Headquarters of the United Persian-language TV Channel will be based in the Tajik capital

Khamrokhon Zarifi, head of the Tajik Foreign Ministry told the media that the office of the United TV Channel of Aghanistan, Tajikistan and Iran will be opened in Dushanbe. This decision was made at a meeting of foreign ministers of the three Persian-language countries.

Zarifi also noted that Tajikistan Он также отметил, что Таджикистан приложит все усилия для того, чтобы создать необходимые условия для функционирования офиса этого телеканала.

A joint final statement signed on 25 March by the foreign ministers of Afghanistan, Tajikistan and Iran says that the 1150-th anniversary of Abuabdulloh Rudaki, the founder of Persian literature will be widely celebrated in the three countries.

http://www.toptj.com/

NANSMIT is seeking participants for a workshop on “Perspectives of Media Trade Union in Tajikistan”

In late April 2008, NANSMIT is holding a workshop “Perspectives of Media Trade Union in Tajikistan”. The event will be supported by the Finnish Foundation on Media, Communication and Development under the Union of Journalists of Finland.

Those wishing to take part in the workshop and make their input in the development of the Tajik media trade unions can contact NANSMIT at: coordinator@nansmit.tj.

Detailed information on the forthcoming workshop is available at: http://www.nansmit.tj/?page=events&id=69

NANSMIT Monitoring Service

Emomali Rakhmon criticizes the online media asking journalists to restrain from pessimism

A new State TV channel to be created in Tajikistan

President of Tajikistan Emomali Rakhmon appreciates the increase in the number of non-government media outlets and considers them a platform for discussions of the most topical problems in the society. This statement was made by Rakhmon at a traditional seasonal meeting with the Tajik intelligentsia. However, Rakhmon criticized the official media noting that they provide Tajikistani with out-of-date information. Very often, the official press and television ignore ongoing events, thus giving a chance to foreign media – especially the Russian mass media – to fill in the information vacuum. “It is necessary to create an information TV channel in the country”, — said the President.

“Prior to learning about a certain accident in the country from the local radio and television, the Tajik people learn about it from the Russian mass media. It often leads to misunderstanding of the situation; it leads to false information, prejudiced interpretations and exaggerations. At the recent government session, I have charged the officials to promptly share official information with the State media – so that the information would not be distorted. I have also given an order to the chairman of the State TV and Radio Committee to create a special information channel, which will broadcast news and stories about the events – not only in Tajikistan, but elsewhere in the world – so that our people would learn about ongoing developments within the country and beyond its boundaries”, — said the President.

To restrain and to keep from…

The President noted that the Tajik-language segment within the global network is very small. “This gap should be filled in order to ensure the information security of the country”, — Rakhmon said. Along with that, he stressed that online publications should not defame human dignity; they should not contribute to fomentation of local conflicts, nepotism and extremism”. Rakhmon asked journalists to restrain from publishing materials containing messages of mistrust and pessimism.

In the meantime, media experts in Tajikistan express concern about the statements made by the country leader. “Some officials can now gamble on that with the purpose to control the press”, — says Nuriddin Karshibayev, chairman of the National Association of Independent Media (NANSMIT).

“A normal official will take the President’s words adequately; but if he is an adulator and social climber, he will apply these words to strengthen pressure on journalists and the media. Our officials have always complained that “the journalists are fond of stirring up the masses, and they should be more careful in order not to disturb stability in Tajikistan. And now, someone who dares to write about the problems of Tajikistani can be immediately “labeled” as a destabilizer of the society”, — Karshibayev said.

A new TV channel or daily papers – what is better?

Regarding the President’s order to create a new State TV channel, Karshibayev says that it would be more efficient to create appropriate conditions for printing and disseminating private newspapers; it would be worthwhile to abolish some of the numerous local official outlets. It is very important that the newspapers will be published every day, not on the weekly basis as it is now.

“I think it would be impossible to resolve the problem of informing the society on the ongoing events in the country. Because of the lack of electricity, half of the year the people do not have access to television, — said Karshibayev. — In my opinion, new public-political newspapers should be created in the provinces of Tajikistan. Such newspapers should be published regularly and reach the remotest areas of the country. The malpractice of publishing the official city, district and province newspapers should be also abolished – since these outlets effectively are tribunes of local authorities. They do not provide readers with alternative information and do not contain any analysis of social and economic problems in the country”.

http://www.toptj.com/

Tajikistan is in the “black list” of the countries controlling online outlets

The REGNUM information agency referring to a report launched on 21 March by the international organization Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said that Tajikistan has fallen into the “secondary” annual list of the countries considered “Enemies of the Internet”. Along with Tajikistan, the list contains such countries as Bahrain, Eritrea, Gambia, Jordan, Libya, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Thailand, United Arab Emirates and Yemen.

