Tag Archives: border

Tajik and Uzbek officials meet to discuss border issues

JAN. 8 2020 (The Bulletin) — Officials from Tajikistan and Uzbekistan met in Tashkent to approve technical documents that they said should lay the basis for the demarcation of their shared border, a dispute that has at times over the past 30 years has triggered violence. A series of meetings between officials to decide on the border issues are scheduled for this year.

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— This story was first published in issue 433 of the weekly Bulletin on Jan. 13 2020

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Kyrgyzstan evacuates residents near border with Tajikistan

JAN. 10 2020 (The Bulletin) — The authorities in southern Kyrgyzstan temporarily evacuated people living in the village of Kok-Tash because of a series of attacks on the border town that they blame on Tajiks, media reported. Clashes in Kok-Tash, which included gunfire, last month hospitalised several people. Tension between Tajiks and Kyrgyz have been rising.

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— This story was first published in issue 433 of the weekly Bulletin on Jan. 13 2020

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Fighting injures four people near Batken, Kyrgyzstan

DEC. 18 2019 (The Bulletin) — At least four people have been injured in fighting near the town of Batken in south Kyrgyzstan between ethnic Kyrgyz and Tajiks, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reported. A video, reportedly taken at Batken, showed people running through the streets of a village from what sounds like gunfire. There have been several fights this year between Kyrgyz and Tajiks around Batken.
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— This story was first published in issue 432 of the weekly Bulletin on Dec. 27 2019

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Pashinyan stirs up Karabakh tension

YEREVAN/Aug. 5 (The Bulletin) — Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan called for Armenia’s unification with the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, hardline language that immediately drew condemnation from neighbour Azerbaijan.

He made the comments during a visit to the Armenian controlled section of the region which is called Artsakh. During his speech, Mr Pashynian said: “Artsakh is Armenia and that’s it.”

He also led the crowd in chants of “miatsum” which means unification, used as a slogan during the 1990s when the region broke away from Azerbaijan.

A shaky UN ceasefire has held since then, although there are sporadic outbreaks of violence.

Azerbaijan, which has accused Mr Pashinyan of blocking peace negotiations since he took power in a revolution in 2018, issued an immediate rebuke, calling his statements a provocation.
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— This story was first published in issue 418 of the weekly Bulletin

Georgia protests after Putin meets Abkhaz leader

Aug. 7 (The Bulletin) — Georgia’s foreign ministry sent a protest note to Russia after a meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Abkhazian leader Raul Khajimba ahead of the 11th anniversary of a war between Georgia and Russia. Abkhazia is one of two breakaway states in Georgia. The other is North Ossetia. They broke away in the early 1990s after the collapse of the Soviet Union and are effectively Russian vassal states. Only Russia and a handful of other allies recognise Abkhazia and North Ossetia’s independence claims
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— This story was first published in issue 418 of the weekly Bulletin

Turkmenistan mobilises its military reserves (again)

JAN. 15 (The Conway Bulletin) — Turkmenistan has started registering reservists because of concerns over militants in neighbouring Afghanistan, sources at the ministry of defence told Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

Turkmenistan has periodically raised concerns over fighting in neighbouring provinces in Afghanistan. In 2015, President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov ordered all reservists to undertake their first mass military exercise since the 1991 break up of the Soviet Union. This was repeated in 2016, and in 2017 he signed another decree calling up for military service all men over the age of 18.

Analysts have said that Turkmen officials are concerned about worsening stability on their southern border with Afghanistan.

The RFE/RL source said that men under 50 had been told to register with the military. Turkmenistan is officially neutral.

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>>This story was first published in issue 397 of The Conway Bulletin on Jan. 20 2019

Analysts warn of Azerbaijan- Armenia war

JULY 5 2017 (The Bulletin) — Azerbaijan and Armenia are drifting towards war over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, analysts warned after a shell killed a grandmother and her grandchild on the Azerbaijani side of the conflict. Azerbaijan accused the Armenian side of shelling civilians. Armenia-backed rebels said that Azerbaijan had deployed weapons deliberately close to civilians. Commentators have been warning throughout the year that tension in the region is close to triggering another major outbreak of violence. This last exploded in April 2016.

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(News report from Issue No. 336, published on July 16 2017)

 

Russian tourists flock to Georgian breakaway region of Abkhazia

SUKHUMI/Georgia, JULY 16 2017 (The Bulletin) — Russian tourists are flocking to beach resorts in Abkhazia at a greater rate than ever before, giving the breakaway Georgian region an economic boost.

