New Eastern Europe - November-December 2017

(Ben Green) #1

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we see in other countries with heavy censorship,” Nazar explains. “This is a govern-
ment trying to control people’s minds. And if that fails, then to stupefy and bore
them into submission with repetitive, totally uninteresting content that celebrates
a golden age of prosperity completely disconnected from real lives.”
Indeed, since the Media Sustainability Index’s start in 2008, out of 80 countries
Turkmenistan has never crawled out from the international survey’s lowest category
of “Unsustainable/Anti-Free Press”. Reporters Without Borders deem Turkmenistan
an “enemy of the Internet”. There are dark stories of the regime deploying invasive
surveillance technologies and freelance hackers to pursue anyone and everyone
within its borders who tries to gain access to information from the outside world.

Impending collapse

According to numerous independent news reports, despite impressive GDP
growth rates, at the grassroots level Turkmenistan’s economy is seriously slug-
gish. There is also trouble at the highest echelons of power. The problems began in
2015 when authorities suddenly devalued the Turkmenistani currency, the manat.
Since then exports have plummeted, the government has limited access to foreign
reserves and bank machines have been said to be dispensing less and less cash. At
the end of 2016, independent news agencies reported a temporary food shortage.
By 2017, according to RFE/RL, food prices have increased sharply (some by as
much as 50 per cent). One confirmed example of a significant price hike is cheese –
200 grams of cheese rose from eight manats to ten. By way of context, three and a
half manats is the equivalent of one US dollar, and the average monthly salary in
Turkmenistan is believed to be approximately 500 US dollars.
All of this has been triggered by a global decline in natural gas prices, a result
of a surplus in supply and a contraction in demand. Meanwhile, the president of
Turkmenistan, Gurbanguly Berdimuhammedov, has launched an unusually high-
profile anti-corruption campaign. Several important members of the government
have been swept up in the dragnet. For a government as secretive and controlling
as Turkmenistan’s, such visibility on a socially and politically sensitive issue, ana-
lysts say, is a major warning sign.
According to Bakhtiyor Nishanov, deputy director of Eurasia at the Interna-
tional Republican Institute, the worst has yet to come. As Turkmenistan’s coffers
run dry, a vast welfare state of subsidies for fuel, electricity and food, which the
government has historically relied upon to placate its population, may be in dan-
ger of collapse. Indeed, the government is believed to have already implemented
extensive cutbacks.

Opinion & Analysis A looming humanitarian crisis in the land Orwell forgot, Christopher Schwartz
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