% of the respondents said that Georgia was heading in the wrong direction and only 20% said it was heading in the right direction.

>> And how did this compare to previous poll results?

>> When the Georgian Dream, the coalition funded, by billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, first won power in 2012, the poll results for Georgia moving in a positive option were sky-high at around 60% or the high 50s. Things had slipped though.

>> What else does the poll tell us about Georgia?

>> By far the two most important issues for people polled were jobs and rising inflation – 58% of respondents said that jobs were a major concern and 38% said inflation was a major concern. Territorial integrity (27%) was ranked fairly highly but joining NATO (3%) and joining EU (3%), the things that occupy most of the politicians most of the time were towards the bottom of the list.

>> Have people’s priorities changed? Were they different when Georgia’s economy was doing better?

>> Much like the rest of the region, Georgia’s economy has been under immense pressure recently with a recession in Russia and an overly strong US dollar. Over the past few months, Georgia’s lari has plummeted in value and the government has warned of tough times. But, and this is the point, in good times or bad, NDI says that Georgians top five priorities are the same. These are, in order of preference – jobs, inflation, poverty, territorial integrity and pensions. Clearly other than issues over the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, it’s all about the economy.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 313, published on Jan. 20 2017)