Category Archives: Uncategorised

Witness recants statement in Kyrgyz court

NOV. 1 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — One of the key witnesses in the trial against Kyrgyz human rights activist Azimzhan Askarov recanted her testimony against her former colleague saying that she had been threatened by the police. Under pressure from the UN and the US, in July Kyrgyzstan’s Supreme Court ordered a re-trial of Askarov’s case. He was given a life sentence in September 2010 after being accused of inciting ethnic hatred in a revolution that toppled former President Kurmanbek Bakiyev earlier that year. Human rights lobby groups say the accusation were fabricated.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)

Kazakhstan’s KEGOC pays dividend

OCT. 28 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s state-owned electricity distributor KEGOC said it paid a dividend of almost 25 tenge (7 cent) per share, amounting to 40% of the net profit for the first half of 2016. The dividend is almost three times as large as the one distributed last year. At a shareholder’s meeting, KEGOC also decided to expand its board of directors to eight, appointing two new local managers.

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(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)

Kazakh court sentences man to death

NOV. 2 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A court in Almaty sentenced Ruslan Kulekbayev to death for killing 10 people during a shooting spree earlier this year. Like Russia, Kazakhstan has a moratorium on the death sentence and Kulekbayev will instead serve a life sentence. If the moratorium is lifted, though, he will be placed on Death Row. Kulekbayev had previously said that his shooting spree in July, which started with the murder of a prostitute in the southern city of Shymkent, was a personal form of revenge against a society which he felt had rejected him. The court, though, said that he was an Islamic extremist.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)

Nationwide blackout hits Tajikistan

OCT. 28 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A three-hour nationwide blackout hit Tajikistan after a power outage temporarily halted the Nurek hydropower plant, casting doubts over the stability of the country’s electricity system. The government opened an investigation on the incident and introduced the traditional winter power rationing scheme from Nov. 1. Hydropower stations produce less power in winter months because the water levels in their reservoirs drop as the depth of snow higher up the mountains increases. The issue of Tajikistan’s power production is particularly important currently because it, along with Kyrgyzstan, is supposed to be powering up to send electricity supplies to Pakistan through the World Bank-backed CASA-1000 project.

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(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)

Kazakhstan not to consider nuclear plans

NOV. 2 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s energy minister Kanat Bozumbayev said that the government will not consider proposals to build any new power plants for the next seven years because the country’s energy balance is stable. The issue of building a nuclear or coal-fired power plant has been on and off for years in Kazakhstan. It appears that an economic downturn, which has drained the government’s reserves, has finally snuffed out these plans altogether.

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(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)

US Court postpones decision on Uzbekistan’s late-President daughter

NOV. 3 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A US judge postponed a final decision on the handling of illicit funds accumulated by Gulnara Karimova, daughter of Uzbekistan’s late-President Islam Karimov. Judge Andrew Carter ordered that the US and Uzbek parties will have to reach an agreement by the end of January 2017, a three-month extension on the previous deadline that expired on Nov. 2. The funds, around $600m which a US court had ring- fenced as illegal under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, are currently held in a Swiss bank account.

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(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)

CPC exports from Kazakhstan rise

NOV. 1 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Caspian Pipeline Consortium, an oil transit route along the northern coast of the Caspian Sea from Kazakhstan’s oil fields to the Russian port of Novorossiysk, said it increased exports in October to around 4m tonnes, a 24% rise compared to last year. For the first 10 months of 2016, exports have reached 35.3m tonnes. If growth projections continue for the next two months, the Consortium, led by US-based Chevron, Russia’s Transneft and Kazakhstan’s Kazmunaigas, will register a record export year in 2016.

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(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)

Shell cuts costs in Kazakhstan

NOV. 1 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — British-Dutch oil company Shell said it will cut costs across the board, a move that is poised to impact the company’s expenditure in Kazakhstan. In Kazakhstan, Shell operates a handful of offshore fields, most notably the giant Kashagan, and is also involved in the Karachaganak gas and condensate field. Sustained low oil prices have hit energy companies’ ability to spend on their upstream projects.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)

Turkmenistan completes railway construction

OCT. 31 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Turkmenistan’s foreign ministry said that construction work at a railway network connecting Atamyrat-Imamnazar to Akina in Afghanistan was complete. The two countries had started building the 88km railway connection in mid-2013. Altcom, a Ukrainian company, built two of the railway’s bridges. Turkmenistan and Afghanistan have tried to improve diplomatic ties to jointly combat Islamic extremists who threaten Turkmenistan’s southern border.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)

Georgian Dream’s election victory

NOV. 4 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — >> This has been a long election period in Georgia. Is it finally over?

>> I agree, it really has felt like a long process. This is partly because of the long campaign build up and partly because of Georgia’s complicated electoral system. There have been two main election rounds. The first on Oct. 8 was nationwide and included both a proportional representation element and a majoritarian element. At the end of this process, there were 50 seats which still had not elected a majoritarian MP. In these seats the top two candidates went head-to- head in a run-off on Oct. 31, giving the final tally.

>> Right. So to win a majoritarian seat you have to poll more than 50% of the votes. Is that right?

>> Yes, that’s right. A majoritarian seat, as the name suggests, is not a simple first-past-the-post system. The winner needs to poll more than half the votes, that’s why 50 seats needed a run-off.

>> So what is the final result? What is the breakdown?

>> Overall, the Georgian Dream won 115 seats out of the 150-seat parliament. This means they passed the 113-seat hurdle they needed to clear to allow them to change the constitution without relying on support from other parties. Georgian Dream won around 48% of the vote but the majoritarian system handed them a large majority. In 2012 the Georgian Dream won 85 seats, so this election represents a major success for them. By contrast the United National Movement party of Mikheil Saakashvili saw the number of seats it won collapse to 27 from 65. It was a disastrous election for them. Despite their fighting talk in the build up to the vote, voters essentially rejected the UNM and any possibility of a return to mainstream Georgian politics for Mikheil Saakashvili. He is currently the governor of the Odessa region in Ukraine. He’ll probably stay there for some time.

>> Is this it for the UNM, then?

>> That’s unclear but they need to have a major rebrand and to drop Saakashvili from their image. He comes with serious baggage, not least dire relations with Russia and allegations of torture in prisons during his time as president. The problem for the UNM is that he is such a dominating personality it might not be possible to just ditch him. To come back from that would represent quite a feat.

>> And, wasn’t there another party which did reasonably well?

>> Yes, the nationalistic and traditional Alliance of Patriots came up on the inside, unnoticed. It came third with just over 5% of the vote, giving it six seats in parliament. They are to the right of the Georgian Dream in their politics. The Industrialists party and an independent also won a seat each through the majoritarian system.

>> This gets complicated. So what does all this mean for Georgia?

>> Essentially this election confirms the Georgian Dream’s utter dominance. This is a crushing victory. On a policy level, the Georgian Dream has a constitutional majority to changes things as much as they want. They have already ripped up the form book in politics and they may want to do the same with society. They now have the power to do this and they have started already by promoting a change in the constitution that locks down marriage as an act only between man and woman. Georgian Dream has an agenda. They now have a four year window to impact how Georgian society operates. Expect some radical policies to come out of Georgia’s government in these four years.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 303, published on Nov. 4 2016)