• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
11 December 2025

Transport Diversification Allows Resumption of Kazakh Oil Product Exports to Europe

In March 2024, Kazakh state pipeline operator JSC KazTransOil again started loading of dark oil products produced at Kazakhstani refineries onto Aframax size tankers through the Republic of Georgia’s Batumi Oil Terminal LLC. The shipments to European countries will total 60,000-80,000 tons. Aframax vessels are designed for the safe and efficient transportation of oil and oil products to various regions of the world, and can carry about 600,000 barrels of oil or petroleum products.

The move is designed to diversify modes of transit, transportation routes and to improve economic efficiency. KazTransOil reports that it plans to load dark oil products of Kazakhstani origin regularly every month. This decision will allow customers of the Batumi Oil Terminal to reduce transportation costs, making the export route through Batumi more attractive, and should contribute to an increase in the volume of transported products.

Over its more than twenty years of existence, KazTransOil has transported more than one billion tons of oil and has moved more than 825 billion ton-kilometers of cargo. To date, KazTransOil manages an extensive network of oil pipelines with a length of more than 5,400 kilometers, providing oil transportation both to domestic refineries and for export in different directions. The company remains in a leading position, providing transportation of about 40% of all oil produced in Kazakhstan and almost 90% of all crude supplies to domestic refineries.

Central Asia and Turkey Serving as Way-Points for Russia’s Explosives Imports

Citing an analysis of trade data, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) has reported that Russia has boosted its imports of an explosive compound critical to the production of artillery ammunition – including from companies based in the U.S. and other Western countries and allies – despite international sanctions meant to choke Moscow’s wartime production. Russian imports of nitrocellulose, a highly flammable cotton product central to gunpowder and rocket propellant production, surged 70% in 2022, the first year of Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and midway through 2023 imports amounted to 3,039 tons of the product – nearly double the 2021 level.

Another supplier of cotton pulp, China, increased its supplies after U.S. and European (EU) sanctions. However, according to Liu Pengyu, spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, “Sino-Russian economic and trade cooperation is not directed against any third party and should not be violated or coerced by any third party… China does not sell weapons to parties involved in the Ukraine crisis and handles exports of dual-use goods in a reasonable manner in accordance with laws and regulations.”

According to Russian customs data provided by trade database, Import Genius, Turkish company Noy İç Ve Diş Ti̇caret accounted for nearly half of Russia’s nitrocellulose imports since the Russia-Ukraine conflict began, with most of the Istanbul-based company’s sales to Russian companies that are government contractors based in Moscow. The Turkish Embassy, as well as representatives of the company, declined to comment.

Nitrocellulose supplies to Russia have also been found to contain chemical tracers from the U.S. company, International Flavors & Fragrances, which suspended its direct shipments to Russia in April 2022 but continued them through third countries. The company said its product didn’t contain enough nitrogen to be a component of an explosive. However, Michelle Pantoja, a professor of mechanical engineering at Texas Tech University who heads the combustion laboratory’s research center, said the nitrogen content of civilian nitrocellulose could be increased to the required level.

In December, the U.S. Department of Commerce added nitrocellulose to its list of high-priority controlled commodities, which restricts its exports, and the Treasury Department said it would impose sanctions on banks or other institutions found to be financing such international trades. To be effective, however, sanctions must also apply to nitrocellulose supplier companies, said a Rand analyst.

Last year, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) claimed to have documents in its possession which showed that more than 98% of nitrocellulose imported into Russia is supplied by Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, and that imports have increased since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The Import Genius database revealed that in 2022 and early 2023, Fergana Chemical Plant, one of the largest cotton pulp producers in Uzbekistan, not only supplied raw materials to Russian importing companies, but also made direct shipments to two Russian gunpowder plants – one in Kazan, the other in Perm – worth more than $2.2 million.

In total, according to a joint investigation by Important Stories, OCCRP and Vlast.kz, the plant supplied 2,700 tons of cotton pulp to Russia worth almost $5 million in 2023. Of this, $2.2 million was supplied directly to gunpowder factories, while the rest went to intermediary firms that in the past also supplied raw materials to Russian defense plants. In the first nine months of 2023, $8.7 million worth of raw materials were supplied. Of the total volume of Russian imports of these raw materials, Uzbekistan accounts for more than half, with Kazakhstan supplying the rest.

Authorities in Central Asia Warn Against Terrorist Recruitment

Uzbekistan’s Interior Ministry has issued a warning over increased instances of calls to commit terrorist acts spread via social media and messenger apps. Citizens are being implored to booby-trap public places – including shopping and entertainment centers, schools and other places of mass gathering – for large sums of money. Besides the promise of money, extremists are offering to provide weapons and send a plan of action – while the provocateurs often won’t take no for an answer.

