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Armenia receives aid for Syrian refugees

JUNE 20 2017 (The Bulletin) — The EU included Armenia in a $300m assistance programme for countries which have taken in refugees from Syria, media reported. In total, Armenia will receive around $3.3m of aid from the EU. It has taken in hundreds of refugees, mainly of Armenian heritage, who had been living in Aleppo. The Balkans, Lebanon, Iraq, Turkey and Jordan all received aid from the EU too.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Venice Commission approves of Georgia constitution reform

TBILISI, JUNE 21 2017 (The Bulletin) — Adding to the debate around Georgia’s constitutional reforms, the Venice Commission, which acts as the Council of Europe’s constitution watchdog, described proposed changes as another step positive step towards a parliamentary democracy.

The proposed constitutional changes are controversial because they strip the president of power and hand it to parliament. Parliament is dominated by the Georgian Dream coalition, increasingly opposed to President Giorgi Margvelashvili who was elected under the Georgian Dream ticket but has rowed with his former colleagues.

The Venice Commission’s opinion should dampen an issue which has become increasingly acrimonious.

The constitutional changes also shift the voting system to proportional representation and away from the proportional/majoritarian system considered opaque, another move the Venice Commission praised.

It did say, though, that maintaining a 5% threshold for entering parliament and allowing political blocs to contest elections were detrimental to Georgian democracy.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Uzbek rights activist dies

JUNE 22 2017 (The Bulletin) — Uzbek human rights activist Nuraddin Jumaniyazov has died in prison of tuberculosis, the New York based Human Rights Watch reported by quoting his wife. Jumaniyazov had been arrested in 2014 for human trafficking, charges that his supporters said were politically motivated. Access to Jumaniyazov was limited and his wife said that he died at the end of 2016.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

Armenian Prime Minister wants to stay on

JUNE 21 2017 (The Bulletin) — Armenian PM Karen Karapetyan has hinted that he wants to continue in his job after 2018, the panarmenia.net website reported, when constitutional changes shift power to the PM from the President. Controversy has surrounded the changes as their opponents have alleged that President Serzh Sargsyan, in power since 2008, wants to become PM when his second and final term in office ends in order to secure power. If Mr Karapetyan wants to remain PM it may, potentially, set up a fight for power.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

Kazakhstan strips IS fighters of citizenship

JUNE 22 2017 (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s upper house of parliament approved a bill that will strip people accused of fighting for the extremist IS group in Syria and Iraq of their citizenship. The Kazakh authorities are increasingly worried about returnees from Syria and Iraq spreading radical ideology and fighting techniques if, and when, they move back to Kazakhstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Thin-skinned Kazakh officials dislike EXPO criticism

JUNE 20 2017 (The Bulletin) — Often accused of being thin-skinned, Kazakhstan reacted with fury at an article published by the Washington-based Foreign Policy magazine which said the EXPO
2017 site was boring and had no visitors. Kazakh officials claimed that Foreign Policy journalist James Palmer had never even visited the site before he wrote the story. They then also blocked the Foreign Policy website.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Uzbekistan warns that inflation is accelerating

TASHKENT, JUNE 24 2017 (The Bulletin) — Inflation in Uzbekistan is accelerating fast, the country’s Central Bank said in a rare statement giving economic guidance.

Uzbekistan is Central Asia’s most populous country and the admission will alarm other neighbouring governments who have been hinting at inflationary pressures built into their economies.

As well as warning of inflationary pressures, Uzbekistan’s Central Bank also said that it was pushing up its key interest rate to 14% from 9%, although it was unclear how much impact this rise would have on an economy underpinned by government support and the Black Market.

“This decision is due to an acceleration of inflation over the past period and the need to limit the increased inflationary risks,” the Uzbek Central Bank said in a statement.

“Along with the seasonal fluctuations and supply factors, inflation has been influenced by monetary factors such as the acceleration in lending of the national currency into the economy and its devaluation compared to previous years.”

The unusually frank guidance from the Central Bank may also be linked to both a change in Central Bank chief and a shift in the Uzbek government’s mindset.

Fayzulla Mullajanov, Central Bank chief since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 and a relic from a Soviet-tinged bygone era, died in May. Parliament has approved Mamarizo Nurmuratov as his replacement.

Mr Nurmuratov is another long- serving Central Bank insider and had been Mr Mullajanov’s adviser but he may have been told to open up the reclusive institution by President Shavkat Mirziyoyev. Mr Mirziyoyev has appeared determined to open up Uzbekistan since taking over from Islam Karimov in September last year.

The Uzbek Central Bank’s statement also referenced the depreciation of its currency. It has steadily managed a drop in value of the Uzbek soum of around 0.7% per week over the past year. In the last 12 months it has dropped by around a third to trade, officially, at 3,930/$1. On the Black Market, the soum is trading at 8,300/$1, according to uzdollar.com.

Uzbekistan’s economic woes are mirrored across the region. A drop in oil prices in 2014, reduced the value of its gas exports and triggered a recession in Russia. Uzbekistan, like its Central Asian neighbours, relies on Russia as an economic driver, creating jobs and markets. Remittances from Russia have picked up but are still at a third of the level of 2014.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Georgian news anchor quits to run for mayor

JUNE 24 2017 (The Bulletin) — The charismatic and well-known Georgian TV news reader Zaal Udumashvili said that he was going to run in an election to be the mayor of Tbilisi for the United National Movement party. Mr Udumashvili’s announcement will give the beleaguered party of former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili a boost. He had worked for Rustavi-2, a TV station that is the subject for a battle for control between its current UNM support- ing owners and a businessman with links to the ruling Georgian Dream coalition.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

IMF hands out another loan to Armenia

JUNE 24 2017 (The Bulletin) — The IMF released the fifth and final loan of $21.6m to Armenia, media reported, completing a promised $111.6m deal pledged in 2014. It said that Armenia’s economy was set to improve over the next few years after a tough period. It particular, the IMF praised Armenia’s spending prudence.

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Copyright ©Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Grain harvest to drop in Kazakhstan

JUNE 20 2017 (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan expects its grain harvest to drop to between 17m tonnes and 18m tonnes this year compared to 20.6m tonnes last year, media reported quoting agriculture minister Askar Myrzakhmetov. Grain has become an increasingly important commodity for Kazakhstan over the past decade. A crop of around 18m tonnes is roughly the mean amount that Kazakhstan expects to harvest. In 2009, it har- vested nearly 23m tonnes of grain.

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Copyright ©Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)