Tag Archives: society

Turkey Council promotes Shushi as its capital of culture

JAN. 19 2021 (The Bulletin) — The Turkey-led Turkic Council wants Shushi, a town in Nagorno-Karabakh captured by Azerbaijan in a six-week war with Armenia last year, to become its culture capital next year, in a move that will antagonise Armenia-Azerbaijan relations. The Turkic Council includes Turkey, which uses it to promote its agenda, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Azerbaijan. It chooses a culture capital each year to promote. Azerbaijan, a key ally of Turkey, has promoted its capture of Shushi as an important liberation.

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— This story was first published in issue 469 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Azerbaijan says to start Covid-19 vaccinations on Feb. 1

JAN. 18 2021 (The Bulletin) — Azerbaijan will start vaccinating its population against Covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, from Feb. 1 using China’s Sinovac vaccine. The country’s health ministry said that it would vaccinate medical workers and the over 65s first. Kazakhstan also said that it would start its own vaccination plan from Feb. 1 using Russia’s Sputnik-V.

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— This story was first published in issue 469 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Coronavirus deathtoll in Kyrgyzstan is higher than officials say –Deptuy PM

JAN. 15 2021 (The Bulletin) –Kyrgyz deputy PM Elvira Surabaldiyeva said that the actual number of people who have died from Covid-19 in Kyrgyzstan may be several times higher than the official death toll of 1,400. Analysts and medical experts said for much of 2020 that Kyrgyzstan was downplaying the impact of the coronavirus.

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— This story was first published in issue 469 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Pashinyan and Aliyev due to meet in Moscow for first time since war

YEREVAN/BAKU/JAN. 8 (The Bulletin) —  Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev are due to meet in Moscow for the first time since a war over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh last year, media reported (Jan. 8).

Neither side has confirmed or denied the media reports that the two rivals will meet in the Kremlin on Jan. 11 to discuss a peace deal, policed by Russian soldiers, with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The meeting will be an especially tense affair for Mr Pashinyan who has been under major pressure since he signed the deal that ended the six-week war in November and handed swathes of the region back to Azerbaijan.

Thousands of people have regularly protested in Yerevan against Mr Pashinyan, calling the deal a humiliation and calling on him to resign. Mr Pashinyan has resisted these calls but has conceded that a parliamentary election should take place this year.

“I can leave the position of Prime Minister only by the decision of the people,” Mr Pashinyan wrote on his Facebook page on Dec. 25. “There is only one way to get the answer to all these questions: holding extraordinary parliamentary elections.”

Mr Pashinyan, who was propelled into the PM’s position after a revolution in 2018, has cut an increasingly diminished figure since the war. Senior ministers have resigned and, as well as regular protests in Yerevan attended by thousands of people, protesters have stormed the Armenian parliament and blocked a government motorcade from reaching Stepanakert, the only remaining Armenia-held town in Nagorno-Karabakh. All this is a humiliation for Mr Pashinyan, who has always seen himself as a man of the people.

By contrast, Mr Aliyev secured his legacy with his swift victory over Armenia in the war. 

He has reclaimed land that Azerbaijan lost to Armenian in the first war over Nagorno-Karabakh in the early 1990s and has also secured Turkey’s involvement in the South Caucasus, a reliable ally that Mr Aliyev hopes to use to counterbalance Russia.

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— This story was first published in issue 467 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Kyrgyz government publishes plan to improve Bishkek air

JAN. 6 2021 (The Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan’s government published a 40-point plan to improve the air quality in Bishkek after meters recorded it as being the worst in the world this winter. The cold winter air traps fumes generated by old cars bought in Europe, smoggy heating systems and the city’s waste dump. Smog has cloaked the city and obscured the famously blue skies for weeks. Analysts have said previous plans to improve air quality have failed because of corruption.

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— This story was first published in issue 467 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Tashkent-Dushanbe flight starts up again

JAN. 5 2021 (The Bulletin) — Uzbekistan Airways flew the first charter flight between Tashkent and Dushanbe since March when flights were suspended because of the intensifying coronavirus pandemic. The return of the Tashkent – Dushanbe route is an important signifier that internal routes in Central Asia are beginning to return to normal.

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— This story was first published in issue 467 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Kyrgyzstan is near herd immunity, says health minister

JAN. 5 2021 (The Bulletin) — Alymkadyr Beishenaliev, Kyrgyzstan’s health minister, said that the coronavirus has already ripped through the Kyrgyz population and that something close to herd immunity has been reached. Kyrgyzstan has imposed only a handful of restrictions on people entering the country. People have also mainly ignored facemask wearing and social distancing campaigns.

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— This story was first published in issue 467 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Kazakhstan abolishes death penalty after 18-year moratorium

JAN. 2 2021 (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan formally abolished the death penalty, 18-years after it was suspended. The last person to be sentenced to death in Kazakhstan was Ruslan Kulekbayev, who shot dead eight policemen in 2016. He has been given a life sentence in prison instead.

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— This story was first published in issue 467 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

Berdymukhamedov says chewing liquorice stops Covid

DEC. 26 2020 (The Bulletin) — Turkmen President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov said that chewing liquorice is a cure for Covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. Mr Berdymukhamedov made the statement in televised remarks to his ministers. Turkmenistan is one of the only countries in the world to still deny that it has had any cases of the coronavirus.

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— This story was first published in issue 467 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021

The Caspian Sea is shrinking, warn scientists

ALMATY/DEC. 23 2020 (The Bulletin) —  The Caspian Sea, which provides a livelihood for thousands of people and acts as a fulcrum for international transit routes through the Central Asia and South Caucasus region, is shrinking, new scientific research showed (Dec. 23).

The report produced by universities in Germany and the Netherlands said that the Caspian Sea could lose up to a third of its water by 2100, with water level dropping by 18m, marooning previously important ports hundreds of kilometres inland.

The report’s authors said they wanted to use the threat to the Caspian Sea to highlight the dangers of global warming to inland seas and lakes.

“A massive warning signal is the projected catastrophic drop in water levels for the Caspian Sea, the largest lake in the world, which could hit stakeholders unprepared,” the report said. 

Previous studies have warned that the Caspian Sea has been shrinking since the 1990s but not this quickly. 

Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Iran and Azerbaijan border the Caspian Sea, which lies at the centre of a series of transport corridors that ultimately connect East Asia with Europe. 

The Caspian Sea also hosts the region’s oil and gas industry and is a wildlife reserve, supporting seals, and migratory birds. The report showed how vast areas of the northern section of the Caspian Sea could dry up, with Atyrau in Kazakhstan effectively being stranded hundreds of kilometres from the shore.

Central Asia’s reputation for ecological disasters is already secure with the shrinking of the Aral Sea, which is shared by Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan. It shrank in the 1960s and 1970s to half its original size because of Soviet schemes to siphon off its tributaries to irrigate cotton fields.

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— This story was first published in issue 467 of the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2021