Author Archives: Editor

New action movie targets dictator in ‘Turgistan’

DEC. 13 2019 (The Bulletin) — Netflix released a new action film about the overthrow of a dictator from a fictional country called Turgistan, a fantasy land that appears to be based on Turkmenistan.

In the movie ‘6 Underground’, a US tech billionaire launches a privately-funded mission to overthrow Rovach Alimov, president of Turgistan. Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty said that as well as the name, scenes and language used by people in the film make it appear set in Turkmenistan. Central Asia has already featured a handful of times in spoof television programmes and films.

The 2006 film featuring fictional Kazakh reporter Borat caused Kazakhstan’s government years of grief and in 2013 the made-up state of Tazbekistan was the focus of a BBC comedy called ‘Ambassadors’.

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— This story was first published in issue 432 of the weekly Bulletin on Dec. 27 2019

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Kazakhstan completes deal to buy power station from Russia

DEC. 12 2019 (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s national wealth fund, Samruk Kazyna, completed a $25m deal to buy a 50% stake in the Ekibastuz power station-2, the largest power plant in the north of the country, that it didn’t already own from Russia’s Inter RAO. The coal-fired power station reportedly produces around 12% of Kazakhstan’s total power.
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— This story was first published in issue 432 of the weekly Bulletin on Dec. 27 2019

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Georgia raises interest rates

DEC. 12 2019 (The Bulletin) — Georgia’s Central Bank increased its key interest rate by 50 basis points to 9%, its highest level for at least 10 years. This year, the Georgian Central Bank has increased its interest rate from 6.5% in an effort to dampen inflation which it partly blames on its weak currency. It said that inflation now measured 7% and would not fall until March 2020. >> See page 8

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— This story was first published in issue 432 of the weekly Bulletin on Dec. 27 2019

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Romania drops fraud investigation into Kazmunaigas

DEC. 11 2019 (The Bulletin) — Prosecutors in Romania told the AFP news agency that they had dropped an investigation into potential tax fraud by Kazakh state oil and gas company Kazmunaigas linked to its purchase of the oil refinery Petromidia from Rompetrol in 2007. In 2016, Romanian investigators briefly seized control of the refinery before Kazmunaigas threatened international arbitration.
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— This story was first published in issue 432 of the weekly Bulletin on Dec. 27 2019

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Markets: KAZ Minerals’ share price rises on copper

NOV. 27 2019 (The Bulletin) –With little corporate news and only minor economic data, stock prices across the region were steady.

KAZ Minerals, the Kazakhstan-focused copper producer, was the biggest riser, up 4.15% to more than 500p, its highest price since the start of the month. These gains were driven by a rise in the price of copper which jumped 2% over the week.

Central Asia Metals also produces copper from slag heaps in Kazakhstan but its share price stayed broadly even.

The other stock that rose significantly over the week was TBC Bank which was up by 3.3% at 1,244p. It has had a tumultuous year with its share price taking a battering when money laundering charges were made against its founder, Mamuka Khazaradze. He denies the charges. TBC Bank’s share price at the start of the year was 1,522p.

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— This story was first published in issue 430 of the weekly Bulletin on Nov. 27 2019

US’ Tyson Fresh Meats to build beef processing plant in Kazakhstan

ALMATY/DEC. 10 2019 (The Bulletin) –Tyson Fresh Meats, a subsidy of the US food giant Tyson Foods, signed a deal with the Kazakh government and the privately-owned Kazakh industrial conglomerate Kusto to build a production facility in the north of the country.

Neither side released financial information on the deal but media reported that the plant should be able to process up to 2,000 heads of cattle per day. By comparison, Tyson’s facilities in the US process around 20,000 heads of cattle per day.

Steve Stouffer, group president of Tyson Fresh Meats, was quoted as saying: “This opportunity supports one of our growth strategies to expand Tyson’s global business, and we look forward to bringing our expertise and capabilities to the country of Kazakhstan.”

Bordering China, Kazakhstan is also geographically important to Tyson’s Asia development plans. China has imposed a 47% tariff on beef imports from the US, part of the two countries protracted trade war. Beef produced in Kazakhstan will not be subject to this tariff.

Kazakhstan has been positioning itself increasingly as a place for cattle farmers to do business. Ranchers from the US have imported livestock to Kazakhstan and corporations have spent millions on improving facilities and promoting beef as a part of the Kazakh diet.

But the deal with Tyson, one of the biggest meat producers in the world, marks a major moment for Kazakhstan’s meat production sector.

Kazakh PM Askar Mamin said: “Tyson is a world-class company with the expertise necessary to help Kazakhstan jump-start the transformation of our agro-protein capabilities and help us create an ecosystem that will increase our beef herd size and establish conditions to support thousands of new high-quality jobs in the country.”
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— This story was first published in issue 432 of the weekly Bulletin on Dec. 27 2019

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Second batch of low-enriched uranium arrives at IAEA site in Kazakhstan

DEC. 10  2019 (The Bulletin) — A purpose-built storage facility managed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in eastern Kazakhstan received its second and final consignment of low-enriched uranium (LEU). The site in Ust-Kamenogorsk was set up to allow countries developing nuclear power to buy fuel for their power stations safely.

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— This story was first published in issue 432 of the weekly Bulletin on Dec. 27 2019

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Jailed former minister paraded on TV

DEC. 4 2019 (The Bulletin) — Turkmenistan’s state TV showed footage of former interior minister Isgender Mulikov wearing a prison uniform and with his head shaved less than two months after he admitted corruption. Mulikov had been interior minister for a decade when he was arrested and charged with corruption. Analysts have said that parading former ministers on TV as criminals is a ploy by Pres. Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov to shift attention away from Turkmenistan’s faltering economy.
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— This story was first published in issue 431 of the weekly Bulletin on Dec. 9 2019

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Nazarbayev given honorary Central Asia role

DEC. 6 (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s former president, Nursultan Nazarbayev, was named honorary chairman of the Consultative Meeting of the Heads of State of Central Asia, a talking shop for the region’s leaders, at its meeting in Tashkent. Mr Nazarbayev said immediately after quitting the presidency in March this year that he wanted to maintain a role in Kazakh politics. He also sees himself as the elder statesman of Central Asia, a position this title cements.
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— This story was first published in issue 431 of the weekly Bulletin on Dec. 9 2019

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Kyrgyz security forces want to question anti-corruption journalists

DEC. 2 (The Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan’s National Security Committee said that it would call in for questioning journalists who worked on a corruption report produced by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the Berlin-based Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and Bishkek-based news website Kloop. The report highlighted organised crime and corruption at the top levels of the Kyrgyz customs service.
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— This story was first published in issue 431 of the weekly Bulletin on Dec. 9 2019

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