Tag Archives: Tajikistan

Tajikistan warns of low water levels

MARCH 31 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Tajikistan’s Hydrological Agency warned that significantly less snow in its Pamir mountains this year will lead to lower water levels for downstream Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, media reported. Arguments over water supplies are a major source of tension in Central Asia.

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(News report from Issue No. 34, published on April 4 2011)

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)

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)

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)

Tajikistan’s winter electricity rationing cut early

FEB. 21 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Tajik state electricity supplier said it would end winter electricity rationing about a month earlier than last year because of the slightly warmer, more rainy weather. Hydropower stations generate most of Tajikistan’s electricity. With Iranian cash, Tajikistan is building another large dam which it plans to open this year and should ensure energy supplies throughout the winter.

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(News report from Issue No. 29, published on Feb. 28 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)

Iran to build $500m cement plant in Tajikistan

FEB. 12 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Iran will spend $500m building a cement plant in Tajikistan, its ambassador in Dushanbe told media (Feb. 9). Later Tajik foreign minister Hamrokhon Zarifi praised the growing cooperation between the two countries.

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(News report from Issue No. 27, published on Feb. 14 2011)

Pressure on Islamic groups in Tajikistan

FEB. 7 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) — Nearly all Tajikistan’s 7.5m people are Muslim and the Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan (IRPT) is the only political party in Central Asia linked to religion, but over the last few months the authorities have steadily increased pressure on Islam and practicing Muslims.

Last year Tajik President Emomali Rakhmon called for hundreds of students enrolled at madrases in Egypt and Pakistan to return home to stop them from becoming radicalised and the authorities have closed dozens of what they say are unregistered religious schools and mosques. Police have raided the IRPT which they accuse of having links to extremists and its cultural centre burnt down in a mysterious fire.

Wearing a beard is now also a problem. Local media reports are full of accounts of police stopping bearded men on the street and accusing them of being Islamic extremists.

The pressure is linked to the government’s battle against insurgents in the Rasht Valley to the south of the capital, Dushanbe. Since September 2010, when extremists killed at least 25 soldiers in an ambush, Tajik forces have poured into the Rasht Valley to hunt down al-Qaeda-linked fighters.

The authorities say as well as fighting these insurgents in the mountains, they also have to stop them from enrolling recruits from the towns and cities.

But that’s just the problem, say many analysts. They say that poverty and the authorities’ heavy-handedness are driving young men in Tajikistan — which borders Afghanistan and is a key part of the NATO supply chain — to the extremists.

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(News report from Issue No. 26, published on Feb. 7 2011)

Tajik Islamic party official beaten

FEB. 7 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Tajikistan’s biggest Islamic party said unknown assailants had beaten one of its senior members, Umarali Khisainov, near his home. Media reports said Mr Khisainov was now in hospital. The Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan has come under increased pressure since last year when the government intensified fighting against Islamic extremists.

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(News report from Issue No. 26, published on Feb. 7 2011)