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THE STANS
China's influence grows in poor neighbour Tajikistan
by Staff Writers
Dushanbe (AFP) June 26, 2012


Extending credits worth almost $2 billion, mighty China is spreading its influence to its poor ex-Soviet neighbour Tajikistan in the hope of winning mineral riches and a loyal strategic ally.

Tajikistan is the poorest nation to have emerged from the USSR's collapse, with a Gross National Income per capita of $780 per year and around 40 percent of GDP coming from remittances from migrants working abroad, according to the World Bank.

Yet the mainly Muslim nation is no longer looking to its ex-Soviet master Moscow to provide crucial assistance in building infrastructure but China with whom it shares a 500-kilometre (300-mile) border across the Pamir mountains.

Analysts say China's economic largesse is winning the modern day version of the 19th century Great Game in Tajikistan as the West, Russia and Beijing jostle for influence in states neighbouring conflict-wracked Afghanistan.

On a visit to China by Tajikistan President Emomali Rakhmon this month, the two sides signed agreements for Beijing to extend $1 billion to Dushanbe in grants and credits.

Some $600 million dollars alone would go towards building a cement factory in the south of Tajikistan.

"Relations with China have the position of priority in Tajikistan's foreign policy," Rakhmon told Chinese President Hu Jintao, quoted by his press service.

This new credit came on top of the $900 million that China has been disbursing since 2005 to help Tajikistan build new roads, tunnels and electricity lines.

Cooperation with China represents Tajikistan's best hope of economic and political stability as it recovers for the civil war that threatened to make it a failed state after the fall of the Soviet Union.

It offers the country a chance to develop new sources of income, away from its traditional reliance on production of cotton and aluminium and the remittances from labour migrants.

Tajikistan has leased out some 600 hectares of agricultural land in its south to a Chinese company which are showing great success.

The Chinese National Petroleum Company (CNPC) has already started oil and gas exploration work in Tajikistan at the same time as Russia's Gazprom and Canada's Tethys, which are also searching for gas.

China's Zijin Mining Group has invested $200 million into gold mining in Tajikistan. It is hoped that the Chinese-Tajik joint venture will expend annual gold production to 5 tonnes in 2016 from the current 1.3 tonnes.

According to political analyst Abdugani Mamadazimov, China wants to see a stable and prosperous Tajikistan, especially as the country borders China's restive Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, home of the Uighur minority.

Beijing also sees Tajikistan as a key transit point for receiving gas supplies in the future from Iran for its energy-hungry population, he added.

"China wants stable and peaceful neighbours... By investing in projects in Tajikistan, China is determining its interests."

In a sign of Tajikistan's eagerness to please its new ally, Dushanbe last year approved a border demarcation agreement that saw Tajikistan cede 1,122 square kilometres (433 square miles) of uninhabited mountainous land to China.

The area represented almost one percent of its territory but the handover ended a dispute that had been running for almost 130 years and was hailed as a triumph in Tajikistan.

Trade volumes between China and Tajikistan are $2 billion, a huge figure for the Central Asian country which has a population of just 7.5 million.

"At the current time China is the preferred economic partner of Tajikistan," said the director of the Kontent think tank, Zafar Abudullayev. "China is always going to want Tajikistan to remain in its sphere of political influence."

He rejected the idea that China's growing influence is a threat to Tajikistan's sovereignty, saying the main threat for the country was internal corruption and poor management.

'China in fact is one of the guarantees of independence of the Tajik nation," he said. "Tajikistan can and needs to cooperate with China on an advantageous basis."

The devastating civil war between Islamists and backers of Rakhmon ended in 1997 after the loss of tens of thousands of lives. Tajikistan is still fighting outbursts of Islamist militancy.

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Germany demands release of Kazakh figure
Berlin (UPI) Jun 26, 2012 - Germany is calling for the release of a renowned Kazakh theater director, who was arrested this month in what critics call a roundup of Astana's political opponents.

Bolat Atabayev, co-founder of the German Theater in Almaty, was arrested June 15 following a six-month investigation by Kazakh authorities on charges of "inciting social discord," German Human Rights Commissioner Markus Loning said last week.

Loning said the government accuses Atabayev of giving an inflammatory speech to oil workers in the industrial city of Zhanaozen just before they went on strike Dec. 16. The resulting clashes with security forces resulted in the deaths of 16 workers.

"I am very concerned by the arrest of Bolat Atabayev," the German official said. "He is being investigated on charges of 'inciting social discord' even though he simply made use of his right to freedom of opinion by giving a speech."

Calling on the Kazakh authorities to release Atabayev immediately, Loning demanded the theater director be allowed to travel to Weimar, Germany, to receive the Goethe Medal -- an official decoration of the Federal Republic of Germany given to foreign "who have performed outstanding service for the German language and international cultural relations."

"As a member of the (Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe), Kazakhstan has committed itself to democratic principles such as freedom of opinion and freedom of assembly," Loning said. "I now expect the Kazakh government to honor its obligations."

The Goethe Institute, which awards the annual prize, called the 60-year-old theater director a "courageous fighter for democratic structures" whose works concentrate on the plight on the German minority in Kazakhstan.

They address the "taboo" subject of the treatment of ethnic Germans by the Soviet Union during and following World War II, when many were forced to move to the fringes of the country in Central Asia.

His work in Almaty, the institute said, "defies the conservative theatrical traditions still strongly anchored in Kazakhstan and often walks a tightrope in doing so ... handling taboo themes such as the genocide of the Volga Germans in Kazakhstan in his plays."

Atabayev's arrest also brought condemnation from Oscar-winning German filmmaker Volker Schlondorff, who co-wrote the screenplay for his 2007 film "Ulzan" with the Kazakh literary figure.

The Hollywood Reporter cited an open letter from Schlondorff to the Kazakh judge in the case, in which he states Atabayev "helped me look for actors in Almaty and the whole republic" while adding he found it "completely inconceivable" he was involved in any form of political agitation.

The December violence -- the worst in the oil-rich Central Asian nation since it gained independence from the former Soviet Union in 1991 -- claimed 16 lives as striking oil workers in Zhanaozen clashed with security forces.

Witnesses claim police fired indiscriminately on unarmed strikers during the clashes, the BBC reported. A video circulated on YouTube appeared to show demonstrators being shot by riot police, though security officials claimed victims were hit by ricochets.

Authorities said three police officers are facing charges related to the violence, while 18 people accused of taking part in the disturbances and looting have been arrested.

Since then, 40 civilians, including 34 from Zhanaozen, have been convicted in connection with the riots. Most of them were granted amnesties but 17 were jailed for terms of up to seven years, Eurasianet.org reported.

The arrests of Atabayev and well-known youth activist Zhanbolat Mamay have followed as part of a more widespread political crackdown, activists say.



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Ashraf takes over as Pakistan's PM
Islamabad, Pakistan (UPI) Jun 25, 2012
Raja Pervaiz Ashraf, Pakistan's new prime minister, said he will work to strengthen the country's democratic institutions as demanded by the Pakistani people. "Powers to all the institutions flow from Parliament," said Ashraf, who won a parliamentary vote to become prime minister last week. "Parliament manifests the aspirations of the people and we shall ensure that nobody else e ... read more


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