Author Archives: Editor

Azerbaijan and Armenia trade more accusations over border violations

JUNE 2 2021 (The Bulletin) — Azerbaijan said that 40 Armenian soldiers had crossed into its territory but that they had been forced to retreat, an accusation that was immediately denied by Armenia. It wasn’t clear if there had been any combat. Both sides have accused the other of violating borders. Armenia has also said that Azerbaijani forces had captured its soldiers. Azerbaijan defeated Armenia in a war last year for control of Nagorno-Karabakh.

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— This story was published in issue 487 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on June 9 2021

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Kyrgyzstan says it is now in full control of Kumtor

BISHKEK/JUNE 1 2021 (The Bulletin) — The Kyrgyz government said that it was now in full control of the Kumtor gold mine even though its Canadian owners have started legal action to stop its expropriation.

Showing off the Kumtor mine, sited in the Tien Shan mountains in eastern Kyrgyzstan, to journalists, Nurdin Usenov, the acting chief production manager, said that the site was operational and would stick to its previous output plans of 14.62 to 15.86 tonnes of gold this year.

“All units are working without interruptions at the moment,” he was quoted as saying.

The expropriation, hinged around an environmental fine, of Kumtor from Toronto-listed Centerra Gold has been swift. Foreign businessmen have said it has turned Kyrgyzstan into an “investment pariah” but for Pres. Sadyr Japarov, who seized power during a coup last year, taking over the highly-prized Kumtor is a political masterstroke, a domestic one at least. He has achieved in seven months what other Kyrgyz leaders had only talked about for years.

In Bishkek, the pressure on people associated with Kumtor appears to be ongoing. Media reported that police in the Kyrgyz capital had arrested five politicians, including former PM Omurbek Babanov, on various corruption charges linked to the mine.

Centerra Gold has launched international arbitration over ownership of Kumtor and on May 31 it said that its Bishkek subsidiary had filed for bankruptcy.

“The actions are designed to preserve the value of Centerra’s wholly owned subsidiaries … and prevent any further efforts by the Kyrgyz Government to strip KGC of its assets or otherwise improperly dispose of the Kumtor Mine in violation of its investment agreements with the Company,” it said in a statement.

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— This story was published in issue 486 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on June 2 2021

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Sixt rental car signs franchise deal in Azerbaijan

JUNE 1 2021 (The Bulletin) — Sixt, the Munich-headquartered car rental company, concluded a franchise agreement with Azerbaijan-based Smart Rent a Car. Sixt, which is still run by the Sixt family, has been expanding its franchises over the past few years and already has franchise partners in Armenia and Georgia.

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— This story was published in issue 487 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on June 9 2021

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Kutmor expropriation damages other gold miners

BISHKEK/MAY 25 2021 (The Bulletin) — — The expropriation of the Kumtor gold mine in Kyrgyzstan is having a knock-on effect on other businesses, British miner Chaarat Gold said in a statement to the London Stock Exchange in which it warned that it was having difficulties financing its Kyrgyz project.

Chaarat Gold, which also owns a gold concession in Armenia, is exploring the Tulkubash area in Kyrgyzstan and has now pushed back its expected extraction of the gold from the site to the end of 2023 because of the pandemic, political unrest and the expropriation of Kumtor which is
owned by Canada’s Centerra Gold.

“The extensive media coverage of the discussions between Centerra and the Kyrgyz Republic is expected to be negatively perceived by potential future debt or equity investors and possibly result in a delay in the project financing,” it said.

Foreign business leaders have said that Kyrgyzstan has turned itself into an “investment pariah” after the government slapped a $3.1b fine on Kumtor for environmental infringements and then took over the mine.

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— This story was published in issue 485 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on May 25 2021

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Kyrgyzstan seizes control of Kumtor gold mine

BISHKEK/MAY 17 2021 (The Bulletin) — — Canada’s Centerra Gold accused Kyrgyzstan of illegally seizing control of the Kumtor gold mine, the country’s biggest industrial project.

As a response to the seizure of the mine, Centerra Gold said that it had started international arbitration proceedings and frozen Kyrgyzstan’s 26% stake in the company.

“The Kyrgyz Government effectively seized control of the Kumtor Mine over the weekend of May 15 and 16, 2021 by sending Government authorities to the mine, Kumtor’s office in Bishkek and the homes of several Kumtor employees,” it said in a statement. “Consequently, Centerra is no longer in control of the Kumtor Mine.”

