WB to award US$50 million grant to Tajikistan for enhancement of teaching and learning outcomes

The World Bank (WB)'s Board of Executive Directors on February 23 approved US$50 million in grant financing from the International Development Association (IDA) for the Learning Environment - Foundation of Quality Education in Tajikistan Project, aimed at enhancing the quality of teaching and learning in Tajikistan's secondary education.

Press release issued by the World Bank Dushanbe Office, in particular, notes that while access to general secondary education is high in Tajikistan, with enrollment at 96.6% in 2019, the learning outcomes remain low. According to the 2020 Human Capital Index, a child in Tajikistan born in 2020 can be expected to attend 10.9 years of schooling by the 18th birthday. However, with a harmonized learning outcome (HLO) score, the learning-adjusted years of schooling drops to 6.8 years, representing a learning gap of 4.1 years.

'Education is a critical investment in human capital and is linked to higher wages and GDP growth,' said Ozan Sevimli, World Bank Country Manager for Tajikistan. 'We are very excited about this new investment as it seeks to improve teaching and learning for a young and growing population and supports capacity improvements and learning assessments towards a more accountable, effective, and inclusive education system.'

The first component of the project will support the development and implementation of a new national framework for teaching and learning environments. Among other aspects, it will include the update of the teaching practices and quality assurance mechanisms to ensure its implementation and enforcement and provide capacity building to staff across educational institutions for its implementation.

The second component will invest in rehabilitation and modernization of schools to allow for more classrooms, opening of modern laboratories, provision of ICT equipment and expansion of opportunities for STEM subjects so that Tajikistan's students have the modern skills essential for the 21st century. Investments will also be made in school ventilation systems, energy efficiency and improvement of toilets and hygiene facilities, especially for girls. These investments will directly benefit 40,000 students and 1200 teachers of the 65 target schools.

The third component will enhance the country's capacity to carry out national and international assessments, such as PISA (Program for International Student Assessment). These assessments are critical for monitoring of students' learning outcomes and producing reliable data to inform policies and decision making.

Poor school teaching and learning environments are a major challenge in Tajikistan. Most public schools are in urgent need of improvements ranging from the skills and competencies of teachers to physical learning spaces. Poor learning outcomes are evident starting in the early grades. Only 55% of students in grade 2 can read the benchmark of 40 Tajik words per minute, decreasing to 41% in grade 4,

Source: Asia-Plus

Yandex go does not have the right to provide even dispatching services, says transport ministry

The Ministry of Transport (MoT) has joined the Dushanbe Administration and the Dushanbe Police Directorate in stating that Yandex go is operating in Tajikistan illegally.

In its letter sent to Asia-Plus in response to the report 'Our service is mistaken for carrier, says Yandex go' published by Asia-Plus on February 23, a MoT explains why Yandex go does not have the right to offer even dispatching service and why its activities are illegal in Tajikistan.

The MoT, in particular notes that Article 70 of the Automobile Transport Code of the Republic of Tajikistan says that the activity of the taxi dispatch service is a technological part of carriage of passengers by taxi.

'That is, the process of carriage of passengers by taxi includes not only passenger carriage services but also acceptance of orders that are carried out by the dispatching service. In view of the above, services offered by Yandex go cannot be called information platform services. This company performs the services of a taxi dispatching service,' the MoT letter reads.

The MoT states that 'based on the above, Yandex go's activity in Tajikistan is illegal.

Recall, Yandex go's online travel booking service has operated in the country since February 15. The reaction immediately followed this - the Dushanbe Administration said that the activity of the service in the country is illegal and the law enforcement agencies have detained taxi drivers who began to work with it.

Commenting on the situation, the company told Asia-Plus on February 22 that it operates in Tajikistan in accordance with the country's legislation.

'The model of the online travel booking service itself is new to the country, and therefore, our service can be mistaken for carrier, but it is not so.

'Yandex go is an international information platform. We do not have our own drivers and cars. We work with local partner carriers, who, in turn, cooperate with the drivers and provide transport services to users,' the company's written response reads.

'Essentially, our platform helps users place their travel requests through the app and help, and helps transport carriers find them,' the company notes.

Yandex Go is an app to request rides, order food from restaurants, carsharing or send items across city.

Carsharing is a membership based service available to all qualified drivers in a community. No separate written agreement is required each time a member reserves and uses a vehicle. All CSOs offer members access to a dispersed network of shared vehicles 24-hours, 7 days a week at unattended self-service locations.

