Tag Archives: security

Suicide bomber hits Aktobe in western Kazakhstan

MAY 17 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – The physical damage from the suicide bomb attack on a security forces office in Aktobe, northwest Kazakhstan, on May 17 2011 was relatively light. The bomber killed himself, injured at least two other people and caused minor damage to a building.

Psychologically, though, for Kazakhstan the attack was devastating.

It was perhaps the first suicide bomb attack in Kazakhstan and despite the authorities’ quick denial, it may well be the work of militant Islamists.

Earlier this year sources in the Kazakh security services told The Conway Bulletin that fighting growing Islamic radicalism in the west of the country was their main priority.

The security sources said it was difficult to stop the internet videos and literature which were radicalising disenchanted young men and they said it was probably just a matter of time before there was an attack.

Adding to their problems, in September 2010 a senior Islamic cleric linked to al Qaeda had
also issued a fatwa against Kazakhstan’s police force.

But the biggest driver of radical Islam in western Kazakhstan comes from the North Caucasus, where Russia has fought militants for years. Dagestan is a short trip across the Caspian Sea from Kazakhstan and in recent months Russian forces have killed Kazakhs fighting alongside rebels in Makhachkala, the scruffy, teeming Dagestani capital.

For much of the past two decades Kazakhstan has watched attacks by Islamic militants against its more turbulent neighbours and been able to project itself as the safe, stable Central Asian country. That may now have changed.

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(News report from Issue No. 40, published on May 17 2011)

Russia wants to return guards to Tajikistan-Afghanistan border

MAY 9 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Six years after withdrawing its guards from the Tajikistan-Afghanistan border, Russia wants to return.

The Kremlin feels Tajikistan cannot control its borders effectively and is worried about a wave of Islamic militants and drugs seeping through the country after NATO forces withdraw from neighbouring Afghanistan in 2014, sources in Moscow have told the media Tajikistan is already fighting Islamic militants and is one of the main transit routes for drugs leaving Afghanistan for Russia and Europe.

But there may be more at stake. Russia is competing with the United States and China for influence over Tajikistan and controlling the border with Afghanistan would give it major leverage. Not only is Tajikistan a major access point into and out of Afghanistan but its mountains, rivers and dams control a large proportion of the water supply for the other Central Asian states. Controlling water supplies in Central Asia, equates to power.

Russia maintains a large base in Tajikistan but its military presence there is far reduced from the 1990s and to re-position its soldiers on the border it first needs to win over Tajik President Emomali Rakhmon.

And, to say the least, Mr Rakhmon is sceptical of the benefits of the Russian border guards.

The WikiLeaks website recently published a US diplomatic cable written in December 2005 in which the ambassador quoted Mr Rakhmon describing how he had personally ordered the Russian border guards to leave. Mr Rakhmon was convinced the Russian border guards were plotting a coup.

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(News report from Issue No. 39, published on May 9 2011)

Russian wants to send border guards to Tajikistan

MAY 5 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russia has re-started talks with Tajikistan on stationing 3,000 guards along the important Tajik-Afghan border, Reuters reported. Russia, the US and China are competing for influence in Central Asia. Russian soldiers patrolled the border until 2005.

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(News report from Issue No. 39, published on May 9 2011)

Report blames ethnic violence on Kyrgyz security forces

MAY 3 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – An independent report headed by an ex-Finnish parliamentarian said Kyrgyz security forces attacked Uzbeks during ethnic violence in the south of the country last June and committed “crimes against humanity”. The Kyrgyz government rejected the report.

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(News report from Issue No. 39, published on May 9 2011)

Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan warn of Islamic militants

APRIL 30 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – The US State Department issued a warning to its citizens in Uzbekistan that Islamic militant groups were planning attacks against US interests (April 25). In Kyrgyzstan, the head of the National Security Committee said a new militant group, the Islamic Movement of Kyrgyzstan, was active (April 30).

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(News report from Issue No. 38, published on May 2 2011)

Kyrgyzstan to reconsider US presence at Manas airbase

APRIL 28 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – On a trip to Turkey, Kyrgyz PM Almazbek Atambayev hinted he was looking beyond the US use of the Manas airbase. Manas, outside Bishkek, has become a major cog in the US resupply chain for its forces in Afghanistan. Mr Atambayev said he wanted to turn Manas, already an international airport, into a major global transit centre.

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(News report from Issue No. 38, published on May 2 2011)

Soccer diplomacy and statues in Armenian-Turkish relations

MAY 2 2011 – The symbolism is striking. In 2008 and 2009 so-called soccer diplomacy helped to build a reproach between Armenia and Turkey after generations of distrust and animosity. Now, a statue commemorating Armenian-Turkish friendship is being pulled down.

Armenia and Turkey had barely spoken since Armenia supported rebels fighting Azerbaijan, Turkey’s long-time ally, in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh after the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union.

The border between Turkey and Armenia was officially closed. But by 2009 with the help of the soccer diplomacy, when the presidents of each country visited the other’s capital to watch soccer matches, they were on the brink of repairing relations. Then the process stalled.

The dispute stretches back further to the Ottoman Turks. Most Armenians say a genocide by the Ottoman Turks killed 1.5m Armenians in eastern Turkey during World War I. The Turks refute this and say hundreds of thousands died on both sides in civil fighting.

On April 26, workmen moved in to pull down a statue in eastern Turkey symbolising Turkish-Armenian friendship. The statue is about the height of a 10-storey building and was started in 2006 but had still not been completed. It depicts two people emerging out of one stone block.

On a visit earlier this year, Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan described the statue as a monstrosity and local officials have said they have always planned to tear down the statue.

Built to symbolise friendship, the statue may now be a more fitting symbol for the stalled reconciliation process.

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(News report from Issue No. 38, published on May 2 2011)

Armenia and Azerbaijan row over Nagorno-Karabakh

APRIL 30 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Armenia accused Azerbaijan of shooting dead three soldiers within 48 hours in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan denied the charge but the row further escalated tension.

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(News report from Issue No. 38, published on May 2 2011)

SCO members pledge greater cooperation in Central Asia

APRIL 25 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) members — China, Russia, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan — pledged greater cooperation at a meeting in Shanghai. Russian news agency RIA Novosti described the meeting as the first summit for the SCO military chiefs. Some analysts have said the SCO could act as a counterbalance to NATO.

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(News report from Issue No. 37, published on April 25 2011)

Russia says it killed Kazakh Islamic radicals

APRIL 20 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russian security forces in Dagestan said they killed an Islamic militant from Kazakhstan, Russian news agency RIA Novosti reported. Over the last two years, security forces have said that seven Kazakhs have died fighting with Islamic radicals in the North Caucasus fuelling fears of a rise in Islamic radicalism in western Kazakhstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 37, published on April 25 2011)