Russian couples walk along Sukhumi’s beachfront promenade and sip Abkhaz wine in newly renovated restaurants. Russian is the main language heard on the streets, shops are filled with Russian products and Russian newspapers are available in local newsagents. The currency used is the Russian rouble.

Abkhazia looks, feels and sounds like a piece of Russia and local residents are, mainly, grateful.

A tourist guide in Novy Afon, around 20km north of Sukhumi told the Bulletin : “Thank God there are the Russians. Not only did they save us when the Georgians wanted to exterminate us but now they make our economy run through tourism.”

It declared independence from Georgia in 1992, triggering a war that killed and displaced thousands of people and lead to a de facto independence. In 2008 after a war with Georgia focused on its two rebel states of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Russia recognised them as independent. Only a handful of other countries looking to curry Russian favours followed.

Moscow subsidises Abkhazia’s state budget and has thousands of troops permanently deployed in the region.

Other than the military and the breakaway region’s administration, bankrolled by the Kremlin, there are few other jobs in Abkhazia, making Russian tourists so important.

And they are coming in their thousands, all via a border crossing with Russia to the north. Last year Avtandil Gartskiya, the tourism minister told the New York Times in an interview that he expected 1.5m tourists per year, up from less than 100,000 a decade ago.

By contrast, references to Georgia have been eradicated, or nearly.

The cuisine gives away Abkhazia’s Georgian connection. Georgia’s food icon, the Ajarian Khachapuri, a boat shaped crusty bread filled with melted cheese and egg, is a firm favourite with the Russian tourists. It’s been subjected to a rebrand, though, and is called ‘lodochka s yaizom’. In English, this simply means ‘boat with egg’.

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(News report from Issue No. 336, published on July 16 2017)

 

Estonian president accuses West of failing Georgia in 2008

TBILISI, JULY 5 2017 (The Bulletin) — In almost her first act as President of the Council of the European Union, Kersti Kaljulaid, Estonia’s president, accused the West of failing to stand up to Russia during its war with Georgia in 2008.

In an interview with Euronews, Ms Kaljulaid said that the failure of the US and Europe to defend Georgia had sent a message to Russian President Vladimir Putin that he could use force to project Russia’s influence over its near abroad. She directly linked Russia’s annexation of the Crimea in 2014 and its support for rebels in east Ukraine with apparent Western indifference towards Georgia six years earlier.

“In Georgia, I believe that the Western world made an error because they didn’t see that they are teaching the wrong lesson,” she said. “In Georgia, Russia learned that if you act, the reaction is relatively mild. And so the avalanche arrived in Crimea.”

The comments will jar with Western leaders who blamed an overzealous Mikheil Saakashvili, then Georgia’s president, for triggering a war with Russia that focused on the rebel region of South Ossetia. Several hundred people died in the short war and thousands were forced to flee their homes when Russian forces pushed back the Georgian army. It was able to set up positions deep inside Georgia and destroy Georgian military equipment and bases before pulling back into Russia.

The upshot of the war was that Russia recognised both Georgia’s rebel states, South Ossetia and Abkhazia, as independent. Only a handful of other countries, and importantly none from the FSU, have followed this lead.

Like scraping off an old scab, Ms Kaljulaid’s comments are painful and important. They reveal the nervousness of ex-Soviet countries, now aligned with the West, towards Russia. These countries consider the Kremlin to be their greatest threat.

“Every country has the right to decide with whom they do business, with whom they associate themselves,” she said. “This does not suit him [Putin]. He is out to change it.”

Estonia holds the Presidency of the Council of the European Union for six months.

The war with Russia marked the beginning of the end for Mr Saakashvili. He had been something of a poster-boy in the West but in the run up to the war had been accused of overstepping his mandate.

By 2012 Mr Saakashvili’s United National Movement party had lost its majority in parliament to the Georgian Dream and by 2013 also the presidency. He is now living in exile, accused by the Georgian authorities of various financial crimes.

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(News report from Issue No. 336, published on July 16 2017)

Russia sends missiles to Azerbaijan

JUNE 24 2017 (The Bulletin) — Russia has sent a batch of new anti- tank missiles to Azerbaijan, the Azerbaijani defence ministry said. It released a video of half a dozen mechanised anti-tank vehicles being unloaded in Baku. Russia has previously been accused of propagating a war between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the disputed region of Nagorno- Karabakh in order to sell more weapons.

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(News report from Issue No. 335, published on July 3 2017)