Category Archives: Uncategorised

Uzbekistan sets presidential election

DEC. 26 2014, (The Conway Bulletin) — The Uzbek Central Election Commission set a presidential election for March 29 2015. It is thought that the incumbent president, Islam Karimov, will campaign in the election. He has been in power since the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union, although his personal authority has waned.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 213, published on Jan. 7

2015)

Inflation climbs in Tajikistan

>>Central Bank has already increased interest rates this year>>

DEC. 29 2014, (The Conway Bulletin) — Inflation in Tajikistan jumped to over 7% in 2014, the Central Bank said, around double the rate in 2013.

The final figures for the year are not yet out but the Central Bank said annualised inflation up to the end of November had been 6.8% and that this would creep up again when December’s data was analysed.

Tajikistan raised its interest rates in October to 6.9%, its highest level since 2012, up from 4.8% earlier in the year, to try and steady its economy against rising inflation.

With remittances from Russia, which contribute to around 50% of GDP, dropping because of a slowdown in the Russian economy, Tajikistan is facing up to an increasingly tough time.

News that inflation is rising just adds to the headache.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 213, published on Jan. 7 2015)

Azerbaijan to increase grain reserves

JAN. 5 2015, (The Conway Bulletin) — Azerbaijan has said that it will increase by 50% the size of its grain reserves, media reported. Azerbaijan wants to hedge against grain harvest fluctuations by increasing its stored supply to 750,000 tonnes from 500,000 tonnes. Its intervention will push up grain prices.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 213, published on Jan. 7 2015)

Nazarbayev closes in on his enemies

>>Aliyev charged in Austria, Ketebayev arrested in Spain>>

DEC. 30 2014, (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev and his associates have scored two more notable victories over their opponents.

A court in Austria charged Rakhat Aliyev, Mr Nazarbayev’s former son-in-law, with kidnapping and murdering two bankers in 2007 in Kazakhstan. Three days earlier, police in Spain arrested Muratbek Ketebayev, a Kazakh opposition leader linked to the 2011 uprising in the town of Zhanaozen in western Kazakhstan.

Mr Ketebayev was co-founder of the Alga! Party which was close to Mukhtar Ablyazov, for many year’s Mr Nazarbayev’s main opponent until his arrest in France in 2013.

Mr Nazarbayev has been after the extradition of both Mr Aliyev and Mr Ketebayev for years. He wants to avenge what he considers his betrayal by Mr Aliyev in the mid-2000s when he was married to Dariga Nazarbayeva, Mr Nazarbayev’s eldest daughter, and also the uprising at Zhanaozen when police shot dead 15 protesters, triggering the most serious crisis of his presidency.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 213, published on Jan. 7 2015)

Georgian MPs fight in parliament

>>Fighting breaks out after opposition MP swears during speech>>

DEC. 26 2014, (The Conway Bulletin) — Georgia’s parliament descended into farce when a mass brawl reportedly lasting half-an-hour broke out.

The brawl not only debases parliament and parliamentarians in Georgia but also illustrates the deep and intensifying hatred between the two main factions. These are MPs belonging to the Georgian Dream ruling coalition and MPs belonging to the former ruling party of the United National Movement (UNM), the party of ex-president Mikheil Saakashvili.

Video footage from the new parliament in Khutaisi showed dozens of MPs pushing, shouting and trying to punch one another.

Several MPs ripped off the microphones from their desks and hurled them at opponents. The fighting started after MP Akaki Bobokhidze from the UNM used expletives to describe his rivals in the Georgian Dream.

The fight paints Georgian democracy in a bad light. It has made Georgian MPs a laughing stock and portrayed them as a sweary bunch of bar brawlers rather than serious minded politicians.

Both sides will have a lot of cleaning up to do — literally and figuratively — after this debacle. It also, graphically, depicts a increasingly dangerous and personal divide in Georgian politics.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 213, published on Jan. 7 2015)

Book review: Central Asia’s golden age

JAN. 7 2015, MONTREAL (The Conway Bulletin) — Readers looking for an accessible overview of one of the world’s most advanced societies 1,000 years ago, and also a peak at Central Asia’s glory days, should reach for Frederick Starr’s ‘Lost Enlightenment: Central Asia’s Golden Age from the Arab Conquest to Tamerlane’.