As for the main “black list” of the countries “Enemies of the Internet”, there are 15 States: “Belarus, Burma, China, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, North Korea, Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunis, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam and Zimbabwe.

http://www.toptj.com/

The Third Central Asian Contest “The Second Ancient…”

So far, the contest of cartoons “The second ancient…” has been a national Kazakhstani event annually held by the Union of Journalists of Kazakhstan and the Freedom of Speech Foundation “Adyl Soz” to celebrate the World Free Press Day.

Last year, the contest went beyond the boundaries of Kazakhstan. In 2008, the Third Cartoon Contest has obtained a status of regional in Central Asia.

Organizers of the contest are: IFEX, the Union of Journalists of Kazakhstan, the Freedom of Speech Foundation “Adyl Soz”, Fredric Ebert Foundation, the Tajik National Association of Independent Media (NANSMIT), and the Kyrgyz public unit “Journalists”.

Journalists and artists are invited to take part in the contest.

Detailed information is available at: http://www.nansmit.tj/?page=events&id=68

NANSMIT

USAID supports a workshop on TB prevention and control

A two-day workshop for the mass media covering the issues of TB prevention and control took place on 13-14 March in Dushanbe.

The workshop was organized by the Republican TB Control Center under support of Project HOPE, a partner of the US Agency on International Development (USAID) and the Global Fund.

The workshop emphasized the role of journalists in mobilizing the society to prevent and counter tuberculosis, and to stress the potential threat of this dangerous disease. The organizers presented basic information about the ailment and essential data on the National TB Control and Prevention Program. Dr. S. Saidaliev, Director of the Republican TB Control Center said that the system of testing and registration of patients has improved countrywide; however, during the last two years, the TB mortality rate remains at the level of 6,5 per 100 thousand citizens.

Participants of the workshop also discussed the issues of ethics in publications and reports on TB issues in the media.

“Despite the recent progress, tuberculosis remains a global health problem, — said Tracy Jacobson, the US Ambassador to Tajikistan. — About 9 million new cases are registered annually around the globe, and about 1,5 million people die every year. The US government is committed to continuing its support to the healthcare partners and will keep helping Tajikistan to strengthen its healthcare capacities”.

TB Control Program implemented by Project HOPE is one of the many programs funded by USAID. Since 1993, USAID has spent about $300 million to implement projects in the spheres of economy, health care, education and democratic reforms in Tajikistan.

NANSMIT

TAJIKISTAN: IMF CATCHES DUSHANBE IN CREATIVE ACCOUNTING SCANDAL

Burdened with an excessive foreign debt and facing a severe humanitarian crisis, the government of Tajikistan now finds itself disgraced in the eyes of the international community. One of the Central Asian nation’s leading creditors, the International Monetary Fund, is demanding repayment of over $47 million in loans after determining Dushanbe cooked its books in order to makes itself seem more creditworthy.

The IMF Executive Board, meeting earlier in March, determined that the Tajik National Bank had supplied the international lender with «inaccurate information» about the country’s cotton sector, Tajikistan’s primary export earner, as well as top employer. The bank also doctored data concerning the size of international reserves, its net domestic assets and its credit policy. The deception pre-dated the onset of Tajikistan’s current crisis, in which severe winter weather has caused alarming shortages of heat and electricity.

«The Board agreed that the Republic of Tajikistan shall be expected to repay the Fund the three non-complying disbursements that were not discharged under Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI) relief,» the IMF said in a statement issued March 6. In all, Tajikistan will have to give back $47.4 million.
At the time IMF approved the loans, the Tajik Nation Bank reportedly led top fund officials to believe that the bank’s reserves stood at $450 million, when, in fact, they were roughly one-third of that amount. In addition, the National Bank also concealed the fact that the reserves had been pledged as collateral in order to obtain commercial-bank loans to prop up the cotton sector.

