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Eurasia Daily Monitor - 04/06/2006

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  • Eurasia Daily Monitor - 04/06/2006

    Eurasia Daily Monitor -- The Jamestown Foundation
    Thursday, April 6, 2006 -- Volume 3, Issue 67



    IN THIS ISSUE:
    *President of Adygeya disappears after conflict with Kremlin
    *Moscow targets joint Armenia-Iran energy projects for takeover
    *Russia, Kazakhstan ink new deals on energy and military cooperation

    KREMLIN PLAN TO MERGE ADYGEYA MEETS UNEXPECTED OBSTACLE

    On April 4, the second session of the newly elected parliament of
    Adygeya, a region in the western section of the North Caucasus, ended
    abruptly when President Khasret Sovmen announced his resignation.

    The Adygei leader had come to parliament to observe the process to
    select the chairmen of 12 parliament committees. Fierce debate erupted
    between members of the pro-Kremlin United Russia Party, which has 30
    seats in the Adygei legislature, and the opposition Communist and
    Russian United Industrial Parties, which have a total of 13 seats.
    Sovmen asked for the floor, presumably to broker a compromise. However,
    parliamentary chair Ruslan Khadzhibekov refused to allow the Adygei
    leader to speak. Then Sovmen handed the speaker a written statement. But
    instead of reading it aloud, Khadzhibekov said that the statement would
    first be reviewed by the Political Council of United Russia; both Sovmen
    and Khadzhibekov are members of the pro-Kremlin party.

    Despite the speaker's obvious resistance, Sovmen managed to take the
    floor following a break. His speech stunned the assembled deputies. "I
    have decided to resign," he declared. "Moscow does not understand me.
    Even if I step down from the president office, I will provide the
    republic with economic and social help." Sovmen wished the parliament
    good luck and suggested possible successors, including Adam Zhane,
    minister of health, and Murad Kudaev, the head of Adygeya's
    Krasnogvardeisk district (Kommersant, April 5).

    Sovmen left the parliamentary chamber after his speech, accompanied by
    several loyal deputies. According to Kommersant, Sovmen went to the
    Government Palace to await a phone call from the Kremlin. He did not
    have to wait for long; the phone call from Moscow came within 30 minutes
    and radically changed the situation.

    Following Sovmen's conversation with Moscow, the Adygei presidential
    office issued a press release. "The deputies and journalists
    misunderstood the statement made by the president," it read. "There are
    no grounds for broadcasting information about his resignation."
    According to press secretary Abrek Chich, "The president reacted too
    emotionally to what was going on during the session. When he entered the
    parliament, some deputies defiantly did not stand up and when Khasret
    Sovmen saw that the deputies had no common ground and synergy, he
    announced that there was no use trying to work with such an attitude."

    Several hours later the United Russia parliamentary faction held a
    special meeting and appealed to Russian President Vladimir Putin to
    extend Sovmen's authority by another term.

    The next day, April 5, the political crisis in Adygeya took a disturbing
    turn: Sovmen disappeared. Vedomosti reported that even officials from
    Putin's administration were unable to locate him. An unnamed source in
    Putin's administration described Sovmen's behavior as "unclear
    vacillation that destabilizes the situation in the region." The source
    also said that Sovmen's resignation might be accepted as early as the
    end of this week (Vedomosti, April 5). However, another source in the
    Kremlin left open the possibility that Putin would reappoint Sovmen
    (Kommersant, April 5).

    Russian pundits offered a variety of explanations for Sovmen's demarche.
    Kommersant reported that the Kremlin was dissatisfied with Sovmen's
    economic policy and that he was resisting a proposal to incorporate
    Adygeya into Krasnodar Krai, which is dominated by ethnic Russians (see
    EDM, April 29, 2005). According to political observer Oksana
    Goncharenko, "The danger now is that the local parliament will split
    into equal parts, including followers and opponents of Sovmen" (Novye
    izvestiya, April 5). The opposition, consisting mostly of ethnic
    Russians, advocates holding a referendum in Adygeya on the issue of
    unification. This would be the easiest way for the Kremlin to dissolve
    Adygeya, as the majority of the population in the republic consists of
    Russians who would vote for such unification. According to Alexander
    Konovalov from the Institute of Strategic Estimates and Analyses, the
    president of Adygeya was called to Moscow where attempts were made to
    persuade him to agree to the unification. Instead, he went to parliament
    to resign in protest.