Its shares, which are listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, have lost a third of their value this month after the Kyrgyz parliament passed a law that would allow it to expropriate Kumtor and also issued it with a $3.1 environmental fine.

The Kyrgyz government has for more than a decade said that it wanted to own a direct stake in Kumtor but it has taken the firebrand populist Pres. Sadyr Japarov, who seized power after a coup in October, to push the process along to this point.

Immediately after taking power, Mr Japrov had sought to calm worried foreign investors by assuring them that despite previously calling for the nationalisation of Kutmor, he would leave it alone.

But now Western businessmen and diplomats based in Bishkek have looked on seemingly helpless as the Kyrgyz authorities started to make good on Mr Japarov’s long-held ambition.
In a joint statement, the Canadian and British governments said that the nationalisation of Kumtor was now “probable”.

“Measures that negatively impact trade and foreign direct investment will further undermine already fragile economic livelihoods of the Kyrgyz people,” they said.

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— This story was published in issue 484 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on May 18 2021

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Japarov sets his sights on grabbing Kumtor

>> Canada’s Centerra Gold is going to have a tough fight on its hands if it wants to keep control of the Kumtor gold mine in Kyrgyzstan, writes James Kilner

MAY 11 2021 (The Bulletin) — Investors had already been wary of Kyrgyz president Sadyr Japarov. He has a reputation as a nationalistic firebrand, a populist with a ruthless streak.

Despite his reassurances when he seized power in Kyrgyzstan in October after being sprung from prison in a coup, they have been proved right. And now, as one well-plugged in observer in Bishkek who is close to foreign investors told The Bulletin, after passing a law and imposing a fine that sets up the expropriation of the Kumtor gold mine, Japarov has turned Kyrgyzstan into an “investment pariah”.

Kumtor is the biggest industrial asset in Kyrgyzstan, making up around 15% of its GDP. Various governments have tried to take a direct stake in Kumtor but Centerra Gold has managed to fend them off. Instead, the Kyrgyz government owns a 27% stake in Centerra Gold.
But Japarov, as we have seen since October, is determined.

Fighting on the streets of Bishkek between his supporters and police after a disputed parliamentary election in October now looks more and more like a set-up, a cover to spring Japarov from prison and grab the presidency. This wasn’t a popular uprising or a people’s revolution, this was a well-planned coup.

Within a fortnight, Japarov had seen off his rivals, faced down pressure from the Kremlin and forced Sooronbai Jeenbekov to give him the presidency. This year, he easily won a presidential election and then pushed through changes to the constitution that hands him more power.

All this while keeping his popularity ratings genuinely high. Japarov is the people’s champion and he knows it. It’s a role that he has been playing throughout his career and now that he has secured his position as president, he can claim what he sees as his crowning glory – taking control of Kumtor.

Centerra Gold has said that it will resist attempts by Kyrgyzstan to take control of Kumtor but in its statement there was also a hint of resignation.

It knows that with the lightning-quick passing through parliament of a law that allows the government to expropriate assets, followed by a ludicrously large $3.1b fine for environmental damage, that Japarov has set his sights on Kumtor.
And what Japarov wants, he gets. At least so far.

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— This story was published in issue 483 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on May 11 2021

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Kyrgyzstan sets up seizure of Kumtor gold mine

BISHKEK/MAY 8 2021 (The Bulletin) — — A court in Kyrgyzstan slapped a $3.1b environmental fine on the Kumtor gold mine, owned by Canada’s Centerra Gold, the day after parliament passed a law that said that the state could take over companies that threaten people’s lives or the environment.

Centerra Gold said that the fine was “meritless” and observers said that the move looked like an attempt by the Kyrgyz government to set up the expropriation of the gold mine.

Shares in Centerra Gold, which holds other assets in Turkey and Canada, lost a third of their value. Centerra Gold, which is 27% owned by the Kyrgyz government, has resisted previous attempts by Kyrgyzstan to take a direct stake in Kumtor, the country’s single biggest industrial asset.

“However, no assurances can be given that…claims impacting KGC or Centerra can be resolved without a material impact on the Company,” it said in a reaction to the new law.

The law, that effectively legalises qualified expropriations, appeared to take people by surprise. Within one day it had been proposed, passed its three readings and been adopted by parliament. The sponsor of the bill was Akylbek Japarov, who is also the chairman of a state commission that was set up in February to investigate alleged shortcomings at Kumtor.

