Tag Archives: Turkmenistan

Alcohol ban imposed in Turkmenistan

JAN. 1 (The Conway Bulletin) — Turkmenistan imposed strict new alcohol laws on Jan. 1 that will outlaw alcoholic drinks on public transport and in sports centres. The sale of alcohol will also be banned altogether on national holidays. One characteristic of Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov’s tenure as Turkmen president has been his emphasis on health edicts. He wants to ban smoking by 2025 and from 2021 restaurants and bars will be banned from selling alcohol at the weekend.
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>>This story was first published in issue 396 of The Conway Bulletin on Jan. 11 2019

MTS packs up equipment in Turkmenistan

JAN. 1 (The Conway Bulletin) — MTS, the Russian telecoms company, said it had started to pack up equipment in Turkmenistan, suggesting that it doubts it will ever be able to repair relations with the Turkmen government which switched off access to its network in Sept. 2017. MTS has filed a legal case against the Turkmen government for lost profit. Turkmenistan had suspended MTS’ operations previously in 2010 but 18 months later agreed to allow the Russian company to resume trading.
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>>This story was first published in issue 396 of The Conway Bulletin on Jan. 11 2019

Putin says Russia may join TAPI gas project

MOSCOW/DEC. 21 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russian President Vladimir Putin hinted at his annual press conference that he be may be willing to support the TAPI project that aims to pump gas from Turkmenistan across Afghanistan to India and Pakistan.

Russian support for TAPI would give the project, devised and pushed strongly by Turkmenistan, a major boost. It comes at a time when Russia is mending damaged relations with Turkmenistan. Gazprom has said it will resume imports of gas from Turkmenistan for the first time since 2016.

At the televised annual press conference, Mr Putin said: “As far as we can, we will contribute to this process (building a stable Afghanistan), including by developing economic cooperation with Afghanistan, by taking part in various international projects, such as, for example, the TAPI.”

China is currently Turkmenistan’s dominant gas client.

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>>This story was first published in issue 395 of The Conway Bulletin on Dec. 23 2018

Turkmenistan to raise import duty on cigarettes and alcohol

DEC. 17 (The Conway Bulletin) – Turkmenistan has raised import duties on alcohol and cigarettes by at least 10%, media reported, highlighting the latest health drive by President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov. Earlier this month, the Turkmen government said that it was going to ban smoking and drinking from most public areas.

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>>This story was first published in issue 395 of The Conway Bulletin on Dec. 23 2018

Berdymukhamedov says he wants to sue Belarussian constructor

NOV. 5 2018 (The Conway Bulletin) — Turkmenistan’s Pres. Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov ordered his government to sue Belgorkhimprom, the Belarusian company that built the Garlyk potash plant. The plant was supposed to be the biggest in Central Asia with a capacity of 720,000 tonnes/year. Since it opened, though, in March 2017, it has produced a fraction of this. No official reason on why the plant’s output has been so low has been given. Belgorkhimprom has said that it hasn’t been paid for the construction of the plant.

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— This story was first published in issue 391 of the Conway Bulletin on Nov. 11 2018.

Turkmenistan says to re-start gas exports to Russia

OCT. 10 (The Conway Bulletin) – Turkmenistan will resume sending gas to Russia in January, Alexei Miller, the Gazprom CEO, was quoted by official Turkmen media as saying on a trip to Ashgabat, giving Turkmenistan’s Pres. Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov a much-needed political boost (Oct. 10).

Turkmen gas exports to Russia were slashed in 2014 during a row over pricing and cut altogether in 2016 during a Russian economic downturn that was triggered by an energy price collapse.

The cut hurt Turkmenistan economically and left it overly reliant on China as its only gas supply client. Its economy has also been hard hit by the drop in energy prices. The economic news coming out of Turkmenistan has been dire, with Mr Berdymukhamedov being forced to cut Soviet-era subsidies on utilities.

Mr Miller said exact details of new gas imports needed to be worked out.