    The new Adygei parliament, elected on March 12, has only one chamber,
    unlike the previous body. It will be much easier to push the referendum
    law through a unicameral parliament, which had been blocked by the upper
    chamber of the old legislature. Adopting the referendum law opens the
    door for unification, which the Kremlin has long tried to engineer.
    Parliamentary speaker Khadzhibekov is loyal to the Kremlin and will not
    resist Adygeya's incorporation into Krasnodar Krai. Relations between
    Khadzhibekov and Sovmen are strained, because Moscow sees Khadzhibekov
    as the region's next president. This explains why Khadzhibekov did not
    let Sovmen speak first at the session and why the Adygei leader
    mentioned two regional politicians as his preferred successors.
    Understanding that the Kremlin wants to get rid of him to clear the way
    for the merger, Sovmen decided to play an all-or-nothing game,
    knowing that Moscow has not yet decided what to do with him and with
    Adygeya. The Adygei president's bold move may have been intended to
    frighten Putin, who often moves tentatively to avoid making missteps.

    Sovmen's open threat to resign demonstrated that the Adygei leader
    continues to be an independent regional political figure, a quite rare
    species in Putin's Russia. But Sovmen must act boldly, as the Adygei
    people would not forgive him if he betrays the idea of Adygeyan
    autonomy.

    --Andrei Smirnov



    BLESSING ARMENIA'S DEBT SERVITUDE

    On March 31 in Moscow, the Foundation for the Orthodox Peoples' Unity
    bestowed its annual award on Armenian President Robert Kocharian and
    Russia's Gazprom company for their support to Russian spiritual and
    religious values (Noyan Tapan, March 31). By fortuitous coincidence,
    Gazprom doubled the price of gas to Armenia, effective April 1. The
    price hike will deepen Armenia's economic dependence and structural
    indebtedness to Russia.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin had personally announced in December
    2005 that the gas price to Armenia would double as of January 1. In
    early January, however, Putin granted a reprieve until March 31, so as
    not to hit allied Armenia too hard in winter, but also to negotiate
    another transfer of Armenian infrastructure and energy-sector assets to
    Russia as payment for the higher gas bill after April 1. On April 5,
    Kocharian publicly hinted that such an arrangement is in the making
    (Armenian Public Television, April 5).

    The gas price has now risen from to 0 per one thousand cubic meters
    delivered at Armenia's border. As a result, the price of gas consumed in
    Armenia is rising in one fell swoop by 52% to households and by 85% to
    industrial and commercial enterprises, effective on April 10. Armenia's
    Public Utilities Regulatory Commission approved the new rates already on
    March 10 -- an indication that Moscow was not prepared to grant any
    further short-term reprieve.

    Furthermore, the Russian-controlled, gas-fired Hrazdan electrical power
    plant -- the largest in Armenia -- has announced its intention to raise
    the price of electricity by 90% for households and enterprises, in
    connection with the price hike on gas. Russia's Unified Energy Systems
    (UES) operates the Hrazdan plant under a 99-year lease, as part of the
    debt-for-assets deal that settled Armenia's debts to Russia in
    2002-2003. Six Armenian industrial enterprises were ceded to Russia in
    that deal as well.

    Previously, Armenia had ceded control of the national gas transport and
    distribution system to a mixed company, ArmRosGaz, in which Gazprom
    holds a 45% stake, Gazprom's affiliate Itera another 10%, and Armenia's
    Energy Ministry the remaining 45% stake, which may now be further
    eroded. Moscow wants the handover process to continue, so as to render
    Armenia's economic dependence complete and irreversible.

    Moscow is now making an offer that, by its reckoning, the destitute
    Yerevan can hardly refuse. It proposes either temporary price relief on
    gas, or a temporary price-offsetting mechanism to alleviate the social
    impact, on the condition that Yerevan transfers additional assets to
    Russia. These could include: part of Armenia's remaining stake in
    ArmRosGaz, or Armenia's stake in the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline under
    construction, or the fifth power bloc under construction by Iran at
    Hrazdan. That fifth bloc, Hrazdan's largest and most modern, is co-owned
    by Armenia and Iran independently from the four Russian UES-operated
    blocs and is valued at some 0 million in the ongoing discussions.

