Tag Archives: economy

Peace Corps quits Kazakhstan

NOV. 23 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Citing “operational considerations”, the US Peace Corps hastily began to withdraw its 117 volunteers and staff from Kazakhstan on Nov. 18, dealing a significant blow to the country’s reputation as one of the most stable states in the former Soviet Union.

Although Peace Corps, which sends thousands of young Americans abroad every year mainly to teach English and spread US ideals, was vague on why it was pulling out of Kazakhstan after 18 years, its volunteers were not. They said worsening security had triggered the evacuation.

Earlier in November a Peace Corps volunteer in central Kazakhstan, was allegedly raped and less than a week before the pull out was announced a gunman linked to militant Islam killed seven people in the south of the country. This was just the latest attack linked to Islamic militants in Kazakhstan this year.

Since the news more evidence of threats and violence directed specifically at Peace Corps volunteers in Kazakhstan has seeped out.

This is all bad enough for Kazakhstan’s image but perhaps more remarkable was its reaction.

Peace Corps was suddenly withdrawing from Kazakhstan, the Kazakh education ministry wrote, because the country had developed so rapidly over the last 20 years it was no longer needed.

In other words, this was a triumph for Kazakhstan and recognition of its great progress. The “operational considerations”, the alleged rape, the threats and the rising Islamic militant linked violence were all ignored.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 66, published on Nov. 23 2011)

GM Uzbekistan opens new car engine plant

NOV. 18 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A joint venture headed by US carmaker General Motors (GM) opened an engine assembly plant in Tashkent, local media reported. The opening comes a few weeks after US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Uzbekistan. The joint venture also owns a car assembly factory in Andijan, east Uzbekistan.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 66, published on Nov. 23 2011)

Tajikistan-Russia spat escalates

NOV. 16 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A row over Tajikistan’s imprisonment of two ethnic Russian pilots for smuggling has escalated and threatens to do long-term damage to Tajik-Russian relations.

As reported in the Conway Bulletin issue of Nov. 8, Russia reacted with indignant fury at the 8-1/2 year prison sentences handed out by a provincial Tajik court on Nov. 8 2011 to Vladimir Sadovnichy, a Russian citizen, and Alexei Rudenko, an Estonian citizen.

The Russian foreign ministry said the sentences would damage Tajikistan. Since then immigration officers in Russia have rounded up hundreds of Tajik workers.

Around 300 have already been expelled for not having the correct paperwork, according to Russian media. If many more are sent back home it will begin to hurt Tajikistan as almost half its national income derives from remittances.

Russian President Dmitri Medvedev says the immigration officials’ actions are a coincidence and not revenge for the prison sentences.

Most commentators, though, don’t see it that way.

Central to the row is what Sadvonichy and Rudenko were doing when they landed their two cargo planes in Tajikistan without permission on a routine Kabul-Moscow flight. They say they desperately needed fuel. Tajik officials say they were trying to smuggle in a jet engine.

Already strained by negotiations earlier this year over Russia’s lease of a military base in Tajikistan, Tajik-Russian relations are now taking another battering.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 65, published on Nov. 16 2011)

Central Asian countries want a stronger SCO

NOV. 7 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – At a meeting in St Petersburg, PMs from the six countries in the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) said they wanted to set up a development bank. Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan are members of the SCO which is lead by Russia and China. Many analysts see the SCO as a bulwark against western interests in the region.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 64, published on Nov. 8 2011)

Georgia and Russia seal WTO deal

NOV. 8 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – So, finally after months of on-off talks in Switzerland, Georgian and Russian negotiators agreed a deal that should allow Russia to join the WTO by the end of the year. Russia started negotiations to join the WTO in 1993, so it’s been a long journey.

As a member of the 153-nation WTO, Georgia had the right to veto Russia’s membership and, sensing an opportunity to extract concessions, it has played its cards heavily.

After the deal, Mikheil Saakashvili, Georgia’s president, was quick to highlight what he considered was a diplomatic victory.

“What we have achieved today is a very important acknowledgment of what Georgia’s customs borders are,” he said on national television.

But was it really such an outstanding victory?

In return for accepting Russia’s membership in the WTO, Georgia won a concession to allow a private company to position observers on the Russian border with South Ossetia and Abkhazia. The observers will monitor trade in and out of both Georgia’s rebel regions.

This is more than the Russians originally offered but under pressure from the Europeans and the Americans who both want Russia to join the WTO, Georgia also had to make compromises.

The finer details of the deal haven’t been released yet but when they are it will be clearer whether Mr Saakashvili’s grand standing it justified.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 64, published on Nov. 8 2011)

S&P upgrades Kazakhstan’s debt rating

NOV. 8 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Ratings agency Standard & Poor’s upgraded Kazakhstan’s sovereign debt rating to BBB+, one notch above Russia. The upgrade is a significant boost to Kazakhstan’s political and business elite. Standard & Poor’s highlighted Kazakhstan’s projected increase in oil exports.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 64, published on Nov. 8 2011)

Georgia-Russia WTO deal looms

OCT. 31 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – After months of negotiations, diplomats said Georgia and Russia were nearing a deal which would allow Russia to join the WTO. Media reports said Georgia had accepted the Swiss compromise deal although Russia had requested more time. No details of the deal were available.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 63, published on Nov. 1 2011)

Non-oil GDP growth booms in Azerbaijan

OCT. 26 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Underscoring Azerbaijan’s economy growth, the IMF said that its non-oil economy will grow by 8.9% this year. Growth rates will slow slightly in 2012, the report said. Fuelled by oil, Azerbaijan has one of the fastest growing economies in the world.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 63, published on Nov. 1 2011)

Georgia could drop objections to Russia’s WTO bid

OCT. 24 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Georgia will drop its objections to Russia joining the WTO if international monitors are stationed in its breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Russian media quoted Georgian foreign minister Nino Kalandadze as saying. Georgia holds the final veto on Russia joining the WTO. More talks are scheduled in the coming days.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 62, published on Oct. 25 2011)

Uzbekistan’s cotton fair attracts sales of $550m

OCT. 14 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Uzbekistan sold cotton worth $550m at its annual cotton fair, local media reported, despite increasing scrutiny over allegations it uses children to pick the harvest. This is roughly the same amount as last year. Local media reported that none of the companies that signed deals at the fair in Tashkent were from Europe or the US.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 61, published on Oct. 18 2011)