Italian fashion consolidates its position in Kazakhstan and Central Asia

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By Trend La Moda [email protected] in Almaty, Kazakhstan closed on a note of cautious optimism among Italian operators at the event, which was organised by Assocalzaturifici in partnership with the Italian fashion industry association EMI, Ente Moda Italia, with the support of the Italian Embassy, the practical assistance of ITA Agency, and in collaboration with the Italian Furriers’ Association AIP and the Italian leather goods association Assopellettieri, Trend reports. The event held at Dom Priemov in Almaty April 6 through 8 registered significant numbers of local buyers: more than 200 fro… Continue reading “Italian fashion consolidates its position in Kazakhstan and Central Asia”

The official handing-over ceremony of the dignity kits for the families of Afghan refugees in Tajikistan

DUSHANBE, TAJIKISTAN – 12 April 2022

The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) in cooperation with the UNHCR Representation in Tajikistan, with the financial support of the UK Government provided 1,080 hygiene kits and 80 food packages for Afghan refugee families, who live in Tajikistan.

The handing-over ceremony attended by Mr. Paul Robbins, Regional Portfolio Manager for Central Asia (UK CSSF), Mr. Yu Yu UNFPA Representative in Uzbekistan and Country Director in Tajikistan, Ms. Nargis Rakhimova- UNFPA Tajikistan Head of Office, Ms. Roza Minasyan, International Protection Officer UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, Mr. Musovir Bahoduri, representative of the community of Afghan refugees in Tajikistan “Ariana”, as well as officers of the above organizations and media representatives.

Mr. Yu Yu- «UNFPA would like to extend its sincere appreciation to UK CSSF, the Government of Tajikistan and UNHCR for providing funding and support to help women and girls at risk of violence, and the community of Afghan refugees for its strong commitment for the delivery of our dignity kits down to communities».

Mr. Paul Robbins - «UK CSSF funded the great work that UNFPA has carried out in strengthening the national capacities across the Central Asia in prevention and responses to the violence against women. This project has been important in development and operationalization Standard Operational Procedures, protocol and packages in health, psychosocial and police services and they are promoting a multi-sectoral support to GBV. The project has paid a special attention to the integrating the need of the vulnerable groups».

Ms. Roza Minasyan - «This support is very important because without WASH and sanitation there is a high risk of the spread of the diseases among households and communities. It is very timely to provide the dignity kits to Afghan families, women and children. This is a good start and we will continue our efforts in mobilizing funds and covering the needs, because the needs are increasing in these challenging times».

Mr. Musovir Bahoduri - «On behalf of all Afghan refugees based in Tajikistan, I want to thank for your humanitarian support and I want to thank the leadership of the country for their support and shelter».

The dignity kits include toothbrush and paste, underwear, thread and needle, shampoos, soap, towel, comb, washing powder, sanitary napkins, toilet paper, pads and other essentials.

This support is essential for Afghan refugee women and children in crisis situations. Assistance will be provided to the most vulnerable refugee families who arrived during 2021.

The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) delivering a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe and every young person's potential is fulfilled.

Source: United Nations Population Fund

Meeting of the Ambassador at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Egypt

On 13th of April, 2023 the Ambassador of the Republic of Tajikistan to the Arab Republic of Egypt Zarobiddin Kosimi met with the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of this country for Asian countries Ayman Komil.

At the meeting were discussed a wide range of issues between the two countries, further strengthening and expanding friendly relations and mutually beneficial cooperation.

Much attention were paid to the expansion of trade and economic cooperation and the use of available opportunities and resources.

Source: Ministry of foreign affairs of the Republic of Tajikistan

Meeting of the Organizing Committee of the Second High-Level Conference on the International Decade “Water for Sustainable Development”

On April 12, 2022, in Dushanbe, under the chairmanship of the Head of the Organizing Committee, Prime Minister of the Republic of Tajikistan Kokhir Rasulzoda, was held a meeting of the Organizing Committee of the Second High-Level International Conference on the International Decade for Action "Water for Sustainable Development, 2018-2028" under the title “Catalyzing Water Action and Partnership at the Local, National, Regional and Global Levels”, which is scheduled for June 6-9, 2022 in Dushanbe

During the meeting, Deputy Chairman of the Organizing Committee, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Tajikistan Sirojiddin Muhriddin presented information on the preparations for the Second High-Level International Conference dedicated to the International Decade for Action "Water for Sustainable Development, 2018-2028".

In particular, it was noted that an Action Plan for the preparation and holding of the Conference at a high level was developed, and the Secretariat of the Conference was created to implement its relevant points, which currently operates in the building of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Tajikistan. In addition, invitations were sent to heads of foreign states and governments, leaders and representatives of the UN and other international organizations, as well as international experts. The official website of the Conference is available on the Internet (www.dushanbewaterprocess.org) and the pages of the Conference on social networks Twitter (@DWaterProcess) and Facebook (Dushanbe Water Process) are fully operational.

