SEPT. 25/28 (The Conway Bulletin) – Armenia-backed forces in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh staged fighter-jet exercises that the Azerbaijani defence ministry immediately condemned as ‘provocative’. Observers have warned that tension over the disputed region is running at a near all-time high. A UN ceasefire organised in 1994 keeps a shaky peace over Nagorno-Karabakh, although fighting broke out in 2016.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018
Tag Archives: Armenia
Carrefour to open second Armenia store
YEREVAN/SEPT. 28 (The Conway Bulletin) — — French hypermarket brand Carrefour is likely to open its second store in Yerevan in October, France’s ambassador to Armenia, Jonathan Lacote, told media.
The opening of another Carrefour store in Yerevan is another sign that Armenia is recovering efficiently from a 2014-17 regional economic downturn. Carrefour opened its first store in Armenia in 2015.
Nikol Pashinyan, Armenian PM since a revolution in April and May, was also quick to hold up the promise of a second Carrefour store as evidence that the country’s fortunes had improved under his careful leadership.
He said that Carrefour had been considering downsizing when he took over as PM.
“One of my first actions was to visit the Carrefour supermarket, because at the time I took office Carrefour was the only supermarket operating lawfully,” he said. “I can now say that this process (of downsizing) is suspended and the process of expansion is guaranteed.”
Carrefour store openings and closings have become important economic barometers in the region. In May 2017, Carrefour closed its only store in Kazakhstan, just 15 months after Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev had opened it, because of weak economic conditions.
By contrast in Georgia, which has had a strong economic resurgence, Carrefour has said it wants to open a third hypermarket.
Dubai-based Majid Al Futtaim operates the Carrefour franchises in Central Asia and the South Caucasus. There are currently 10 Carrefour supermarkets and two hypermarkets in Georgia, one hypermarket in Armenia and one in Tajikistan.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018
Armenia keeps interest rate at 4%
SEPT. 25 (The Conway Bulletin) – Armenia’s Central Bank said annualised inflation by end-August was 3.3%, roughly in-line with its predictions. It kept interest rates at 4% as it expected inflation to drop slightly over the next year. This bucks a trend as other Central Banks have warned inflation is creeping up once again.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018
Armenian intelligence chiefs questioned
SEPT. 27 (The Conway Bulletin) – Prosecutors in Armenia have interviewed two senior intelligence chiefs over a leaked phone call that appeared to show them colluding with other government departments over the detention of former President Robert Kocharyan in July, media reported. Mr Kocharyan was detained, and then released, for his role in the shooting dead of anti-government protesters after elections in 2008.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018
Armenian economy grows 6.5%
SEPT. 27 (The Conway Bulletin) – Armenia’s economy will expand by 6.5% in 2018, higher than the previous expectations of a 4.5% growth, finance minister Atom Janjughazyan told a government meeting. Armenia, like the rest of the region, is rebounding from an economic downturn between 2014-17. A sharp rise in activity in the construction sector has been a key driver of the economic upturn.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018
Close nuclear power station, EU tells Armenia
JAN. 30 (The Conway Bulletin) – The European Union has once again told Armenia that it needs to close its nuclear power station at Metsamor. The power station has become a major source of friction between the EU, which says it is an environmental risk, and Russia, which has lobbied to keep it open. It lies in an earthquake zone but still provides Armenia with 40% of its power as well as giving it a valuable export commodity.
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>>This story was first published in issue 360 of The Conway Bulletin
Sargsyan travels to Georgia
DEC. 25 (The Conway Bulletin) — Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan flew to Tbilisi for talks with his Georgian counterpart Giorgi Margvelashvili that both sides described as “wide-ranging”. From Tbilisi, Mr Sargsyan was heading to Moscow for an informal meeting of heads of states of CIS countries. Armenia’s diplomacy in the South Caucasus is delicate. It needs to cultivate good relations with Georgia to counter its enemies Azerbaijan and Turkey. Georgia, though, through pipeline politics is increasingly close to Ankara and Baku.
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— This story was first published on Jan. 5 2018 in issue 356 of The Conway Bulletin
Armenian randy production soars
JAN 4 (The Conway Bulletin) — Brandy production in Armenia, something of a bellwether for the state of the wider FSU economy, increased by 41% between January and end-November to 27.9m litres, official statistics showed. This comes on top of a 27% increase for the same period in 2016 compared to 2015. Powered by Russia and oil prices, the FSU economies are recovering from a slump in 2014-16.
— This story was first published on Jan. 5 2018 in issue 356 of The Conway Bulletin
Comment: A quick look back at 2017
>> The region’s economies and Uzbekistan’s regeneration under Mirziyoyev are the standout features of 2017, writes James Kilner
JAN 5 (The Conway Bulletin) — For Central Asia and the South Caucasus, 2017 was a year of recovery. There have been the usual rounds of elections, generally predictable and cementing the incumbent powers in Georgia, Armenia and Kyrgyzstan, but economics, and not politics, caught the eye and the bigger headlines in 2017.
The economic stupor that had hung over the region since oil prices collapsed in 2014 and Russia’s economy fell into a recession, was finally thrown off. If, at the start of the year, the green shoots of recovery looked tentative, by October they were coming out into full bloom.
Most countries were posting decent economic growth figures and double-digit inflation, a real worry, has been neatly sidestepped.
Special mention here must go to Georgia which has posted exceptionally strong economic results, pushed on by a spurt in tourism and investment.
There have been some serious economic exceptions, though. Azerbaijan’s economy still shrunk and its banking sector looked as shaky as ever. International Bank of Azerbaijan defaulted on its debt repayments and several smaller banks have had their licenses revoked. Tajikistan also looks increasingly fragile and Turkmenistan, while the information stream coming out of the country is as beguiling as ever, looks like it may have been holed below the waterline. Watch out, in 2018, for a serious fracture in Turkmenistan.
As well as a recovery period for the region’s economies, 2017 was also a year of recovery for Uzbekistan’s political structures and their relationships with society. This will go down as the year that Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev made it clear that he was determined to pursue a reformist agenda after taking over from the authoritarian and brutal Islam Karimov in September 2016.
He devalued the official exchange rate of the Uzbek soum, took thousands of people off blacklists linked to Islamic extremists, reigned in the power of the secret service, encouraged traders to export to neighbouring countries and signed deals with the rest of the region over borders and commerce that his predecessor had spurned.
There is still much to do in Uzbekistan, and some people grumble about the lack of genuine democratic values and the slow pace of human rights progress, but Pres. Mirziyoyev is laying the foundation for a better future for Uzbeks.
If the Conway Bulletin had a ‘Person of the Year’ prize, Mirziyoyev would be a worthy winner.
>> Next week – the first in a 2-part series on what to look out for in 2018
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— This story was first published on Jan. 5 2018 in issue 356 of The Conway Bulletin
Armenia keeps interest rates steady
DEC. 26 (The Conway Bulletin) — Armenia’s Central Bank said that it was going to keep its interest rates steady at 6% although year-on-year inflation rose to 2.2% in November, up from 1.2% in October. The decision will be cheered by business which had warned that a rise in interest rates would dampen growth. Interest rates in Armenia had been at 10.5% in 2015 and have been steadily cut to stimulate economic growth.
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— This story was first published on Jan. 5 2018 in issue 356 of The Conway Bulletin