Tag Archives: security

IS is a threat to Tajikistan, says Russia

MARCH 5 2015 (The Bulletin) – Russia’s defence minister, Anatoly Anatonov, said IS groups in Afghanistan posed a threat to Tajikistan. Russia has been a consistent siren on Tajikistan, warning of the threat to its stability once NATO withdraws from Afghanistan. Russia maintains a garrison in Tajikistan.
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(News report from Issue No. 222, published on March 11 2015)

France rejects Ablyazov appeal

MARCH 4 2015 (The Bulletin) – The highest court in France rejected an appeal by lawyers of former Kazakh opposition figure Mukhtar Ablyazov against his extradition to either Ukraine or Russia . This decision paves the way for a governmental decree to extradite Ablyazov who is wanted by Kazakhstan on various charges.
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(News report from Issue No. 222, published on March 11 2015)

Armenia accuses Azerbaijan of N-K breech

MARCH 2 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Armenia accused Azerbaijan of shooting dead two of its soldiers around the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. There was no immediate Azerbaijani reaction to the accusation but it does appear to be an escalation. A 1994 cease-fire keeps a fragile peace around Nagorno-Karabakh.
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(News report from Issue No. 221, published on March 4 2015)

Kyrgyzstan says IS has increased recruiting drive

MARCH 2 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – IS and other radical Islamic groups have turned southern Kyrgyzstan into a rich recruitment grounds, the head of the Kyrgyz National Security Committee, Rakhat Suleimanov, said. Some Western analysts, though, have questioned the veracity of these claims saying that they allow the security services to clamp down on dissent.
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(News report from Issue No. 221, published on March 4 2015)

South Ossetia’s demographic decline

ZGUBIR/Georgia, FEB. 25 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) —- Vera, a 70-year old widow, lives with her jobless, unmarried son in the small mountain hamlet of Zgubir, ten miles north of Tskhinvali, the capital of the Georgian rebel region of South Ossetia.

In 2008 South Ossetia was the poster-boy of rebel regions of the former Soviet Union. With the help of Russian forces it had just defeated Georgia in a war and declared independence.

The future for South Ossetia was, back then, bright. Now, though, nearly seven years later and with the world’s gaze fixed on separatist fighting in eastern Ukraine it looks different.

“Nationalism brought us only war and destruction and this hard-won independence condemned this land to isolation,” Vera said.

South Ossetia may have won its independence but it has lost its people. According to Russian data, 52,000 people live in South Ossetia, compared to 100,000 in Soviet times and 70,000 in 2007.

Most of the people living in Tshkinvali have fled to Russia to escape the war and search for a new life. Those who stayed were unable to emigrate. Apart from bored Russian soldiers, local militiamen and a few government officials, most inhabitants appeared to be lonely elders and alcoholic single men.

Vera is one among those who stayed.

“I grew up all my life in a country where it didn’t matter whether you were Ossetian, Georgian, Russian, or Jewish. We were all Soviets and we knew only one flag, only one army,” she said.

The unemployment rate, the demographic outflow and the almost complete lack of public investments are bleak for South Ossetia, leaving Vera and others with ever more romanticised, glorious memories of the Soviet era.
By Gianluca Pardelli

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(News report from Issue No. 220, published on Nov. 22 2010)

 

Russia to strengthen Kyrgyz military base

FEB. 18 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Russia’s military will equip its Kant airbase in Kyrgyzstan with up-to-date fighter-jets, media quoted Colonel Jaroslav Roschupkin, a Russian army spokesman, as saying. Russia has, generally, been looking to beef up its military deployments in Central Asia, especially at the Kant airbase.
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(News report from Issue No. 220, published on Feb. 25 2015)

Two men jailed in Kazakhstan for IS link

FEB. 20 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — A court in the central Kazakh town of Temirtau sentenced two men to eight and 11 years in prison for links to radical Islam and plotting a series of attacks. One of the men, prosecutors said, tried to recruit people to head out to join the extremist IS group in Syria.
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(News report from Issue No. 220, published on Feb. 25 2015)

Turkmenistan offers to host Afghan peace talks

MARCH 18 2015 (The Bulletin) – Turkmenistan has offered to host talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government, Pakistan’s Express Tribune newspaper reported. Sapar Berdiniyazov, a senior Turkmen diplomat, said: “If the Afghan parties ask us, Turkmenistan is available as a venue for the talks.” If Ashagbat did ever host peace talks it would significantly raise its international profile.
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(News report from Issue No. 223, published on March 18 2015)

Kyrgyzstan stops more IS recruitment

FEB. 13 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan’s security services have uncovered 30 more attempts by the radical group IS to recruit young disaffected Kyrgyz men for their army in Syria, the US-backed Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reported quoting the government. The authorities also said an imam at a large mosque had been arrested for supporting IS.
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(News report from Issue No. 219, published on Feb. 18 2015)

US mission to the S.Caucasus

FEB. 16 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — US Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland is due to travel to Yerevan and Baku over the next few days to discuss their relations with Washington and how to reduce rising tension along the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Ms Nuland’s trip is part of a wider South Caucasus mission.
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(News report from Issue No. 219, published on Feb. 18 2015)