Tag Archives: Kazakhstan

Another bomb attack hits Kazakhstan

OCT. 31 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A suspected suicide bomber attacked two government buildings in Atyrau, a major Kazakh oil city. The blasts only killed the bomber and caused no significant damage. It was, though, the second attack this year and it raised the prospect of a sustained campaign by militant Islamists in Kazakhstan.

ENDS

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

TV crew attacked in Kazakhstan

OCT. 26 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Kazakh independent internet TV channel Stan TV said four men armed with baseball bats and a gun attacked two of its journalists in western Kazakhstan. The journalists had been reporting on the stand-off between oil workers and a subsidiary of the state oil and gas company Kazmunaigas.

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

Tony Blair builds links with Kazakhstan

OCT. 21 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Quoting sources in Kazakhstan, the FT linked ex-British PM Tony Blair to a $13m deal to advise the Kazakh government. Mr Blair’s consultancy group, which includes staff from his Downing Street days, has agreed to advise Kazakhstan on its social and economic policies, the FT wrote.

Kazakh officials later confirmed the deal. Mr Blair’s press people said that although he had helped set up the group, he personally was no longer involved.

Since Mr Blair left government in 2007 he has been Special Envoy to the Middle East and built up a business as a high profile consultant and adviser through his company Tony Blair Associates.

Whatever the exact nature of his engagement with the Kazakh government, it would be one of his biggest clients as well as one of his most controversial.

President Nursultan Nazarbayev has ruled over Kazakhstan for all 20 years of its independence, international observers have never deemed an election to be free and fair and rights groups criticise its draconian approach to the media.

But Kazakhstan has recently developed a love for consultants. It is a country which has always had a slight air of insecurity about it, more so after the emergence in 2006 of the boorish fictional character Borat. Now, buoyed by its energy wealth, Kazakhstan is increasingly confident and wants to project a more serious image.

There are already plenty of Western advisers, consultants and PR gurus in Astana. Perhaps it was only ever a matter of time before Kazakhstan’s and Mr Blair’s interests converged.

ENDS

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

Wages increase by 15% in Kazakhstan

OCT. 17 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Wages rose roughly 15% in Kazakhstan during the 12 months to August, local media quoted Kazakhstan’s statistics agency as saying, an indication that inflation is rising fast in Central Asia’s largest economy. The government has said it expects the Kazakh economy to grow by around 7% a year in 2011 and 2012.

ENDS

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

Kazakhstan’s KMG EP drops production forecast

OCT. 10 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – KMG EP, the London-traded unit of Kazakh state oil and gas company Kazmunaigas, downgraded its oil production forecast for 2011 again because of strikes and powers cuts at fields in the west of Kazakhstan. It said it would miss its initial 2011 goal by 8.4% now. In August, KMG EP said production would be 6% below the initial forecast.

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(News report from Issue No. 60, published on Oct. 11 2011)

Kazakhstan’s Communist party suspended

OCT. 5 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A court in Kazakhstan suspended for six months the opposition Communist Party for trying to team up with an unregistered party with links to exiled billionaire Mukhtar Ablyazov who wants to unseat President Nursultan Nazarbayev. The ban could mean the Communist party misses the next parliamentary election which is scheduled for the first half of 2012.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 60, published on Oct. 11 2011)

Karachaganak row inches forward in Kazakhstan

OCT. 5 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Timur Kulibayev, head of the Kazakh sovereign wealth fund Samruk-Kazyna, said Kazakhstan would pay up to $1b for a 10% stake in the oil and gas project Karachaganak. His statement raised hopes that the state and the Karachaganak investors were nearing an end to their long-running dispute.

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(News report from Issue No. 60, published on Oct. 11 2011)

Putin’s Eurasian Union shapes up

OCT. 4 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – So it’s finally official. The Kremlin sees the Russia-Belarus-Kazakhstan Customs Union as a tool for further integration.

In an article for the newspaper Izvestiya on Oct. 4, Russian PM Vladimir Putin wrote of his vision for a Eurasian Union based around Moscow’s leadership emerging from the customs union. The timing of this article underlined its importance. This was Mr Putin’s first major policy statement since Sept. 24, 2011 when he said he would return as Russian president.

For Central Asia, but not yet for the South Caucasus, the customs union is already important. Kazakhstan is an enthusiastic member, Kyrgyzstan has officially applied to join and Tajikistan is thinking about it.

Russia uses the customs union as a bulwark against the growing influence of China and the West in Central Asia, a region it considers to be its natural sphere of influence.

Although Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan may be able to afford to resist, for Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan it has become politically and economically important to join the customs union.

Kazakhstan’s President Nursultan Nazarbayev can also claim to have been the first to float the idea of a Eurasian Union. He mentioned the concept during a speech at a Moscow university in 1994.

Now, 17 years later, this Eurasian Union is gaining momentum.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 59, published on Oct. 4 2011)

Kazakhstan to decide on Karachaganak stake by year-end

OCT. 4 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A deal will be signed by 2012 on the size of the stake Kazmunaigas will take in the Karachaganak gas field, the head of BG in Central Asia, Chris Finlayson, told the Kazenergy Forum in Astana. BG is part of the consortium developing Karachaganak, the only major energy project in Kazakhstan the government is not involved in.

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(News report from Issue No. 59, published on Oct. 4 2011)

Kazakhstan supplies cheap gas to Kyrgyzstan

SEPT. 28 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyzstan will buy gas from Kazakhstan at half the price it had been paying Uzbekistan, media quoted Kyrgyz acting deputy PM Omurbek Babanov as saying. In return, Kyrgyzstan has agreed to increase electricity supplies to southern Kazakhstan. There has been constant friction between Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan over gas and water supplies.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 59, published on Oct. 4 2011)