In most such cases of fraudulent behavior, the IMF usually demands repayment within 30 days. But given Tajikistan’s status as Central Asia’s poorest nation, and taking into account the humanitarian crisis, the fund said Dushanbe could repay the money in six monthly installments starting on September 5, 2008.
In its own statement, the Tajik National Bank pledged to meet the IMF’s repayment timetable. Bank officials gave no indication of where they would find the necessary funds to meet the repayment timetable. The state is already caught in a vicious cycle of deficit spending. In 2007, the government is estimated to have generated about $614 million in revenue, while spending over $756 million.
The fiscal picture is likely only to grow worse in the coming months. Given the IMF’s findings, other key creditors, such as the Asian Development Bank, are intending to conduct audits. This raises the possibility that President Imomali Rahmon’s government will have to repay other loans.
Tajik political analyst Saymuddin Dustov said he believed that the Tajik government would likely try to squeeze more taxes out of an already hard-pressed population, in order to cover the new IMF obligation.

While some political analysts and economists in Dushanbe, including Dustov, confessed to feeling ashamed by recent developments, others expressed outrage. One such expert, economist Hajimuhammad Umarov, questioned the timing of the IMF announcement, suggesting that Tajikistan was somehow being punished unfairly.
In Moscow, some analysts believe that the IMF’s action was dictated not by financial considerations, but by geopolitics. «It is absolutely probable that the recent IMF statement is merely a means of pressure on Tajikistan in order to turn [the country’s] loyalty toward Washington, rather than Moscow,» Mikhail Delyagin, the director of Russia’s Globalization Institute, was quoted as saying by the Nezavisimaya Gazeta daily.
Defenders of the bank say that the scope of the Tajik government’s dishonesty was simply too great to ignore.
In bringing the deception to light, the IMF painted an alarming picture of Tajikistan’s cotton sector. According to some reports, the country already owes foreign commercial banks roughly $330 million, and each year, the sector needs a fresh injection of about $80 million just to stave off collapse. Overall, the country’s foreign debt is currently estimated at $1.3 billion.
IMF officials first started to grow suspicious in late 2007 that they had been fed faulty information. The IMF’s worst fears were confirmed in December and January, after Tajik officials responded to requests for additional data.
The IMF scandal is unfolding as the country’s humanitarian crisis enters a new phase. As temperatures rise with the onset of spring, the power shortages that plagued the country during the winter are easing. But now concern is growing about the food supply. The harsh weather inflicted a severe agricultural toll, although the extent of the damage has not yet been fully estimated. In the Gorno-Badakhshan region, for example, local officials say the winter wheat crop was effectively wiped out by the harsh weather.
Already, an alarming spike in inflation is being reported in some regions in the country. In Gorno-Badakhshan, the price of vegetable oil has doubled in the past year, while the cost of flour has risen 60 percent over the same period. In addition, powdered milk has experienced a 50 percent price jump, the Asia-Plus news agency reported.

Kambiz Arman

Источник: http://www.eurasianet.org

OSCE will support Tajik newspapers

The OSCE Center in Dushanbe will provide several Tajik newspapers with special funds to support their self-development. Since the early 1990-s, newspapers in Tajikistan are published only once a week; most of them print not more than 3-5 thousand copies a week.

“This measure is designed to increase printouts and expand circulation of Tajik newspapers, — says Michael Unland, representative of the OSCE Center in Dushanbe. — We cannot compare Tajikistan with Western countries in terms of the number of newspapers per capita and the quality of printing. However, the Kyrgyz daily “Vecherny Bishkek” releases 120 thousand copies a week, whereas the total number of Tajik newspapers is hardly a half of this amount”. It is logical that advertisers are not interested in small newspapers with limited circulation.

According to the recent OSCE study conducted in Tajikistan, about 30 percent of all expenditures related to printing are costs of polygraphic materials and paper. The average price of paper for printing in Tajikistan is $1,000 per ton. Saimiddin Dustov, chairman of the NGO “Informatics for Democracy and National Progress” considers that Tajik publishers should use the OSCE grant funds at their own discretion, i.e. those who are close to the “threshold of sustainability and profitability” could use the money to increase salaries of their staff.

Those applying for grants to OSCE must develop and present clear and comprehensive business plans reflecting forthcoming changes in the quality of their outlets. The editing board must show the way towards financial sustainability, the stable increase in the number of copies, the expansion of circulation, and the decrease in production costs.