    If Yerevan hands over such assets, Moscow could recalculate the price of
    gas downward to or per one thousand cubic meters; or, alternatively,
    Yerevan can use the proceeds from such handovers in order to compensate
    the populace for the doubling of the gas price. According to credible
    reports, not denied by Armenian officials and partly corroborated by
    some of them, Yerevan and Moscow are now discussing a solution along
    those lines, to apply for a two-and-a-half year period. The Hrazdan
    plant's fifth power bloc alone --- the largest and most modern, co-owned
    by Armenia and Iran separately from Russia's UES --- is valued at some 0
    million in these discussions.

    Gazprom and Itera supplied Armenia with 1.7 billion cubic meters of gas
    in 2005 and intend to deliver 2 billion cubic meters in 2006. This gas
    originates in Turkmenistan, reaching Armenia by pipeline via Kazakhstan,
    around the northern bend of the Caspian Sea and through the North
    Caucasus and Georgia. This is the pipeline that was blown up
    (simultaneously with another pipeline and an electricity transmission
    line) by never-identified saboteurs on Russian territory in January,
    causing severe hardship to Georgia and Armenia.

    Until 2005, Gazprom and Itera were buying Turkmen gas at per one
    thousand cubic meters and reselling it to Armenia at to . This year,
    Turkmenistan sells its gas for per one thousand cubic meters to Russia.
    Thus, the Russian price hike to Armenia is highly disproportionate to
    the Turkmen hike.

    Apparently, Moscow feels free to resort to economic extortion of Armenia
    and takes its political loyalty as an ally for granted. Moreover, by
    targeting the joint Armenia-Iran energy projects for takeover, Russia
    intends to rule out for the long term any alternative to its own
    monopoly in Armenia. For its part, the Armenian leadership seems content
    to accept the type of short-term price relief that goes together with
    long-term insecurity and debt servitude for the country.

    (Interfax, Noyan Tapan, Armenpress, Mediamax, PanArmenianNet, March
    30-April 6; Haikakan Zhamanak, March 29, 31; see EDM, January 17, 20)

    --Vladimir Socor



    NAZARBAYEV'S GROWING CONFIDENCE ON VIEW IN VISIT TO MOSCOW

    Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev received a warm welcome during his
    April 3 visit to Moscow. Friendly relations were emphasized when
    Nazarbayev dedicated a new monument to the 19th-century Kazakh poet Abai
    Kunanbayev, a devoted Russophile. Speaking at the ceremony, Russian
    President Vladimir Putin noted that this event, as well as the erection
    of a similar monument to Russian poet Alexander Pushkin in Astana,
    symbolizes the long tradition of friendship between the two countries.

    Nazarbayev and Putin signed seven bilateral agreements covering energy
    and fuel cooperation, the use of the Saryshagan test site by the Russian
    military, and cooperation between Kazakhstan's Eurasian Industrial Group
    and Russia's Vneshekonombank, and between the Foreign Ministries of the
    two countries. Moscow also pledged to help Astana putting the first
    Kazakh satellite -- Kazsat -- into orbit (Khabar TV, April 5).

    The Kremlin is using every pretext to secure a strong military foothold
    in Kazakhstan following Tbilisi's repeated demands for the Russian
    military to withdraw from its bases in Georgia. Astana regarded Russia's
    recent ban on imports of Georgian and Moldovan wines (see EDM, March 28)
    as a response to swelling anti-Russian sentiments in these countries.
    With an amazing promptness, just before Nazarbayev's trip to Moscow, the
    Sanitary Inspection Department of the Kazakh Ministry of Health ordered
    an inspection of imported Georgian and Moldovan wines. The head of the
    department, Anatoli Belonog, said that, if the wines pose health
    hazards, such imports might be banned in Kazakhstan as well (Megapolis,
    April 3).

    The current military and political ties between Russia and Kazakhstan
    are hardly conducive to fostering friendship among equals. In Astana,
    the Kazakh government sporadically comes under fire from nationalists
    for granting Russia a 50-year lease on the Baikonur launch site, which
    is in the environmentally vulnerable Kyzylorda region. The lease on the
    Saryshagan test site is likely to draw additional protests.