Owned by the Russia-based internet company Yandex, Yandex go (called Yango in some countries) is a ride-hailing, delivery and e-grocery service operating in more than 1,000 cities, including 300 large cities across Russia, Belarus, Moldova, Armenia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Serbia, Israel, Ivory Coast, Finland, Ghana, Romania, Norway, and Bolivia. In the latter seven countries, it operates under a brand called Yango. More than 700,000 drivers are reportedly connected to the network.

Source: Asia-Plus

Russia calls on Central Asia’s nations to exercise caution in building relationships with the West

Russia calls on Central Asia's nations to take the utmost care when building relationships with the West, the Deputy Foreign Minister of the Russian Federation, Mikhail Galuzin, told TASS in an interview on February 23.

'We and our Central Asian friends remember what the American good offices turn into. What ended, for example, the recent Afghan epopee of the United States? It ended up in nothing but chaos and ruins,' said Galuzin. 'In today's increasingly multipolar world there is no more room for Washington's democratizering experiments, which, at best, end in color revolutions.'

'In this situation, we call on our Central Asian friends to take the utmost care when building relationships with the Western countries,' said the Russian deputy minister. 'We are convinced that stability and security of Central Asian countries and the CIS member nations as a whole is, first of all, the task of our states and not of extra-regional players pursuing, as it was note above, dubious goals. To successfully solve this problem, we have all the tools - CIS, CSTO, relevant bilateral agreements.'

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had earlier stated that the West puts pressure on Central Asia's nations and demands that they join sanctions against Moscow.

lenta.ru reported that speaking at a press conference, top Russian diplomat noted on January 18 that 'the European Union, the United States and Japan demand that Central Asian nations refuse cooperation with Russia, because, in their opinion, Russia will lose in the war with the West, and propose to take the position of the 'winning side.'

'In addition to such verbal influences, there is serious pressure with threats: you will lose our markets and the investments that we were going to make in your countries, don't you dare help Russia bypass sanctions,' Lavrov was quoted as saying by lenta.ru.

Russian foreign minister noted that the Central Asian nations' governments are forced to take into account such threats.

Source: Asia-Plus

Center to provide assistance to foreign tourists opens in Dushanbe

The Interior Ministry Tourism and Ecology Directorate and Diyor Travel Tourist Company have jointly opened the Tourist Information Center in Dushanbe.

The Center will make comprehensive information about Tajikistan available for foreign tourists arriving in the country and offer them a complex of services.

The Center, which is located at 81 Nisor Muhammad Street, equipped with modern facilities and advanced technologies.

The Center has an information office, three bedrooms for temporary accommodation, ATVs, the currency exchange point, Wi-Fi, and the point of replenishment of the balance of mobile communication and the Internet.

Diyor Travel top manager Umedshoh Saidov says they plan to launch new tourist service points across the country.

Recall, the Tourism Development Committee head Kamoliddin Muminzoda told reporters in Dushanbe on February 10 that the main tasks of the tourism industry for the period up to 2027 include the creation of the tourism infrastructure in accordance with world standards, training of qualified personnel for the tourism industry, improvement of quality of offered tourist services and expansion of their list, increasing the country's status in international ratings, and formation of a national brand.

Tajikistan's rich cultural heritage, hospitality and abundance of mountain snow peaks, rivers, lakes and recreational opportunities contribute to the development of country's tourism industry. In 2018, Tajik Government announced a year of tourism development. The tourism sector is considered a priority for the development of Tajikistan's economy. At the same time, undeveloped infrastructure and low levels of quality of services delay the growth of the tourism industry.

Source: Asia-Plus

Defiance In A Frontline Ukrainian City Claimed By Russia — And Hopes Of A Homecoming

ZAPORIZHZHYA, Ukraine -- Svitlana Kim, an 18-year-old who left her hometown of Berdyansk soon after Russian troops occupied it, was refurbishing a big white room at the Zaporizhzhya Youth Center one recent morning. The bright space will be turned into a hub for the integration of people who -- like her -- have been driven from their homes by the Russian invasion.

The days before she came to Zaporizhzhya, the Ukrainian-held capital of a region that Russia groundlessly claimed to have annexed in September, were “frightening, hard, and incomprehensible,” Kim said.

She escaped in late March along with her brother and sister, and their mother joined them in May. But her father decided to stay in Berdyansk, an Azov Sea port city that is also in the Zaporizhzhya region, southeast of the capital.

