Tag Archives: international relations

Clinton to visit Central Asia

NOV. 29 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – In the wake of WikiLeaks’ publication of confidential files from US Embassies around the world, US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton will visit Central Asia this week. She flies to Kazakhstan for an OSCE summit on Dec. 1, 2010 and then visits Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan before flying on to Bahrain.

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(News report from Issue No. 17, published on Nov. 29 2010)

Uzbekistan builds relations with Qatar

NOV. 23/24 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Uzbekistan’s President Islam Karimov flew to Qatar and signed bilateral agreements promising closer ties between the energy producing nations. This was Karimov’s first trip to Qatar. He has previously spoken about increasing cooperation
with energy producers in the Middle East.
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(News report from Issue No. 17, published on Nov. 29 2010)

With US help, Kazakhstan cleans nuclear site

NOV. 18 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan and the US finished decommissioning a nuclear reactor in eastern Kazakhstan and securing highly enriched uranium and plutonium capable of making 775 nuclear weapons. In Georgia, officials said they arrested four people carrying radioactive material which could have been used in a dirty bomb.

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(News report from Issue No. 16, published on Nov. 22 2010)

The Caspian Sea feud continues

NOV. 22 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Control of the Caspian Sea and its resources are worth arguing over.

It is the biggest inland body of water in the world, covering an area about the size of Germany, and dominates trade routes between Europe and Asia. The Caspian Sea also holds vast stocks of sturgeon which produce the lucrative caviar. Most tantalising, though, is the oil potential.

Its reserves are difficult to estimate but the US Energy Information Administration puts them at between 17b and 44b barrels of oil — equivalent to the oil reserves of Qatar at the bottom end of the scale and to the United States at the upper end.

The five states which border the Caspian Sea — Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia and Turkmenistan — have argued over its ownership for years. On Nov. 18 in Baku the heads of these countries met for their third summit in eight years on how to divide the Caspian Sea and its treasures between them. Once again much was promised but little agreed.

Writing for Asia Times Online, Robert Cutler, a Canada-based academic, commented: “While the framework for a relatively minor security cooperation agreement was endorsed, the summit’s real significance lay in the agreements not reached and documents not signed.”

Before 1991, ownership of the Caspian Sea was less complex as it only needed an agreement between the Soviet Union and Iran. Now, with five countries, it’s far more difficult. Add into the mix the Caspian Sea’s emergence as an energy transit route to Europe and the debates heat up.

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(News report from Issue No. 16, published on Nov. 22 2010)

Kazakhstan will not attend the Nobel Peace Prize

NOV. 18 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Alongside China, Russia, Cuba, Iraq and Morocco, Kazakhstan will not attend the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo next month, the Norwegian Nobel Committee said. This year the committee awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to an imprisoned Chinese dissident angering China. China is one of Kazakhstan’s biggest investors.

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(News report from Issue No. 16, published on Nov. 22 2010)

Caspian Sea countries meet

NOV. 18 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – The leaders of the five countries that border the Caspian Sea met for a summit in Baku to discuss the sea’s disputed ownership but they failed to sign any major agreements. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had arrived on Nov.17 for separate bilateral talks with Azerbaijan’s President.

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(News report from Issue No. 16, published on Nov. 22 2010)

Turkish President visits Turkmenistan

NOV. 11/12 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Continuing a busy diplomatic period, Turkmen President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov hosted talks with Turkish President Abdullah Gul on future energy supplies. Turkey needs extra supplies for the EU-backed Nabucco pipeline which will carry gas from Turkey to Europe.

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(News report from Issue No. 15, published on Nov. 15 2010)

Iranian president to visit Azerbaijan

NOV. 9 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will visit neighbouring Azerbaijan for a two-day Caspian Sea summit starting on Nov. 18, Iranian news agency ISNA said. Iran’s ambassador in Baku later told the Azerbaijani Trend news agency Ahmadinejad would visit on Nov. 17-18 at the invitation of Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev.

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(News report from Issue No. 15, published on Nov. 15 2010)

Kazakhstan to allow US military to increase flights

NOV. 12 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan agreed to allow the US military to use more direct flight routes across its air space. The deal signed in Washington by a senior State Department official and the Kazakh ambassador will save the US military fuel and time on flights to Afghanistan.

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(News report from Issue No. 15, published on Nov. 15 2010)

Georgia and Iran improve links

NOV. 3 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) — Georgia and Iran agreed to drop visa requirements for their nationals and to introduce a direct air link between Tbilisi and Tehran. Iran has been trying to boost relations with the South Caucasus in the face of tightening UN sanctions promoted by the US.

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(News report from Issue No. 14, published on Nov. 8 2010)