Kyrgyz revolution heralds investment drive

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Kyrgyz revolution heralds investment drive

Top new government official courts Russia

Inward investment by Russia's powerful business groups is welcome in the new Kyrgyzstan, deputy prime minister Daniyar Usenov told Emerging Markets in an interview yesterday.

Usenov, outlining Kyrgyzstan's economic perspectives for the first time in the international press, said government will act as a strategic "organizer and adjudicator". Corruption is being combated "from the top".

The new authorities were swept to power on the basis of popular protest in March. "This was a revolution, not a coup, and it came as a reaction to corruption and to the gulf between rich and poor," Usenov said.

Meeting Russian business leaders was an early priority for acting president Kurmanbek Bakiev. He travelled to Moscow this month and saw Oleg Deripaska, the main owner of Rusal, the world's second largest aluminium producer, and Petr Aven, chairman of Alfa Bank.

Bakiev and Deripaska discussed developing Kyrgyzstan's huge natural potential for hydro-electric power production.

Usenov said: "We are in discussion with Mr Deripaska about completing two unfinished power stations at Kambar-Atina, building new high-voltage power lines to export electricity to Tajikistan and constructing an aluminium smelter in Kyrgyzstan."

A supply of cheap Kyrgyz electricity would boost Rusal's plans in Tajikistan, where it has signed an agreement with the government for $1 billion of investment in energy and aluminium production. Rusal is front-runner to take control of the Tursunzade aluminium smelter, Tajikistan's largest industrial asset, in a privatization sale this year.

Usenov also said Kyrgyzstan welcomes inward investment in telecoms by billionaire and former economics minister Petr Aven's Alfa group, which owns Alfa Bank, Russia's largest private bank, and has merged its oil company, TNK, with BP's Russian assets.

Alfa Telecom, an Alfa group company, has bought BiTel, Kyrgyzstan's only GSM operator. It is defending an action in the international arbitration court in London by a Kazakh group, Alians Kapital, over ownership of BiTel.

"The Alfa group is ready to invest substantial sums in Kyrgyzstan. But the government will not take any part in the legal process," said Usenov. "We are interested in BiTel's future: we want it to work, to pay taxes and to develop. The telecoms sector must be opened up to competition and a second GSM operator established."

Usenov believes that the political changes in Kyrgyzstan have brought "vastly improved conditions" for inward investment from the whole international community. The priorities in the country's relationship with the EBRD are infrastructure and banking sector reform, and in developing such financial products as mortgages and leasing.

The government's economic strategy must reverse years of neglect, Usenov said. "We will lead, not interfere. First, it will act as an organizer and adjudicator, and ensure that there is a level playing field. Second, it will work to bring into existence a middle class that will act as a guarantee for stability and against future political upsets. Third, it will give direction to strategic industries including electrical energy and gold production."

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