Tag Archives: Kyrgyzstan

Russia is looking at funding Kyrgyz hydro projects once again

DEC. 22 (The Conway Bulletin) — Russia is, apparently, looking at potentially funding hydropower projects in Kyrgyzstan two years after it pulled out of a $700m deal to finance the development of the Kambar-Ata-1 hydropower station and four smaller projects along the Upper Naryn River. Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty quoted Russian deputy PM Arkady Dvorkovich as hinting that Russia was looking again at potential projects. Kyrgyzstan has not found an alternative funder for the Upper Naryn river projects since Russia pulled out.

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— This story was first published on Jan. 5 2018 in issue 356 of The Conway Bulletin

Currency market: Lari falls but finishes 2017 up

JAN. 5 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Georgian lari yo-yoing showed no sign of stopping as it came off recent highs to fall 1.2% in the period from Dec. 22. On Dec. 22, the Georgian lari had been valued at 2.534/$1 compared to its current value of 2.589/1. It finished the year at 6.6% higher than its 2017 starting value.

The other big mover over the Christmas period was the Kyrgyz som. It rose 1.2% to 68.93/$1 and finished the year nearly 0.5% stronger against the US dollar.

Indeed only two currencies out of the eight in the Central Asia and the South Caucasus region were weaker on New Years eve 2017 then they were on the first trading day of the year.

The Uzbek authorities effectively devalued their soum currency in September when they released it from its various US dollar pegs. It immediately lost half its value to trade at around 8,100/$1 and has stayed there ever since.

The other losing currency of 2017 was the Tajik somoni. Pushed down by bad fundamentals and a failing banking system it finished the year 12% lower at 8.8277/$1.

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— 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

Kyrgyzstan accuses Kazakhstan of political meddling

BISHKEK/SEPT. 20 (The Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan exchanged testy diplomatic notes after Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayev travelled to Bishkek to meet with Omurbek Babanov, a former PM and a high-profile opposition candidate in next month’s presidential election.

Immediately after news of meeting between Mr Nazarbayev and Mr Babanov broke, the Kyrgyz government complained that the Kazakh government was trying to influence the election. 

The Kazakh government replied in kind, saying that Mr Nazarbayev had every right to visit opposition leaders in Bishkek.

The election in Kyrgyzstan, set for Oct. 14, is ratcheting up into a grumpy affair. Pres. Almazbek Atambayev is stepping down after his single six-year term. He has backed his PM Sooronbai Jeenbekov to replace him.

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— This story was first published in issue 344 of The Conway Bulletin, now called the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on Sept. 24 2017.

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2017

Kyrgyz-Czech hydropower project deal is scrapped

SEPT. 18  (The Bulletin) — A deal lauded by Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev only three months ago as proof that Kyrgyzstan can attract major foreign direct investment has been scrapped. Kyrgyz PM Sapar Isakov announced the deal was dead after it became clear that Liglass, the Czech company, had no way of paying $37m to Russia by mid-September to takeover construction of the major Upper Naryn Cascade hydropower project.

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— This story was first published in issue 344 of The Conway Bulletin, now called the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on Sept. 24 2017.

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2017

Centerra Gold and Kyrgyzstan agree deal to end Kumtor dispute

BISHKEK/SEPT. 12 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan and Toronto-listed Centerra Gold said they had agreed a deal to end their dispute over ownership of the Kumtor gold mine in the east of the country.

The news propelled Centerra Gold’s shares to a 4-1/2 year high on the Toronto stock exchange. It will also give Kyrgyzstan’s ruling Social Democratic party a boost ahead of next month’s presidential election.

Under the deal, Centerra Gold will retain its 100% ownership of Kumtor in exchange for a one-off $50m payment to a new environmental protection agency. It will also pay the agency $3m every year and make another one-off payment of $10m to a cancer centre. Centerra Gold will also pay $6m a year into Kumtor’s reclamation fund, up to a total of $69m.

The Kyrgyz state owns 26.6% of Centerra Gold.

After signing the deal, Kyrgyz PM Sapar Isakov said: “This will be the basis for restarting our relations based on mutual trust and joint efforts to further effectively implement the project in the interests of the people of Kyrgyzstan and all the shareholders of Centerra Gold.”

Kumtor is Centerra Gold’s most important asset and also the biggest industrial site in Kyrgyzstan. It produces 10% of Kyrgyzstan’s total GDP.

As well as suppressing Centerra Gold’s share price, the row has damaged Kyrgyzstan’s reputation as a place to do business.

Western analysts have accused Kyrgyz officials of trying to make life difficult for Centerra Gold by denying key workers permits, launching claims for environmental damage and chasing back tax payments.

Centerra Gold retaliated last year by taking the dispute to an international arbitration court.
This action will now be dropped.

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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan re-open border crossing after 7 years

SEPT. 6 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan officially reopened the Dostuk (Friendship) border crossing point that has been closed since ethnic fighting in Osh, Kyrgyzstan, in 2010. The Dostuk checkpoint is one of the most important in the Ferghana Valley and its reopening is considered a major indicator of improved relations between Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan.
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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Kyrgyzstan vs Myanmar football match cancelled

SEPT. 4 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan cancelled a football match with Myanmar because of what it described as terror threats. The inference from the Kyrgyz authorities was that Myanmar’s treatment of its Muslim Rohingya minority meant the team was vulnerable to an attack. Myanmar is a predominantly Buddhist country. Last year a suspected Uighur extremist drove a car bomb into the Chinese embassy in Bishkek.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 342, published on Sept. 7 2017)

Iran drops tax on foodstuffs to Central Asia

SEPT. 4 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Iran has lifted an export tax on foodstuffs being sent to Central Asia and the South Caucasus, media quoted Abdollah Mohajer, the head of Mazandaran Province Chamber of Commerce, as saying. The export tax had covered a range of products including pistachio nuts, cabbages, dates and raisins. Ditching the export tax is likely to drop the price of sending foodstuffs to Central Asia by up to 20%. Iran is increasingly trying to tap into Central Asia and the South Caucasus as natural export markets for is various products.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 342, published on Sept. 7 2017)

Gazprom opens new gas pipeline in Kyrgyzstan

BISHKEK, AUG. 30 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Gazprom CEO Alexey Miller officially unveiled a renovated section of the gas pipeline that pumps gas from Bukhara in Uzbekistan to Kyrgyzstan and on to Kazakhstan.

The pipeline renovation is seen as a major piece of regional infrastructure that should improve access to heat and electricity for residents of Bishkek and other Kyrgyz cities. It also highlights the power of Gazprom in the region. It bought the Kyrgyz gas distribution business in Kyrgyzstan in 2013 for a symbolic $1, promising to improve its performance.

The opening of the new pipeline will go along way to making good on this promise and also towards strengthening Russia’s soft power impact in the region.

“The reconstruction of the Kyrgyz section of the Bukhara Gas-Bearing Province – Tashkent – Bishkek – Almaty gas pipeline has taken us to the next level in terms of reliability of gas supplies not only to the north of the Kyrgyz Republic, but also to the south of Kazakhstan,” media quoted Mr Miller as saying.

Gazprom officials said that the capacity of the pipeline had been doubled and that nearly 2,000 extra homes in Kyrgyzstan had been added to the mains gas network.
Kyrgyz president Almazbek Atambayev was also at the opening ceremony of the pipeline. His presence underscored the pipeline’s significance and also how it connects neighbours with often fractious relations. Previously, under Islam Karimov, Uzbekistan had withheld gas deliveries to Kyrgyzstan as a weapon.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 342, published on Sept. 7 2017)