The panels of the Second High-Level Conference will be divided into three separate groups and will cover a variety of topics on the three dimensions of sustainable development, taking into account the post-crisis period of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as a separate group of 12 interactive panels. The conference will include 6 forums, including the Regional Forum for Central Asia, the Water Forum for Women, the Water Forum for Children and Youth, the Water Forum for Indigenous Communities/Indigenous Peoples, the Water and Mountain Forum, and the Water Forum for the Private Sector. Within the framework of the Conference, the Water Festival will be held in the Navruzgoh Park in Dushanbe.

Source: Ministry of foreign affairs of the Republic of Tajikistan

Central Asian Neighbors To Feel The Pain As Kazakhstan Suspends Wheat, Flour Exports

Kazakhstan's decision to ban wheat exports is really bad news for the country’s poorer Central Asian neighbors, which get some 90 percent of their wheat imports from their northern neighbor.

One of the world's major wheat growers, Kazakhstan also imports relatively inexpensive wheat from Russia to use domestically and to resell to other countries.

But Russia, the world’s largest wheat exporter, temporarily banned grain exports to its fellow members of the Moscow-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) -- Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Belarus, and Armenia -- in March.

The Kazakh Agriculture Ministry now says it will limit wheat and flour exports to 1 million tons and 300,000 tons, respectively, for three months starting on April 15. It’s not clear if the restrictions will be extended beyond that date.

The Russian government said it was suspending wheat, rye, barley, and maize exports until June 30 to “protect the domestic food market in the face of external constraints” amid harsh Western sanctions over its unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

Moscow’s decision means that Kazakhstan -- the largest buyer of Russian wheat in the EEU -- has temporarily lost access to relatively affordable agricultural products it got duty free.

Just two or three weeks later, Kazakhstan’s flour-milling companies began to raise alarms that they were running out of supplies and going out of business. The Union of Grain Processors of Kazakhstan urged the government to halt exports.

It led the country’s Agriculture Ministry to limit exports to address the grain “deficit” in Kazakhstan created by Moscow’s export ban, officials said.

According to First Deputy Agriculture Minister Aidarbek Saparov, the Russian ban “forces Kazakh millers to urgently switch to the purchase of grains from domestic growers,” who sell their crops at a higher price than Russia.

It also comes at a time when prices for wheat and other food products have risen to record highs globally because of the war in Ukraine, which is also a major producer of wheat and corn.

Poorer Neighbors

Tajikistan annually buys nearly 1 million tons of wheat from Kazakhstan, which accounts for up to 94 percent of Dushanbe’s grain imports.

The immediate impact of Kazakhstan’s decision on Tajikistan hasn’t been immediately known. But if Kazakhstan prolongs the curbs beyond June, Tajikistan -- the poorest country in Central Asia -- will face severe food shortages.

Bread is the most important staple in Tajikistan, where some families say they only have “bread, tea, and sugar for breakfast.”

The government said it was working out a crisis-management plan to prevent any unwarranted price hike for food products and to support the most vulnerable, but details of the plan haven't been made public.

Tajik President Emomali Rahmon urged people on April 1 to stock up on food. Rahmon made no mention of the war in Ukraine but said “humanity is facing an extremely difficult year, especially in terms of food security.”

Rahmon called on Tajiks to work hard to have a good harvest and to store up to “two years’ worth of food.” Rahmon has made similar calls during crises in the past, including during the coronavirus pandemic.

Some Tajiks took to social media to express their anger and accused the government of failing to create jobs, provide decent salaries, and “always leaving the people to fend for themselves.”

“With a salary of 800 somoni [about $64] a month, I can’t feed my family for a month, and how are we supposed to stock food for two years?” one social media user wrote.

“I just bought a 50-kilo sack of flour for 325 somoni and that is a quarter of the joint monthly income for me and my husband,” said Rahima, a resident of the northern city of Khujand.

Her family of five consumes “two sacks of flour a month” to make bread at home, “because buying ready-made breads is a luxury not everyone can afford,” she explained.

“We don’t have land, apart from our small backyard, and actually many people in Tajikistan don’t have land to grow crops and become self-reliant,” Rahima said.

Neighboring Uzbekistan, the most-populous country in Central Asia with about 34 million inhabitants, is the largest buyer of Kazakh grains.

According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, Uzbekistan imports about 35 percent of its domestic consumption needs of wheat, mostly from Kazakhstan.

Kazakhstan’s curb on exports coincided with Uzbekistan’s plan to buy 600,000 tons of grain from abroad -- mostly from Kazakhstan -- to ensure domestic food security.

That includes a planned purchase of 100,000 tons of wheat from its northern neighbor between April and July, Tashkent said on April 4.