The anonymous instigators – as a rule, there is no photo or number in the profile – often write with similar appeals to children and teenagers, intimidating them with fabricated stories such as having all of that person’s data and personal information. “In case you receive this kind of message, please do not panic and do not send them to public chat rooms, to your acquaintances and friends, but immediately report it to the internal affairs authorities on the number 102. Block the senders and do not enter into correspondence or conversations with them,” the Interior Ministry said in a statement.

“There is a Cybersecurity Center within the structure of the interior agencies, which is engaged in monitoring and identifying individuals and channels spreading calls for unlawful acts. Special divisions have been created within the operational and investigative department of the internal affairs bodies, which are also engaged in activities to identify terrorist threats on the World Wide Web and punish attackers,” Shokirjon Hashimov, spokesman for the operational and investigative department of the Uzbek Interior Ministry, told The Times of Central Asia.

The Uzbekistan TV channel reported on the detention of a group of extremist students, who were plotting terrorist attacks in several locations in Tashkent. The attackers, who were planning to carry out a terrorist attack in the spring of 2022, were discovered in February 2021. The young men carefully thought out a plan of action and chose the Israeli embassy in Tashkent or the murder of U.S. and Chinese citizens at the capital’s international airport as the target of their planned attacks. After committing the terrorist acts, the boys intended to move to Syria via Turkey, or to Afghanistan via Surkhandarya. Over the course of the investigation, explosives were found at the suspects’ homes. The court sentenced them to between 10 and 15 years in prison.

Calls for vigilance can also be heard in neighboring Kyrgyzstan, where through social networks and dating sites, attackers are trying to recruit young people to carry out terrorist attacks in Russia. “The representative office of the Ministry of Labor, Social Security and Migration of Kyrgyzstan in the Russian Federation warns that through social networks and popular messengers such as Telegram, there is active recruitment of citizens, including underage children, to participate in terrorist acts in Russia,” the press service of the ministry reported.

Saiga Antelope Revival Pleases Kazakh Naturalists — And Leonardo DiCaprio

Kazakhstan’s steppe is now home to booming numbers of saiga antelope, with the country’s authorities and environmentalists pulling together to revive the country’s iconic species.

News that the saiga population is no longer classified as “endangered” has reached the Hollywood actor Leonardo diCaprio, who recently wrote on his Instagram page: “This unprecedented recovery reflects the remarkable conservation of saigas in Kazakhstan. A species that once numbered 48,000 in 2005 has now grown to over 1.9 million individuals in the wild.” The animal is, however, still listed as “threatened” in Kazakhstan.

The Kazakh Ministry of Ecology estimates that the saiga population will rise above 2.6 million after the calving season this year. However, as their number has grown, the Kazakh authorities have reclassified the saiga as a species that may be hunted. Environmental scientists in the West Kazakhstan region have calculated that around 340,000 adult saigas — around 18% of the population — can be culled this year, to which end over 40,000 have already been killed. Saiga meat is sold in stores and bazaars in Kazakhstan, often to be used in stews, and is also found online on the Russian marketplace Ozon.

Kazakh society is divided about the treatment of these indigenous antelopes. Some support the cull by pointing out the damage that they cause to crops, which lost the West Kazakhstan region alone over $25 million last year. Others argue that saiga hunting, if not properly regulated, could lead to poaching and the resale of saiga antlers on the black market. This could lead to another drastic decline in a species that has been thriving in recent years.

The Priority of Maintaining a United and Stable Afghanistan

The issue of inter-ethnic relations in Afghanistan affects not only the country itself but also its surrounding region. Recent history has placed a heightened importance on the “nation” question in Afghanistan in terms of the country’s political and social stability. Since regaining power in 2021, the de facto Taliban authorities have focused primarily on social policies to respond to the people’s immediate needs as well as on implementing trade and economic cooperation with regional countries to realize the geo-economic potential of the country. To a large degree, they have been successful in these endeavors.

The important question now is how the Taliban will work to synthesize various ethnic groups into a society that has a strong identity as a nation while preserving the Pashtun status quo and the legacy of Durrani statehood. Afghanistan in its current state is not ready for a federal structure, and outside actors pushing this now could possibly undermine its stability. On the other hand, the country and the wider region have a long history of diverse ethnic and national groups managing to find a way to coexist and function effectively. As the Afghan people try to overcome humanitarian crises and focus on their economic and social recovery, the Taliban’s strategy will likely continue to be based on the consolidation of ethnic groups around itself and under the umbrella of Islam, supported by measures of assimilation and expansion, as Pashtun rulers did in the country’s history.

Understanding the historical role of ethnicity and nationality in Afghanistan

So far, no modern regime in Afghanistan has been able to significantly advance the idea of “Afghan nationalism,” reflecting the national unity of the country’s people. Slogans about “one nation” have always been promoted by the capital, but did not necessarily reflect realities on the ground.