“The intergovernmental agreement between Russia and Turkmenistan on cooperation in the gas sphere is valid until the end of 2018. It was paused for commercial reasons and will be renewed by the end of 2018,” Mr Miller was quoted as saying by official Turkmen media. “In this regard, we discussed the resumption of the procurement of Turkmen gas by Gazprom, which will start in January 2019.”

Analysts speculated on the timing of Russia resuming gas exports from Turkmenistan. Some said that it was linked to Russia’s efforts to dampen the increased lure of gas sales to Europe from the region.

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>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Turkmenistan makes electricity deal with Afghanistan

OCT. 13 (The Conway Bulletin) – Turkmenistan will send Afghanistan 300MW along new transmission lines to Herat and Kandahar, Turkmen official media reported by quoting officials. It said that a formal deal had been agreed and will be officially signed by the various leaders in February. Turkmenistan already exports electricity and gas to Afghanistan. Analysts have said that an integrated regional power export network can act as a cornerstone for boosting regional trade.

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>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Berdymukhamedov appoints new head of agri-bank

OCT. 8 (The Conway Bulletin) – Myratniyaz Berdyev has been promoted to chairman of Dayhanbank State Commercial Bank of Turkmenistan, from deputy chairman, official Turkmen media reported by quoting a presidential press release. Dayhanbank focuses on supplying loans to agriculture businesses. Turkmen President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov fired the bank’s previous chairman last month.

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>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Turkmenistan allows Tajik trucks to cross to Afghanistan

OCT. 4 (The Conway Bulletin) – Turkmenistan has allowed Tajik trucks to cross its territory after a month-long delay, media reported. No explanation was given for the delay but the row had threatened to damage Tajik-Turkmen relations. At one point, the Tajik ambassador in Ashgabat had said that his government would stop cooperating in a high-profile joint railway project linking the two countries to Afghanistan. The Tajik trucks had been carrying goods to and from Afghanistan.

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>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Subsidy cuts in Turkmenistan will hurt

–Turkmen subsidy cuts will irritate ordinary people but are unlikely to trigger massive anti-government protests, writes James Kilner

OCT. 1 — Successive former Soviet states have had to bite the bullet on reforming their various subsidy systems. This year, the most high-profile reforms have been to Russian and Kazakh pensions. The age of retirement has slowly been increased with the realisation that the state just can’t afford to pay for so many people in their 60s not to work.

Now news has broken that Turkmenistan has finally decided to do away with its previously excessively generous subsidies. The Turkmen government has been chipping away at subsidy levels for a few years but from January there won’t be any at all.

This is a big leap and there is genuine concern among analysts that Turkmen officials may face the ire of ordinary people. Some analysts have even talked up the possibility of anti-government protests.

Anti-government protests over subsidy cut-backs have happened before in the region. In 2015, protests across Yerevan forced the government to climb down over proposed electricity price rises.

Of course, Armenia is different from most other countries in the Central Asia and South Caucasus region. Street-level politics is an accepted part of the power spectrum in Armenia, as shown by a revolution in April and May that propelled Nikol Pashinyan into the premiership. Georgia too has a reputation for protests as a part of its political spectrum. The Rose revolution of 2003 turned Mikheil Saakashvili into a president. In Tbilisi, the full range of protests — pro-government, anti-government; pro-gay rights, anti-gay rights; pro-drug use, anti-drug use and so on — are relatively common. This year a march by workers of a mothballed regional sugar factory forced the government to reopen it.

In Central Asia, protests are treated with much less tolerance by the authorities and are a rare form of political expression. The main exception, of course, being Kyrgyzstan which has been through two revolutions since 2005.
News from Turkmenistan shows that its economy is doing poorly and points to a population having to deal with various deprivations. There is a lack of basic foodstuffs, money transfers out of the country are limited and people leaving the country are heavily monitored.

Subsidy cuts on basic utilities will hurt and there will be pockets of protests in Turkmenistan. There have been previously when cuts were announced and there will be now. But this is one of the most controlled police states in the world. Small-scale protests are one thing but what is more difficult to envisage are wide-scale protests that genuinely threaten the government.
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>>This story was first published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018