Tag Archives: protest

Kyrgyzstan’s investment climate takes another turn for the worse

OCT. 16 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – By Oct. 13 2011 Talas Copper Gold, a Kyrgyz gold mining company, had had enough.

After raiders on horseback had firebombed its camp in a remote part of northern Kyrgyzstan and local officials linked to its project had received death threats, the company decided to postpone further gold exploration. It had simply become too dangerous.

Talas Copper Gold, may only be a relatively small operation but the impact is significant and will echo around investors looking at Kyrgyzstan. The attacks bear the hallmarks of organised crime.

A joint venture between a British company Orsu Metals (40%) and South Africa’s Gold Fields (60%), Talas Copper Gold is the sort of operation Kyrgyzstan needs to lift its economy.

Foreign investors may be essential for Kyrgyzstan but their choice of investment sectors is limited. After water, gold is one of the most abundant natural resource. Kumtor, a gold miner owned by Canada’s Centerra Gold, contributes around 7% of Kyrgyzstan’s national income.

But two revolutions since 2005, ethnic violence last summer that killed roughly 400 people and a change of constitution, make Kyrgyzstan a risky place for foreign investors. Raids and death threats organised by local crime gangs looking for extra revenue often make it just too difficult to operate.

Perhaps most disturbing is that Talas Copper Gold’s experience is not unique. There have been several other cases of raiders on horseback attacking foreign gold prospectors this year.

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.

ENDS

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

Protesters step up demonstration in Armenia

OCT. 4 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Hundreds of anti-government protesters have defied the police and camped in Yerevan’s main square since Friday, AFP reported. They want early parliamentary elections and have pledged to stay in the square for a week. The authorities have said that they are breaking the law.

ENDS

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

Central Asia prepares war games with Arab Spring in mind

SEPT. 19 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A Russia-lead security organisation involving most Central Asia states and Armenia started a week of military manoeuvres. Russia’s most senior general, Nikolai Makarov, told the Vedemosti newspaper that stopping any potential Arab Spring-style uprising was one of the main aims of the manoeuvres by the Collective Security Treaty Organisation.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 57, published on Sept. 19 2011)

Street protests resume in Armenia

SEPT. 9 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – As many as 6,000 people gathered for the first opposition street demonstration in Yerevan for months, local media reported. Talks between the government and the opposition alliance (HAK) have stalled since Aug. 26 over the detention by police of a HAK youth activist. More protests are planned.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 56, published on Sept. 12 2011)

Armenian opposition suspends talks with government

SEPT. 1 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Armenia’s opposition coalition (HAK) suspended talks with the government and threatened to organise protests, local media reported. The talks, important for Armenia’s stability, started in July. HAK complained police had unfairly detained one of their activists.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 55, published on Sept. 6 2011)

Human rights lawyer sent to prison in Azerbaijan

AUG. 27 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A court in Baku sentenced human rights lawyer Khalid Bagirov to three years in prison for interfering in a 2010 parliamentary election. The authorities in Azerbaijan have jailed a number of anti-government protesters this year. Police arrested Bagirov in April during an anti-government protest. He said he has been jailed for reporting vote rigging.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 54, published on Aug. 30 2011)

Georgian opposition leader’s husband jailed

AUG. 19 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A court in Georgia sentenced in absentia the husband of opposition leader Nina Burjanadze, Badri Bitsadze, to 5-1/2 years in prison for organising paramilitary groups to attack police at a protest on May 26. Bitsadze, who has been in hiding since the protest, has said he is innocent.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 54, published on Aug. 30 2011)

Labour lawyer jailed for six years in Kazakhstan

AUG. 9 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A closed court in Aktau, west Kazakhstan, jailed for six years a lawyer who advised striking oil workers. Natalia Sokolova was convicted of “inciting civil disorder” and also banned from practising as a lawyer for three years after her release. Human rights groups said the sentence was incompatible with Kazakhstan’s commitment to free speech.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 52, published on Aug. 10 2011)

Pop star Sting sides with striking Kazakh oil workers

JULY 5 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Workers’ rights, the energy business and rock music are mixing into a potent concoction in Kazakhstan.

British pop star Sting stepped into the row between striking oil workers and Kazakhstan’s business elite when he cancelled a concert in support of a six-week long strike. Sting’s concert had been planned for Astana on July 4 as part of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s birthday celebrations.

Cancelling it handed the oil workers a massive publicity coup and Nazarbayev a very public snub.

On his website Sting, former frontman of the 1970s/1980s rock band The Police, said: “Hunger strikes, imprisoned workers and tens of thousands on strike represents a virtual picket line which I have no intention of crossing.”

Perhaps Sting also had in mind the criticism he took last year after playing for the daughter of Uzbek President Islam Karimov, a man western human rights groups accuse of abuses.

The Kazakh strikers are mainly from Ozenmunaigas, a subsidiary of the state energy company Kazmunaigas in Kazakhstan’s energy producing western hinterland. They say they are not being paid enough. The authorities and Kazmunaigas have declared the strike illegal and arrested some of the workers’ leaders but they have failed to pressure them back to work.

Strikes in Kazakhstan are rare. This one though has already forced KMG EP, the London-listed arm of Kazmunaigas, to reduce its 2011 production forecast by 4% and looks set to rumble on.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 47, published on July 6 2011)