    But these sacrifices and concessions are inevitable for Kazakhstan,
    which is desperately seeking to build up its military force with Russian
    help. At a press conference in Astana the chairman of the Committee for
    Scientific and Technological Development of the Ministry of Industry and
    Trade, Meyram Kazhyken, announced plans to set up a Russian-Kazakh joint
    venture to assemble Kazakh Ansat and Aktay helicopters based on the
    Russian MI model. Some helicopter parts may be manufactured in the
    former munitions plants of Aktobe, Almaty, and Petropavlovsk. But
    Kazhyken pointed out that it would take 10-15 years before even 30% of
    the production could be relocated to Kazakhstan (Sayasat, April 1).

    The price for Russian assistance in modernizing the Kazakh army is
    political loyalty to the Kremlin. Aware of this pitfall, Astana seeks to
    diversify its military partnerships and avoid relying entirely on Moscow
    for sophisticated weapons. For example, Kazakhstan inherited a
    well-developed Soviet space-flight monitoring system that could be used
    to modernize its air defense system with help from Singapore
    Technologies.

    Astana has also made significant steps toward greater energy
    independence from Moscow by bidding for stakes in the Yukos-owned
    Mazeikiu Nafta complex in Lithuania. Ironically, on the eve of the
    Nazarbayev-Putin talks in Moscow, the Lithuanian newspaper Lietuvos
    Rytas announced that the Lithuanian government was seeking to buy back a
    57.3% stake in Mazeikiu Nafta from Yukos and then sell it to
    Kazakhstan's state owned company, KazMunayGaz (Vilnius BNS, March 31;
    also see EDM, April 5). Kazakhstan's closer ties with China also help
    counterbalance Russia's drive to monopolize hydrocarbon transportation
    routes through Kazakhstan.

    Astana has enthusiastically embraced the idea of a "Greater Central
    Asia" region and Kazakh Foreign Minister Kasymzhomart Tokayev recently
    went to Afghanistan to attend an international conference on
    "Partnership, Trade, and Development within Greater Central Asia,"
    sponsored by Johns Hopkins University. He also made sure to extend a
    personal message of friendship from Nazarbayev to Afghan President Hamid
    Karzai. Tokayev said that Greater Central Asia, which includes a
    politically and economically diverse grouping of Iran, Afghanistan, and
    Azerbaijan, parts of China, Western Siberia and the Urals of Russia,
    particularly interests Kazakhstan as a promising energy transportation
    route extending from Central Asia to the Persian Gulf via India and
    Pakistan. The Kazakh foreign minister stressed that Afghanistan should
    be part of Greater Central Asia linked with Almaty, Bishkek, and
    Dushanbe
    via a Trans-Afghan highway running through Kabul to Kandahar. Kazakhstan
    also offered to train Afghan medical workers and engineers
    (Kazakhstanskaya pravda, April 4).

    Tokayev addressed the conference on behalf of all Central Asian states
    without fearing any criticism from Kazakhstan's neighbors. It is a clear
    sign of Astana's growing confidence in spearheading an alliance of
    Central Asian countries. Nazarbayev's March 19 visit to Tashkent also
    contributed much to the rapprochement between Uzbek President Islam
    Karimov and Putin, and Karimov spoke in favor of a Kazakh-Uzbek alliance
    and putting priority on a partnership with Russia in foreign policy (see
    EDM, March 22). However, Astana takes a more cautious approach toward
    Moscow and tries to neutralize the Kremlin's attempts to return the
    Central Asian states to the Russian fold. Kazakhstan's foreign policy
    program for 2006 -2008 points out that Kazakhstan "will pursue a
    balanced and responsible foreign policy." The Kremlin should not be
    overly optimistic regarding "eternal friendship" with Astana.

    --Marat Yermukanov

    The Eurasia Daily Monitor, a publication of the Jamestown Foundation, is
    edited by Ann E. Robertson. The opinions expressed in it are those of
    the individual authors and do not necessarily represent those of the
    Jamestown Foundation. If you have any questions regarding the content of
    EDM, or if you think that you have received this email in error, please
    respond to [email protected].

    Unauthorized reproduction or redistribution of EDM is strictly
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