The author, an academic based at Johns Hopkins’ School of Advanced International Studies in Washington DC,
takes the reader back to the world of flourishing Silk Road, long before the Russian tsarist armies arrived to colonise the “untamed” steppes and impose rule from Moscow. Starr focuses on the years 800 through to 1100, painting a milieu where education, philosophy and critical thought were highly valued and scholars were revered. The book takes readers right up to the ascension of the Mongols in Central Asia.

Starr is strongest when he describes the conditions that allowed trade to blossom in this period. He describes how Samanid rulers, operating around their capital of Samarkand, took care to limit taxes on locals, understanding that the ultimate success of their state and society rested on the continuing prosperity of traders and producers.

The strength of local mining, which yielded refined tin, lead, copper and other metals, also buttressed the local economy, Starr explains, which then allowed the Samanids to create an export-based economy.

The details in this book gives the reader the opportunity to fully grasp the intellectual activity of the age, and appreciate why orthodoxy — philosophical, religious, or otherwise — failed to take route in most
of the region.

>>’Lost Enlightenment: Central Asia’s Golden Age from the Arab Conquest to Tamerlane.’ 680 pages, Princeton University Press (13 Oct. 2013)

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 213, published on Jan. 7 2015)

Kyrgyzstan to join Eurasian Economic Union

>>Membership to become political ahead of elections>>

DEC. 23 2014, (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan signed a deal that will make it the fifth member of the Eurasian Economic Union (EaEU) in May.

At a meeting in Moscow, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the union, which from Jan. 1 includes Belarus, Kazakhstan and Armenia as well as Russia, would benefit from Kyrgyzstan’s membership.

“All the participants of this integration process are already experiencing its real benefits,” media quoted Mr Putin as saying.

“We are convinced that Armenia and Kyrgyzstan’s membership in the Eurasian [Economic] Union meets the key national interests of both countries.”

Many analysts, though, and people on the streets of Bishkek questioned whether there would be any real economic benefit. Instead, they said that Kyrgyzstan had joined the Eurasian Economic Union for political rather than economic reasons.

Kyrgyzstan is, largely reliant on Russia for economic and military support, but its membership of the Eurasian Economic Union is likely to become a political issue later this year in the run up to its parliamentary election, scheduled for October.

In an interview with Russian state-linked newspaper Rossiskaya Gazeta before the official signing ceremony, Kyrgyz president Almazbek Atambayev waived aside concern.

“When making decisions, we guide solely by economic expediency,” he said.

“This step will revive our industry, strengthen security, open borders with neighbouring countries, improve the standard of living of the people. Entry into this union opens up new opportunities for economic development.”

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 213, published on Jan. 7 2015)

China to invest in Kazakh potash

DEC. 14 2014, (The Conway Bulletin) — China agreed to invest $3.8b into developing Kazakhstan’s potash deposits to produce a mineral that can be used in fertiliser production. The massive investment both underscores China’s interest in Kazakhstan and will also help Kazakhstan diversify its economy away from oil and gas.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 213, published on Jan. 7 2015)

Russia econ problems hit Georgia

DEC. 18 2014, (The Conway Bulletin) — In an interview with Reuters, Georgian PM Georgy Margvelashvili said
that the downturn in the Russian economy had hit Georgia’s alcohol and water exports hardest. Russia allowed imports of water and wine from Georgia last year after a ban in 2006.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 213, published on Jan. 7 2015)

Nazarbayev reassures on oil price slump

DEC. 22 2014, (The Conway Bulletin) — In a televised address, Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayev said he had a plan to counter falling oil prices even if they fell below $40/barrel. Oil prices have now halved from their height last summer to around $50/barrel. Kazakhstan has been building up a reserve of cash to deal with a slump.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 213, published on Jan. 7 2015)