Turkmenistan to have gas pipeline to China ready in 2009
Saparmurat Niyazov, the president of Turkmenistan, announced that a pipeline designed to deliver natural gas to China
would be opened by the beginning of 2009. The president of the ex-Soviet republic met the Vice-Minister of Commerce
Yu Guangzhou, in the capital, Ashgabat, and assured him of the plan.
Under a contract signed in April, Beijing will buy 30 bn cm of natural gas a year from Turkmenistan over 30 years. Yu
said he had discussed “the funding of projects involved and the volumes of gas deliveries” with the
Turkmen leadership.
Chinese interest in central Asia is steadily increasing: in this part of the world, after the collapse of the Soviet
block, Beijing hopes to build a new “silk route” made of railways and oil pipelines, to channel the
wealth of the mountains and the Caspian Sea to the western Chinese province of Xinjiang.
The agreements the Chinese government is signing with Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan
are also aimed at stopping the “threeevils” -- extremism, terrorism and fundamentalism -- in Asia. But
this objective is used to justify other “serious” human rights violations committed by governments in the
region.
According to the international no-profit organisation World Audit, out of 150 nations with more than 1 mm
inhabitants, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan are “absolutely the least democratic”.
A coalition of ten human rights organisations, including Human Rights Watch, shares this view. In a letter to US
Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, they said “there is no religious freedom in Turkmenistan” and
called on the United States to designate it as a “country of particular concern” because of the serious
abuses of religious freedom committed.
