Tag Archives: Uzbekistan

US law firm to open in Tashkent

JAN. 29 (The Conway Bulletin) – US law firm White & Case said that it was opening a full-time office in Tashkent because of the improved economic and political environment. A statement by the company said that the office, which will be staffed by partners visiting from its London and New York offices as well as local lawyers, would focus on merger, acquisitions and dispute resolutions. Specifically, it also said that the driving motivation for opening the office had been provided by the liberal-minded reforms introduced by Pres. Shavkat Mirziyoyev, in power since Sept. 2016.

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>>This story was first published in issue 360 of The Conway Bulletin

Lola Karimova quits UNESCO role

FEB. 2 (The Conway Bulletin) – Lola Karimova-Tillyaeva, the youngest daughter of former Uzbek leader Islam Karimov, said that she had left her position as Uzbekistan’s ambassador to UNESCO, fulfilling a commitment she made five months ago (Feb. 2). Ms Karimova-Tillyaeva’s elder sister, Gulnara Karimova, is still under house arrest in Tashkent accused of various financial crimes. The Karimovs were once all-powerful in Uzbekistan but since 2014 have suffered a sharp decline in influence. Islam Karimov died in September 2016.

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>>This story was first published in issue 360 of The Conway Bulletin

Uzbekistan talks to Russia’s Rosatom on developing nuclear power

DEC. 29 (The Conway Bulletin) — Uzbekistan is in talks with Russia’s Rosatom to commission building two new nuclear power stations, media reported. Uzbekistan currently relies primarily on gas-fired power stations for its electricity. It is still some way off commissioning a nuclear power station but it has signed various memorandums of understanding with Russia on nuclear power. Relations between Russia and Uzbekistan have improved after Shavkat Mirziyoyev took over as president in 2016.

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

“Made in Uzbekistan” label to be launched

JAN 5 (The Conway Bulletin) — Uzbek officials said that they were going to introduce a new label, Uztexile, that will only be given to clothes that meet the highest ethical, environmental and manufacturing techniques, the chairman of the industry association Uztekstilprom, Ilkhom Khaidarov, told media. The new label appears to be another attempt to improve Uzbekistan’s image for cotton. It is a major cotton producer and wants to start processing and exporting an increasing amount of its crop.

— 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

Hundreds of finance ministry staff sacked for corruption in Uzbekistan

DEC. 27 (The Conway Bulletin) — Uzbekistan sacked 562 staff from its finance ministry in a corruption purge that appears designed to show off President Shavkat Mirziyoyev’s determination to root out bribe-taking. Reuters reported that Mr Mirziyoyev had described the finance ministry staff accused of corruption as “rats”.

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

Mirziyoyev tells forced cotton labourers to go home

TASHKENT/SEPT. 22 (The Bulletin) — Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev ordered forced labourers working in the country’s cotton fields to return home, taking a step towards banning the practice altogether.

A Conway Bulletin correspondent said that the order for forced labourers — mainly teachers, medical staff and students — to leave the fields didn’t impact the wider mass mobilisation of the workforce to pick Uzbekistan’s cotton, a mobilisation that is characterised by low wages and poor conditions. 

The Conway Bulletin, through its Silk Road Intelligencer newswire, had been one of the first news agencies to the report the news. The next day, on Sept. 23, Uzbek PM Abdulla Aripov confirmed the order.

“It’s forever,” he was quoted by Reuters as saying. “Students should study, state employees should work.” 

The use of forced labour in Uzbekistan’s cotton fields has infuriated human rights groups who successfully lobbied for Western clothing companies to stop buying Uzbek cotton. 

In the last few years, though, Uzbek officials and officials from the UN’s International Labour Organisation (ILO) have said that the use of forced labour has been cut back. 

Human rights groups have published evidence that dispute this.

Under Pres. Mirziyoyev, Uzbekistan has appeared to lurch towards a more free and open society, rejecting the authoritarian tendencies of Islam Karimov who ruled from the 1991 break-up of the Soviet Union until his death in Sept. 2016.

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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

Swedish prosecutors charge ex-Telia CEO with corruption in Uzbekistan

SEPT. 22  (The Bulletin) — Swedish prosecutors charged former Telia CEO Lars Nyberg, former deputy CEO and head of its Eurasia division Tero Kivisaari and a third unnamed senior executive with authorising bribe-paying to access Uzbekistan in 2007/8. The charges came a day after Telia agreed to pay a fine of $965m to settle the bribe-paying allegations. 

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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

Telia agrees to pay $965m fine to US authorities over Uzbek corruption

SEPT. 21  (The Bulletin) — In a settlement with the US authorities, Swedish telecoms company Telia agreed to pay a fine of $965m for bribing its way into the Uzbek mobile market in 2007/8. The fine is smaller than had first been mooted. Telia paid a Gibraltar-based company ultimately owned by Gulnara Karimova, the daughter of former Uzbek leader Islam Karimov, at least $330m.

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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

Veon says devalued Uzbek soum has cost it “hundreds of millions of doillars”

TASHKENT/SEPT. 21 (The Bulletin) — Veon, the New York-listed Amsterdam-headquartered telecoms company formerly called Vimpelcom, said that that the liberalisation and devaluation of the Uzbek soum had cost it hundreds of millions of dollars.

Earlier this month, the Uzbek government scrapped a US dollar peg for the Uzbek soum, allowing it to lose half its value. The move was generally applauded as necessary to modernise Uzbekistan’s economy and for giving foreign investors clarity but businesses already entrenched in Uzbekistan said there would be a cost.

Veon, which operates the Unitel subsidiary in Uzbekistan under the Beeline brand, said there were advantages in the long-run but that, in the short term, profits were lower.

“Under these liberalized exchange rules, Veon may in the longer term be able to more effectively repatriate cash from Uzbekistan,” it said in a statement. 

“[But] as a result [of the devaluation], Veon expects annualised decreases in revenues of $300-350m and in underlying EBITDA of $175-225m.” These comments are important as they come from a company already doing business in Uzbekistan.

Veon has previously been fined for paying a bribe to a company ultimately owned by the daughter of Uzbek president Islam Karimov for market access to Uzbekistan in 2007/8.

Sweden’s Telia and Norway’s Telenor have also been fined for paying bribes in Uzbekistan.

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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