"He’s had enough of moving around," Kim said of her father, who is 69 and relocated to Ukraine from Tajikistan after civil war broke out there in the 1990s.

The family hopes to reunite, but it will be only possible if a much-hoped-for Ukrainian counteroffensive aimed at severing the "land bridge" that gives Russian forces access to the occupied Crimean Peninsula materializes -- and if Berdyansk, which was occupied three days after the invasion began a year ago, is liberated in the process. If that happens, it could change the course of the war.

Kim is among thousands of displaced people in Zaporizhzhya -- and millions across Ukraine and abroad -- who are hoping to return to their cities and towns in the country’s east and south someday. By pushing millions of people from their homes, Russia has created a force determined to help Ukraine achieve a decisive battlefield success and drive its forces out.

The ordeals of the past year have been a huge challenge, Kim said.

“But after all this, I feel I am a part of a bigger force," she said.

'Moses of Melitopol'

Oleksandr Lyubyshko believes that the liberation of his native Melitopol, a city due south of Zaporizhzhya and west of Berdyansk, is a matter of time.

Lyubyshko, a 37-year-old businessman, has been dubbed the “Moses of Melitopol” for his role in evacuating thousands of people from Russian-occupied territory.

He left the city after Russian tanks rolled in in early March and decided to help as many people as possible to escape the increasingly dire conditions of the Russian occupation.

Thanks to his knowledge of the area, contacts, and organizational skills, he said, he and his associates were able to provide information about dangers and detours that helped about 50 drivers get people out safely over a period of several months.

A year later -- with all the possibilities of travel between Ukrainian-held and Russian-controlled parts of the Zaporizhzhya region gone -- he has pivoted to helping the military forces operating here. He says he helped more than 50,000 people evacuate, and some of them now help him raise funds to supply equipment to soldiers. He maintains the evacuation chat group he set up, he said, so that he can someday send a final message announcing that Melitopol is once again in Ukrainian hands.

"No one has done as much to make the whole of southeastern Ukraine decisively pro-Ukrainian as Putin himself," Lyubyshko told RFE/RL in Zaporizhzhya, where he lives alone for now. With his wife and four children in Hamburg, Germany, his family is “stuck between the old life and the new”, he said.

Longing For Home

A year into the invasion, many people forced to flee the occupation of the region are the limbo -- unable to go back home but not ready to settle in a new place.

Natalya Alekiseyeva, 51, and Natalya Koval, 42, are among the 135,000 people registered as Internally Displaced People (IDPs) in the city of Zaporizhzhya. Both women, who talked to RFE/RL while weaving camouflage nets for the army at the Youth Center, have loved ones in the military.

Alekiseyeva's son has been a soldier since he joined the army almost 10 years ago. But over the past year, she has asked him to send her messages confirming that he is alive almost every day. Koval's husband is a military doctor currently serving near Vuhledar, where some of the heaviest recent fighting has taken place.

Alekiseyeva said she would like to return with her husband and daughter to Burchak, her native village, some 60 kilometers south of Zaporizhzhya. As long as there is anything to go back to, she said, she does not lose hope of returning to her past life.

Koval's family house in Mykhaylivka, a village near Burchak, was robbed and turned into quarters for Russian soldiers. She left out of fear for her teenage daughter’s safety, she said, and she also had conflicts with her colleagues from the national dance ensemble who collaborated with the Russians.

There are 5.3 million displaced persons in Ukraine, according to the International Organization for Migration. As of January 23, 74 percent had declared that they want to return home, while 11 percent planned to integrate in their current locations. Others had no specific plans or intended to resettle elsewhere.

'Freedom-Loving Spirit'

Many of the displaced are doing their best to help Ukraine win the war.

Before Russia's invasion in February, the Zaporizhzhya Regional Youth Center, one of the biggest institutions of this kind in Ukraine, hosted educational events, concerts, and competitions. Now its vast premises are used to integrate IDPs, distribute humanitarian aid, and provide support to the army, Kostyantyn Chernyshov, 24, the project manager who leads the institution, told RFE/RL.

After the invasion, hundreds of people came to the center to make Molotov cocktails, he recalled, leaving him wondering where that will of resistance came from.

Zaporizhzhya is often associated with Zaporizhzhian Cossacks, who created a semiautonomous borderland polity in the 16th century that fought against Crimean Tatars, Ottoman Turks, Poles, and the Russian Empire, which ultimately annexed the area in 1775.