Uzbekistan’s own wheat production is expected to decline in the 2021-22 market year, which ends on June 30. The output is estimated to be around 5.5 million tons, down from 6.2 million the previous year.

Turkmenistan imported $15.1 million worth of wheat in 2020, mainly from Kazakhstan with $12 million.

During a visit to Ashgabat in October 2021, Kazakh President Qasym-Zhomart Toqaev pledged to “increase the supply of agricultural products, primarily wheat and flour,” to Turkmenistan on “mutually beneficial terms.”

The hike was expected to help Ashgabat tackle the chronic shortage of foodstuffs -- especially flour -- that has plagued Turkmenistan in recent years. With the current supply shortages, however, it remains to be seen if Kazakhstan will be able to deliver.

Kyrgyzstan, a member of the EEU, gets about 40 percent of its imported wheat from Kazakhstan. Bishkek’s main grain supplier is Russia.

“We had decreased the purchase of grains from Kazakhstan because it’s 30 percent more expensive than [Russian wheat],” Rustam Zhunushev, the head of the Union of Grain Producers of Kyrgyzstan, told RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service.

Despite Moscow’s ban on grain exports to EEU states, Kyrgyzstan hopes to purchase 450,000 tons of Russian wheat in the coming days.

Copyright (c) 2015. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

President Emomali Rahmon Opens TALCO Gold’s Ore-Processing Enterprise in Ayni District

The Founder of Peace and National Unity, Leader of the Nation, President of Tajikistan Emomali Rahmon visited Sughd Province to review the socio-economic development of the region, to take part in the opening of various facilities, and to hold a meeting with the locals.

His visit began in Ayni where he took part in the opening ceremony of the ore-processing enterprise of TALCO Gold, which is jointly owned by Tajik Aluminum Company (TALCO) and China’s Tibet Huayu Mining Company.

Tajik Aluminum Company (TALCO) and China’s Tibet Huayu Mining Co. have spent $136 million for the construction of the plant, which is expected to produce 2.2 tons of gold and 21,000 tons of antimony per year. The company employs more than 1,500 people with good wages.

More than 2,000 builders, engineers and technicians staff has been involved in the construction and installation of this large industrial facility so far.

The extraction of minerals at the enterprise is carried out by underground and open methods. To date, more than 2,500 kilometers of tunnels has been dug for the extraction of gold and antimony.

President Rahmon also laid the foundation stone for the construction of a new metallurgical plant and gold refinery of TALCO Gold in Konchoch area of Ayni. They will be built and put into operation within a year.

The metallurgical enterprise’s production capacity is 2.2 tons of gold (99.99%) per year, 15,000 tons of antimony powder 99.85 %, and 6,000 tons of white antimony 99.5%. With the commissioning of two new enterprises, the production of gold and antimony will reach its maximum.

Today the production capacity of TALCO Gold is 10% of the world antimony market, and if it doubles its production, it will become the largest antimony plant in the world.

Source: National information agency of Tajikistan

Tajik and Kyrgyz Foreign Ministers Hold Telephone Conversation

Yesterday, the Minister of Foreign Affairs Sirojiddin Muhriddin had a telephone conversation with his Kyrgyz counterpart Ruslan Kazakbaev, reports the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Tajikistan.

The conversation focused on the incident that took place on April 12 in Khistevarz of the Bobojon Gafurov district of the Sughd region of Tajikistan, as a result of which there was a victim.

Condemning the actions of the Kyrgyz border guards, Muhriddin demanded an objective investigation of the incident and bring those responsible to justice.

The ministers also exchanged views on topical issues of Tajik-Kyrgyz cooperation, discussed preparations for the meeting of the CIS Council of Foreign Ministers scheduled for May 13 in Dushanbe and the meeting of Foreign Ministers of Central Asian countries.

The ministers agreed to maintain constant communication.

Source: National information agency of Tajikistan

Theft from a children’s resort

DUSHANBE, March 2, 2013, Asia-Plus – Police in the northern city of Vahdat have identified a group of unidentified individuals who entered the Lola children’s resort in the village of Romit, Poyonob village, in early March 2022. and stole construction materials and disappeared from the scene.

The damage is estimated at 32 thousand 270 somoni.

During search operations by police on suspicion of theft was detained 31-year-old resident of Vahdat and a 17-year-old resident of Vahdat.

An investigation is under way.

Source: Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Tajikistan

Arrest of a man previously convicted of fraud

Criminal proceedings have been instituted against a 63-year-old resident of Spitamen under Article 247 (3) of Tajikistan’s Penal Code and an investigation is under way.

In 2017, he fraudulently entered into the trust of a 63-year-old resident of the district and, under the pretext of releasing his son from prison, received 3,500 US dollars and 9,850 somoni and spent it on his own needs.

Source: Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Tajikistan