Tag Archives: Uzbekistan

GM Uzbekistan appoints new head

JULY 25 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Car manufacturer GM Uzbekistan appointed Rustam Razhabov as the new CEO, after months of uncertainty over the top position at the Uzbek-US joint venture. The government-linked Novosti Uzbekistana confirmed the appointment. In June, unofficial reports had said that Mr Razhabov had been detained in May in relation to a criminal scheme that brought down his predecessor, Tokhirzhon Zhalilov. State-owned Uzavtoprom owns 75% of GM Uzbekistan, US-based GM owns the rest.

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(News report from Issue No. 291, published on Aug. 1 2016)

Cement plant expands in Uzbekistan

JULY 28 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Turkish company DAL Teknik Makina completed the expansion of one of the largest Uzbek cement complexes, the ministry of economy said in a statement. State- owned Almalyk Mining-Metallurgical Complex commissioned the expansion of the cement plant in the Jizzakh region near Samarkand, southern Uzbekistan, for $35.8m. The plant should now increase production of cement to 650,000 tonnes in 2016 and to around 1m tonnes thereafter. Last year, China’s Shanfang Cement pledged a $130m investment to build a new cement plant in Uzbekistan.

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(News report from Issue No. 291, published on Aug. 1 2016)

Uzbek authorities fire prosecutor

JULY 27 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — One Uzbek prosecutor was fired and the head of a local police station in Tashkent is also being questioned in an investigation over an alleged fraudulent pyramid scheme master- minded by businessman Akhmad Tursunbayev. Mr Tursunbayev was arrested in mid-June for having stolen money from people with the promise of a 100% return, Eurasianet reported. The investigators now claim that public officials may have been involved.

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(News report from Issue No. 291, published on Aug. 1 2016)

China to build piplene between Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan

JULY 23 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — China will go ahead with the construction of a fourth line of the Central Asia-China gas pipeline from Turkmenistan through Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, officials said. Luo Wei Dong, a deputy at China’s ministry of commerce told the Kremlin- funded Sputnik news agency that the pipeline will be built in the near future and will increase the overall capacity by 54% to 85b cubic metres/year.

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(News report from Issue No. 291, published on Aug. 1 2016)

Amsterdam court orders seizure of assets linked to Uzbek President’s daughter

JULY 20 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A court in Amsterdam ordered the seizure of €123m ($135m) of assets linked to Gulnara Karimova, the eldest daughter of Uzbek president Islam Karimov, as part of an ongoing global investigation into bribes paid by major telecoms firms looking to enter the Uzbek market.

Gibraltar-registered Takilant, the company linked to Ms Karimova that took bribes to award telecoms licences in Uzbekistan, had its assets frozen in Sweden in 2012/13 in a related court case but this is the first time a Western court has directly confiscated them.

The Dutch ruling targeted cash that Amsterdam-based Russian telecoms operator VimpelCom and Sweden’s Telia Company paid Takilant between 2004 and 2013.

In its decision, the court said that Takilant demonstrated “a way of doing business that is socially extremely destabilising.”

The latest ruling aggravates a corruption scandal that has sunk Uzbekistan’s already weak reputation as a place for Western businesses to operate.

It also deals another blow to Ms Karimova’s profile in Uzbekistan, where the self-styled fashion designer and diplomat was once touted as a potential president. She has been under house arrest in Tashkent for two years and her associates are in prison for various financial crimes.

With the confiscation of Takilant’s assets, the courts start to close in on reclaiming some of the millions of dollars paid to Ms Karimova. Previously, courts had only managed to fine European telecoms companies for their illegal practices.

In February, a US court ruled that VimpelCom, listed on the New York Stock Exchange, was guilty of bribing Takilant and fined it $795m. Another US prosecutor is currently trying to freeze $550m of Takilant’s assets.

Sweden’s Telia has also said at it has put aside millions of dollars to pay fines linked to bribery charges.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

 

Briefing: Region’s economies sputter into life

JULY 22 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — >>Malaise, downturn recession. What exactly going on in Central Asia and the South Caucasus?

>>All countries in the region are either growing slower than last year or, in some cases, their economies are even shrinking. The crisis is regional, although each country has shown its own specific problems.

>>This is the region-wide problem. I can see but what caused it?

>>The US dollar strengthened so much in 2014 that it triggered a sharp drop in oil and commodity prices. This pulled dollars away from Emerging Markets, like our own patch. As commodity prices sank, Russia fell into a crisis that quickly turned into a recession. The depreciation of the rouble cut the value of salaries earned by migrant workers, triggering a slowdown in remittances to Central Asia and the South Caucasus.