But the modern, predominantly Russian-speaking, city with a population of more than 700,000 developed as an industrial center over the 20th century, attracting laborers and qualified professionals from different nations.

Chernyshov, who has Jewish and Greek roots -- two of the earliest ethnic groups in Ukraine -- believes that the “freedom-loving spirit” of the region comes from the diversity brought by the immigrants in the past.

"When the full-scale war started a year ago, the sentiment in Zaporizhzhya was that it is we -- and not Putin -- who will determine our future," he said.

Offensives And Counteroffensives

Just 35 kilometers from the front line, Zaporizhzhya has been pounded with cruise missiles, S-300 air-defense missiles repurposed for ground attacks, and “kamikaze” drones since the first day of the invasion. Dozens of people have been killed in the attacks, and numerous buildings damaged or destroyed.

Without stopping the bombardments, Russia carried out a referendum in late September in the part of the region that it controls -- a vote dismissed by Kyiv and the West and much of the international community as a sham. Putin then announced that Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhya, Kherson, Luhansk, and Donetsk regions -- none of which Russian forces fully control -- had become part of Russia. He has repeatedly reasserted this false claim, which is now enshrined in Russian law, and said in a February 21 address that the war is being fought on Russia's "historical lands."

"Everybody understands that we are next on Putin's list," Chernyshov said. "But the last year showed that things don't always go according to his plans."

While the possible Ukrainian counteroffensive is not yet under way, it’s unclear whether Russian forces will try to push closer to the city of Zaporizhzhya in the near future. Recent reports from the southern front, which runs through the region south of its capital, say they are strengthening the defense of Melitopol -- a strategically critical city key for the control of roads and railways connecting the Donbas to Crimea.

The displaced Ukrainian mayor of Melitopol, Ivan Fedorov, said that Russia has been bringing new troops into the city -- Wagner Group forces, mobilized personnel, and battalions from the North Ossetia and Daghestan regions -- and has prepared several lines of defense there.

According to the Institute for the Study of War, a U.S.-based think tank, transporting "irregular forces who are likely battle weary, poorly trained, or both" to the area indicates that the Russian military leadership has de-prioritized making new territorial gains in the Zaporizhzhya region, focused instead on maintaining its positions.

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.

Representative of Tajikistan Attends the 22nd Winter Meeting of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly in Vienna

Chairman of the Committee of the Majlisi Namoyandagon Majlisi Oli of the Republic of Tajikistan on International Affairs, Public Associations and Information Saidmurod Fattohzoda took part in the 22nd Winter Meeting of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly. This was reported by NIAT «Khovar» with reference to the Majlisi namoyandagon.

During the meeting of the three general committees, about 250 deputies from 50 countries of the world were discussed the political, economic, scientific and technological, humanitarian and environmental issues, problems of security, democracy, human rights and most important world issues.

The 22nd Winter Meeting of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly in Vienna (Austria) will end today with a speech by the responsible persons of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization.

Source: National information agency of Tajikistan

Blinken Heads to Asia Amid Soaring Tensions With China, Russia

WASHINGTON — Fresh from a meeting with China’s top diplomat and a U.N. Security Council session regarding Ukraine, Secretary of State Antony Blinken will travel to Central and South Asia next week for international talks that will put him in the same room as his Chinese and Russian counterparts.

The State Department announced late Thursday that Blinken would travel to Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan before going to India for a meeting of the Group of 20 foreign ministers from the world’s largest industrialized and developing countries, including China and Russia.

The trip comes as tensions have soared between the U.S. and Russia and between the U.S. and China over Russia's war in Ukraine and Chinese assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific. All three countries are competing fiercely to outdo each other in global influence.

U.S. officials have been tight-lipped about the prospects for Blinken having sit-down talks with Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang or Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in New Delhi. But all three will be present in the Indian capital for the G-20 meeting. The State Department has said only that no meetings are scheduled.

The last time the group met — in Bali, Indonesia, in 2022 — Blinken held extensive talks with China’s then-foreign minister, Wang Yi, that led to a summit between President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping in November.

And Wang, who has since been promoted, met with Blinken last weekend on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference in Germany, the first high-level talks since the U.S. shot down a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon and Blinken postponed a much-anticipated trip to Beijing.

A meeting between Blinken and Qin, who was formerly China’s ambassador to the U.S., would be their first in Qin’s current capacity.