The latest (2004) republican constitution states in its Article 4 that the Afghan nation consists of “Pashtuns, Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks, Turkmen, Baluchis, Pashais, Nuristans, Aimaks, Arabs, Kyrgyz, Qizilbash, Gujars, Brahuis and other tribes,” and that the word “Afghan” applies to every citizen of Afghanistan. This multinational state has so far shown stability in its ethnic groups, but cannot demonstrate their synthesis into a society with a strong self-identification as the Afghan nation, and the term “Afghan” continues to serve as an exonym, a general name for the inhabitants of the country.

After regaining power in 2021, the Taliban worked to stop a bloody civil war that had begun in 1978, but faced a set of problems including the big “national question.” Against the backdrop of demands from the international community to ensure an inclusive government, the idea of federalism is once again being brought up in information spheres, which, according to its few supporters, presents the only way to ensure long-term peace in this diverse country.

Discussions about federalism in Afghanistan are not new and are largely connected to events in recent history, primarily the civil war that began in 1978 with the “April Revolution.” That said, there has not been enough technical analysis and evaluation on this concept with regard to this particular country, and its supporters rely too much on the historical region of Khorasan (that united different parts of modern Afghanistan, Iran, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan) and the larger region of Ariana (up to modern Pakistan).

In essence, the emergence of Afghanistan’s modern borders, primarily in the north with the Central Asian republics and the Durand Line (the border with Pakistan), did not happen through natural processes like a settlement of peoples, ethno-linguistic identity, geographical background, or historical ties. They were formed as a result of the rivalry between British and Russian empires. At the same time, the first Afghan state, i.e. the Durrani Empire in the 18th-19th centuries, extended its power to wider territories.

The border situation can be considered a historically relevant factor just like the fact that modern Afghanistan is the successor of Ahmad Shah Durrani’s state. Since Durrani’s time, central authorities in Kabul and Kandahar have been engaged in maintaining their power with a focus on a diverse ethnic, cultural and religious composition, but always with an emphasis on Pashtun ethnocentrism. At the same time, separatism has never been characteristic of the peoples of northern Afghanistan.

Even the communists had ethnic differences. The People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) was initially divided into warring factions such as the Pashtuns united in the Khalq (“people”) faction and the Parcham (“banner”) bloc who were predominantly Tajiks.
After the overthrow of the Najibullah regime in the early 1990s, groups that were formerly allies began to war among themselves. The attempt to create a coalition government (inclusive in the modern sense) only led to unprecedented chaos. The Pashtun Islamic Party of Afghanistan (Hezb-e Islami led by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar) fought with the Tajik-Uzbek alliance made up of the Islamic Society of Afghanistan (Jamiat-e Islami under Masud Ismail Khan) and the National Islamic Movement of Afghanistan (NIDA, led by Marshal Abdul Rashid Dostum). Dostum then reached a truce with Hekmatyar and began a war against Ahmad Shah Massoud, a Tajik who was also opposed by the Hazara community (see below). These events only represent some of the highlights from the civil war. Overall, the situation at that time can be best characterized as bellum omnium contra omnes: a war of all against all.

While the Mujahideen were fighting for power, a new player emerged: the Taliban, who founded their first Islamic Emirate in 1996. The non-Pashtuns again acted as a united front, reviving the so-called “Northern Alliance” (United Islamic Front for the Salvation of Afghanistan), where the main role was played by Ahmad Shah Massoud, a Tajik. It was Operation Enduring Freedom (2001-2014) spearheaded by the United States that resuscitated the former Mujahideen. But for the Afghans themselves, the war against the Taliban became only a new stage in civil conflict.

The cabinets of ministers during the transitional and republican periods looked very ethnically diverse. The representation of Pashtuns was on average 50-60%, representatives of national minorities periodically replaced each other in the post of vice president, while the presidents were Pashtuns (i.e. Karzai, Ghani) and the parliament was inclusive. The issue in the “center” seemed to have been thus resolved, but in the provinces, the situation did not really change. Through all this, the Taliban have always been present as shadow governments, de facto controlling entire regions.

In terms of the “national question,” one can argue that the communist and republican periods intensified interethnic contradictions, and political choices opened up new struggles for dominance in an ethnically diverse country, gradually disrupting the historical balance between Pashtuns and non-Pashtuns. This led to the modern realities in which Pashtuns do not know the Dari language, and national minorities do not speak (and don’t want to learn) Pashto. Non-Pashtuns gained true power only with the advent of the Soviet Union, and subsequently established themselves as a political and military force.

Separately, consider the position of the Hazara community in the modern history of Afghanistan, which has made its own adjustments to the ethnopolitical situation and is considered the most oppressed ethnic group in Afghanistan. For centuries, the Hazaras, who have Turkic-Mongolian-Iranian roots and practice Shi’ism, have been subjected to tyranny at the hands of Pashtuns and other ethnic groups.