As for the $3.1b environmental fine, a judge said that Kumtor had illegally placed waste rock on glaciers at its high altitude site in the Tien Shan mountains.

Foreign investors have been wary of the nationalist and populist Pres. Sadyr Japarov since he soared to power in October after being sprung from prison during a coup. Since then he has secured his position as the champion of the people through a referendum that tweaked the constitution and an election win.

One Bishkek-based investor said that Kyrgyzstan was turning into an “investment pariah”.

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— This story was published in issue 483 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on May 11 2021

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Comment — Mirziyoyev needs to deliver reform and not just talk about it

MARCH 15 (The Bulletin) — Perhaps the gloss is beginning to flake off the Shavkat Mirziyoyev project. 

In an unusually long press release, the New York-based Human Rights Watch accused Mirziyoyev, Uzbekistan’s president, and his government of tinkering rather than actually making any meaningful reforms in its much vaunted changes to the Criminal Code.

This, Human Rights Watch said, is an opportunity missed as it “falls short of protections to which women, victims of torture, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people are entitled under international law”.

For example, on religion the new criminal code relaxes previously harsh rules that could see you put in prison for disseminating religious text but on defamation, which is often used to silence critics of powerful people and business leaders across Central Asia, the law hasn’t changed despite a headline-grabbing announcement last year that it would.

This is stinging criticism from Human Rights Watch.

Since coming to power in 2016 after the death of the reclusive and repressive Islam Karimov, Mirziyovev has made great play of his plans to open up the economy and society. Things have improved, as Human Rights Watch pointed out, but emphasis seems to be changing now. Is Mirziyoyev making the same mistakes as his predecessor and other Central Asian leaders? Is he beginning to believe his own hubris? He was PM under Karimov, after all.

News reported by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty that Mirziyoyev has built himself a large dacha, or palace as some people have been calling it, in the hills outside Tashkent is in itself not a surprise, but the denials and cover-up were bizarre and obtuse. It had all the characteristics of a man more concerned with is image than with being straight with his own people.

And there is his family too, which has become increasingly prominent, especially his daughter Saida Mirziyoyeva, who represents her father at official meetings and on overseas trips.

It is too early to draw close comparisons but Karimov also started out talking up a more liberal agenda before switching to autocracy and promoting his own daughter, Gulnara Karimova. Mirziyoyev needs to concentrate on delivering real reforms and not just talking about them.

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— This story was published in issue 475 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on March 15 2021

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Markets — Georgian stocks push on lockdown relaxations

MARCH 15 (The Bulletin) — Stocks in the region mainly pushed up with Bank of Georgia, listed on the London Stock Exchange, recording a rise of more than 10%. Its share price has been volatile over the past few weeks with results highlighting the negative impact of the coronavirus pandemic on profits, although in a  later statement the bank said that it was looking forward to a far better 2021.

Georgia Capital, the beer-to-healthcare conglomerate, also saw its share price increase, pushed up by a relaxation in coronavirus pandemic conditions and what analysts said were signs of an economic bounce back. 

The region’s metal producers saw their share price slide slightly. a consequence of some profit-taking.

Kaspi Bank, the Kazakh fintech stock and one of the current stars of the London Stock Exchange, saw its share price rise by another 0.9%, continuing its strong run.

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— This story was published in issue 475 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on March 15 2021

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Markets — Currencies steady despite political turbulence

MARCH 15 (The Bulletin) — Currency markets in Central Asia and the South Caucasus were once again subdued. The Armenian dram continued to slip slightly, down 0.2%,  dragged down by its protracted post-war political crisis. It lost a war against Azerbaijan for control of Nagorno-Karabakh in November last year and PM Nikol Pashinyan has been fending off calls to resign ever since.

The Armenian Central Bank has said that it will do all it can to prop up the currency and analysts have said that its sales of US dollar reserves has stemmed a run on the dram.

In neighbouring Georgia, which has also been convulsed by political instability, the Georgian lari was steady at 3.3141/$1. An intervention by the European Union, which is trying to mediate between opposition forces and government, has given the market hope that the political standoff will end. 

Other currencies were flat, with the Uzbek soum trading slightly down.

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— This story was published in issue 475 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on March 15 2021

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021