The broader G-20 meeting is expected to focus on food and energy security, especially for developing countries, which have been hit by fallout from the Ukraine conflict. In Bali, a number of nations that have not outright condemned Russia for the war expressed deep concern about its impact on the prices and supply of food and fuel.

Before traveling to Delhi, Blinken will visit the Kazakh capital of Astana for talks with leaders there as well as a meeting of the so-called C5+1 group, made up of the former Soviet republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan and the United States.

At that meeting, he will stress the U.S. “commitment to the independence, sovereignty, and territorial integrity of Central Asian countries," the State Department said in a statement that mirrors the wording it has been using to support Ukraine against Russia.

Blinken will then go to Tashkent for talks with Uzbek officials.

Source: Voice of America

Tajikistan’s Education Outcomes to Improve with Support from a New World Bank Project

The $50 million grant will invest in system improvements for better teaching and learning outcomes, modernize schools and enhance capacity to carry our learning assessments

WASHINGTON, February 23, 2023— The World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors approved today $50 million in grant financing from the International Development Association (IDA) for the Learning Environment – Foundation of Quality Education in Tajikistan Project, aimed at enhancing the quality of teaching and learning in Tajikistan’s secondary education.

While access to general secondary education is high in Tajikistan, with enrollment at 96.6% in 2019, the learning outcomes remain low. According to the 2020 Human Capital Index, a child in Tajikistan born in 2020 can be expected to attend 10.9 years of schooling by the 18th birthday. However, with a harmonized learning outcome (HLO) score, the learning-adjusted years of schooling drops to 6.8 years, representing a learning gap of 4.1 years.

“Education is a critical investment in human capital and is linked to higher wages and GDP growth,” said Ozan Sevimli, World Bank Country Manager for Tajikistan. “We are very excited about this new investment as it seeks to improve teaching and learning for a young and growing population and supports capacity improvements and learning assessments towards a more accountable, effective, and inclusive education system.”

The first component of the project will support the development and implementation of a new national framework for teaching and learning environments. Among other aspects, it will include the update of the teaching practices and quality assurance mechanisms to ensure its implementation and enforcement and provide capacity building to staff across educational institutions for its implementation.

The second component will invest in rehabilitation and modernization of schools to allow for more classrooms, opening of modern laboratories, provision of ICT equipment and expansion of opportunities for STEM subjects so that Tajikistan’s students have the modern skills essential for the 21st century. Investments will also be made in school ventilation systems, energy efficiency and improvement of toilets and hygiene facilities, especially for girls. These investments will directly benefit 40,000 students and 1200 teachers of the 65 target schools.

The third component will enhance the country’s capacity to carry out national and international assessments, such as PISA (Program for International Student Assessment). These assessments are critical for monitoring of students’ learning outcomes and producing reliable data to inform policies and decision making.

Poor school teaching and learning environments are a major challenge in Tajikistan. Most public schools are in urgent need of improvements ranging from the skills and competencies of teachers to physical learning spaces. Poor learning outcomes are evident starting in the early grades. Only 55% of students in grade 2 can read the benchmark of 40 Tajik words per minute, decreasing to 41% in grade 4, where 80 Tajik words are used as a benchmark. Testing in Russian language produced similar results. Teaching and learning duration is reduced due to multiple shifts, and this negatively affects student learning outcomes. In 2018-2019, 88% of students attended double-shift schools, 5.2% attended triple-shift schools, and the remaining 6.6% attended single-shift schools. On average, one toilet is shared by 339 students. While most schools reported separate sanitation facilities for boys and girls, only 1% of schools had covered bins for disposal of menstrual hygiene waste, while only 2% of schools had water available in girls’ cubicles for menstrual hygiene. Based on global evidence, this is likely impacting girls’ attendance at school, particularly in the higher grades, leading to poorer learning outcomes and increased drop out of girls. Only 3% of schools have separate toilets for students with disabilities.

The project aims to address these challenges.

International evidence supports the role of teaching and learning environments in improved learning outcomes of students. The new project, by working at a higher level with the national framework, at the school level in the actual learning environment, and at the teacher level with training programs will support an integrated approach to improved teaching and learning environments, teaching, and learning practices in Tajikistan.

Currently, the World Bank is financing 24 projects in Tajikistan totaling $1.54 billion. Since 1996, the World Bank has provided over $2.72 billion in IDA grants, highly concessional credits, and trust funds for Tajikistan. The World Bank is committed to continuing its support as the country strives to improve lives and meet the aspirations of its young and growing population.

Source: World Bank