Nuriddin Karshibayev, chairman of the Tajik National Association of Independent Media (NANSMIT) considers that editors should pay special attention to the contents of newspapers, i.e. publications must be topical; authors should touch upon the most relevant social, economic and political issues. “One-time grant infusions from international donors would hardly change the situation in the media, — says Karshibayev. — Editors and publishers should think of their commercial sustainability, which largely depends on their own efforts”.

Independent journalist Rajabi Mirzo thinks that the media needs support from the government. However, the authorities somehow are not interested in the development of the media market in the country. The energy crisis last winter has revealed reluctance of the government to help the printing media. The State-owned printing house Sharki Ozod is the facility for most of the Tajik newspapers. During the crisis, this printing house was supplied with electricity only 5 hours a day.

“Regrettably, the energy crisis will continue in Tajikistan, — says Rajabi Mirzo. — Most of the population cannot watch TV programs, and newspapers remain the main source of information. The Tajik State television receives both electricity and funds from the national budget, whereas the main printing facility – also fully controlled by the government – is lacking electricity…” – says Rajabi Mirzo.

Based on a piece by Nigora Bukharizade, Deutsche W

Источник: http://www.ariana.su/

IMF Executive Board Reviews Noncomplying Disbursements to Republic of Tajikistan and Breach of Obligations Under Article VIII, Section 5

IMF Executive Board Reviews Noncomplying Disbursements to Republic of Tajikistan and Breach of Obligations Under Article VIII, Section 5

Press Release No. 08/43
March 5, 2008

The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) met today to review a report from the Managing Director on noncomplying disbursements to the Republic of Tajikistan and a breach of obligations under Article VIII, Section 5 of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement.
The Executive Board reviewed matters related to five noncomplying disbursements to the Republic of Tajikistan, each in an amount equivalent to SDR 9.8 million (about US$15.8 million), that were made in January 2004, August 2004, March 2005, July 2005, and February 2006 following the completion by the Executive Board of the second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth review under the three-year Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF) arrangement. The PRGF arrangement was approved by the Executive Board on December 11, 2002 (see Press Release No. 02/54).
Based on new information provided by the authorities to IMF staff in December 2007 and January 2008, the Executive Board concurs that these disbursements were made on the basis of inaccurate information provided by the Tajik authorities relating to the performance criteria on the net international reserves of the Republic of Tajikistan, the net domestic assets of the National Bank of Tajikistan (NBT), and against the NBT issuing directed credits. The Board agreed that the Republic of Tajikistan shall be expected to repay the Fund the three noncomplying disbursements (related to the fourth, fifth, and sixth review) that were not discharged under Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI) relief, which amount to a total of SDR29.4 million (about US$47.4 million), together with any interest accrued, in six equal monthly installments starting with the first installment no later than September 5, 2008, and concluding with the sixth and final installment no later than February 5, 2009. The Board expressed its regret on the nature and extent of misreporting, and emphasized the seriousness it attaches to the fact that MDRI resources extended to Tajikistan cannot be made subject to repayment.
In taking its decision, the Executive Board carefully weighed the Republic of Tajikistan’s very difficult economic circumstances , in particular its balance of payments position as well as the severe humanitarian crisis prevailing in the country, against serious instances of misreporting by the Tajik authorities. Accordingly, the Executive Board decided to make use of its discretion to extend the repayment period beyond the normal 30-day repayment expectation period called for under the misreporting framework.
Moreover, the Executive Board reviewed matters related to misreporting under Article VIII, Section 5, of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement by the Republic of Tajikistan. It found that the Republic of Tajikistan had breached its obligations under Article VIII, Section 5, of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, which obliges member countries to furnish such information as the Fund deems necessary for its activities.
The Tajik authorities have agreed to undertake a special audit of the NBT, to be carried out by a recognized international firm. The audit will aim to establish a reliable foundation for the future provision of monetary data and data on external debt, and to define steps to ensure transparency of all financial operations of the NBT. The Executive Board urged the authorities to publish the results of the audit when it has been completed.
In view of the corrective actions taken and the ongoing efforts of the authorities to improve the governance structure of the NBT, and implement measures to improve and strengthen the monitoring and reporting of data provided to the Fund, the Executive Board decided not to require any further remedial action in connection with the breach of obligations under Article VIII, Section 5 of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement. At the same time, the Board agreed to monitor closely the reporting of data to the Fund going forward.

IMF

Источник: IMF

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