The relatively independent political activity of the Hazaras began in the 1990s after the collapse of the communist regime. Apart from dominating certain parts of the capital, they became completely autonomous in the Hazarajat and skillfully maneuvered between various forces. However, their position improved qualitatively only with the advent of the Western coalition. A whole stratum of Hazara politicians and statesmen appeared. The Hazaras are thriving in business like never before

The Afghan territories, which are part of the historical region of Hazarajat, constituting about 12% of the country’s territory, hold significant hydropower potential and are rich in minerals, including the largest iron deposit in Hajigak, as well as deposits of tungsten, tin, zinc, lead, and lithium salts, among others. The area also houses the Bande Amir National Park with the only ski resort in the country, as well as the world-famous Buddha statues destroyed by the Taliban during the first Islamic Emirate. Also, the Hazara territory is famous for its farmland, which produces, among other things, the famous Bamiyan potato.

Addressing the priorities of today’s Afghanistan

The above realities under the current Taliban regime have not changed. The Taliban will not support regional autonomy as this is fundamentally contrary to the idea of an “Afghan state,” and the memories of decades of civil war remain fresh in the memory of the Afghan people.

Afghanistan in its current condition is not ready for a federal structure. For its people, overcoming humanitarian crises and economic and social recovery are more important than the ambitions of a small group of politicians. The region (and the world) needs an Afghanistan that is stable in every sense and not undergoing a process of “Balkanization.”

The de facto authorities have so far focused on social policy to provide for the needs of the people and appear to be working to fulfill the geo-economic potential of the country. They are implementing regional trade and economic cooperation. Their calculation appears to be simple: the government ensures economic stability and fights poverty, which increases the confidence of all ethnic groups, representing a kind of “internal jihad,” i.e. the fight against poverty, devastation and social injustice, in contrast to bringing the people together against a foreign threat.

On the domestic political front, the Taliban (Pashtun) will likely try to consolidate of all of the various ethnic groups around itself, using Islam as the main instrument and through assimilation and expansion, much like all Pashtun rulers of Afghanistan have done.

 

Aidar Borangaziyev is an Open World Foundation expert and a consultant for the Investment Group, ACME.

 

Uzbekistan Working on Economic Reforms, Wants U.S. to Get More Involved

Uzbekistan’s ambassador to the United States says the relationship between the two countries is on a roll.

“It’s a very promising time,” Ambassador Furqat Sidiqov said in Washington this week, adding that the two nations have a high level of “effective, open dialogue” as Uzbekistan seeks American investment and U.S. support for economic reforms and in other areas. Even difficult topics such as child labor and concerns about religious freedom in Uzbekistan are on the table, he said.

American businesses stand to benefit from Uzbekistan’s push into information technology and other industries, Sidiqov said on Wednesday at a meeting of the Caspian Policy Center, a research center based in Washington.

More than 100,000 Uzbeks are engaged in IT services; with most industry exports already go to the United States, a technology campus affiliated with Arizona State University will open this year in the Central Asian country, according to Sidiqov.

The ambassador acknowledged that Uzbekistan faces challenges such as water scarcity, and that the country’s leaders hope U.S. and international institutions can help implement “smart technologies” that save water. Only 20% of Uzbekistan’s water comes from within the country – the rest coming from neighboring states – and the vast majority of water is used in agriculture, often inefficiently, according to the press office of President Shavkat Mirziyoyev. 

Uzbekistan is privatizing most of its banking industry, there are plans to relax the tax burden on foreign investors, and an anti-corruption push is underway.

“Our main strategy is to minimize the role of the government in business,” said Sidiqov, a former deputy foreign minister who became ambassador to the U.S. last year. Sidiqov worked as a lower-ranking diplomat in the Washington embassy on two previous tours lasting a decade.

Uzbekistan’s state-owned banks have made progress toward “more commercially-driven business models” since the unveiling of a banking reform plan in 2020, according to Fitch Ratings, the credit ratings agency. But “further improvements may take longer due to the sector’s deep-seated structural weaknesses and new risks,” the agency said in March.

A U.S. congressional delegation recently returned from a trip that include a visit to Uzbekistan. The delegation, which included Adam Smith, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, met Mirziyoyev and his foreign and defense ministers.

The Uzbek ambassador said a key development in ties between Central Asia and the United States came last year when U.S. President Joe Biden met leaders from the region in New York. The summit, dubbed “C5+1,” included the presidents of Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.  They discussed security, economic development, climate change and efforts to promote peace.

“For the first time in our history, the United States is seeing us as a region. Before, we were part of American policy toward Afghanistan, something like that,” said Sidiqov, adding that Central Asia would welcome a Biden visit.

“We will be more than happy to organize that,” he said.