>>Okay, but oil prices picked up again since the 13- year low point in January. Isn’t that good for energy exporters in Central Asia and the South Caucasus?

>>Higher oil prices have helped state-owned oil companies to relax their emergency mode, but they’re still too low to justify the region’s most expensive projects. Think of the Kashagan oil project in Kazakhstan’s sector of the Caspian Sea, or the upgrade of Azeri Chirag-Guneshli oil project in Azerbaijan. Plus there are negative signs for transparency over the re-organisation of government companies and structures in the energy sector in Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan.

>>And what about the other commodities, such as gold and aluminium?

>>Gold is a big component of Kyrgyzstan’s GDP as it depends on the performance of the Kumtor gold mine in the east of the country. This year, operational problems and corporate battles have slowed production, which has significantly hit Kyrgyzstan’s growth figures. It now could slip into a recession. Tajikistan, on the other hand posted a promising 6.6% GDP growth in the first half of 2016 and state-owned smelter TALCO increased aluminium production. But these numbers should be read with caution. TALCO also said that it is currently operating at a loss, as its production costs are 25% higher than market prices.

>>Right, so is it all bad?

>>Not necessarily. Dollarisation, as Georgia’s Central Banker said this week, is still a problem across the region and the currencies continue to be weak. But despite some devaluations and depreciations, most of them have kept steady in 2016, which is a sign that governments want to keep their economies stable and will spend their reserves to prop them up.

>>And for companies looking to do business in the region, how bad is it?

>>If in 2015 we saw scores of international companies running away from projects in Central Asia and the South Caucasus, this year we’ve seen promising developments, such as the final investment decision for the expansion of the Tengiz oil- field in Kazakhstan and the signing of the contract for the construction of the Rogun dam in Tajikistan, both multibillion-dollar commitments. French hypermarket Auchan has also opened up its long-awaited store in Dushanbe. Perhaps confidence is returning or at least a sense of “let’s just get on with it”.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Tajikistan and Uzbekistan downgrade flights to Pakistan

JULY 19 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Both state-owned Uzbekistan Airways and Tajikistan’s Somon Air have downgraded their links to Lahore, in eastern Pakistan, citing security concerns and dwindling consumer interest.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

 

Kazakhstan’s mobile operator posts Q2 revenues 15% down from 2015

ALMATY, JULY 20 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kcell, Kazakhstan’s largest mobile operator, said Q2 revenues were 15.3% lower than last year because of weak economic conditions and aggressive competition which have driven down prices.

Kcell’s Q2 revenues of 36.4b tenge ($107.7m) represented a slight improvement over the previous quarter, when it posted 35.6b tenge ($107), its worst quarter since an IPO in 2012. Importantly, however, Kcell said that its subscriber base is holding up through an economic downturn.

“In the second quarter we started to see some stabilisation in market prices and subscriber numbers,” the company’s CEO Arti Ots said in a statement.

Increased competition and the depreciation of the tenge currency against the US dollar over the past year have knocked revenues for mobile operators in Kazakhstan.

In April 2016, revenues for all mobile companies in Kazakhstan were down by 21% to 68b tenge ($204m) compared to the same period last year, according to government data.

Sweden’s Telia Company owns a 62% stake in Kcell. It has said that it wants to sell this stake because of reputational damage caused by a corruption probe into bribes it paid to enter the Uzbek market.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Uzbek PM warns Tajikistan on dangers of Rogun

JULY 19 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Uzbek PM Shavkat Mirziyoyev complained to his Tajik counterpart over the signing of a $3.9b contract with Italy’s Salini Impregilo to build the Rogun dam and hydropower station on the Vakhsh river.

Uzbekistan has always opposed the project, which it has said will reduce essential water flow from the Pamir mountains to the Amu Darya river which irrigates Uzbek cotton fields.

For Tajikistan, Rogun carries symbolic value, it will be the world’s tallest dam, and is also economically important.

Mr Mirziyoyev said Tajikistan’s stance will trigger a reaction.

“The persistence with which the Government of Tajikistan seeks at all costs to continue construction of the Rogun hydroelectric power station, cannot but cause anxiety for the possible dangerous and irreparable consequences of such risky steps taken by the Tajik side,” he wrote.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

China to invest in Uzbekistan’s food processing

JULY 19 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — China’s Xinjiang Silu Changlong Investment said it will partner with Uzbekistan’s ministry of economy to establish a $28.7m food processing, packaging and logistics centre in Bukhara, in the south of the country.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)