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    Ireland and Central Asia

    Working Paper

    By Rob Kevlihan1

    1Acknowledgements: The author wishes to thanks Donnacha OBeachin, John Doyle, Brian McElduffand the anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on earlier drafts of this paper. The idea for this

    paper germinated while the author taught for a semester at the Kazakhstan Institute for Management and

    Strategic Research (KIMEP), Almaty, Kazakhstan in early 2005.

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    The former USSR itself has split into a mosaic of different countries,

    including the Russian Federation, Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and

    those new states to the east of the Caspian Sea2

    Abstract

    This paper reviews the extent of Irelands engagement with Central Asia, asking why

    the region has played such a marginal role in the Irish governments engagement with

    the Asian continent as a whole. The paper argues that Ireland has, in contrast with its

    relations with the rest of Asia, viewed Central Asia primarily through a Euro-centric

    lens. This Euro-centric perspective is largely as a consequence of the existing

    configuration of international institutions with which Ireland engages that relate to the

    region. This approach has had tangible implications: it has meant that Central Asia has

    been ignored in the development of trade strategies related to the Asian continent and

    it has reduced the potential scope of Irish aid engagement with the poorer countries of

    the region. Given the increased profile of Asia in Irish economic and aid policy, and

    the new proximity of Central Asia to the EU with its recent expansion eastwards, the

    article concludes that greater attention should be paid to the region by Ireland and

    offers some suggestions for future Irish government engagement.

    Introduction

    In recent years there has been a growing recognition within international studies that

    big is not always best, resulting in increased attention on small state policy making,

    and the role of small states in the international system.3

    Literature on international

    institutions, for example, while tending to emphasize the continued dominance of

    stronger countries within international regimes, accepts that such regimes can serve all

    2 Development Co-operation Ireland, Eastern Europe overview, available atwww.dci.gov.ie(3rdMarch 2005).3Smith, N., Pace, M. & Lee. D., Size Matters: Small States and International Studies in InternationalStudies Perspectives, Vol. 6, No. 3, August 2005, pp 395-397.

    http://www.dci.gov.ie/http://www.dci.gov.ie/http://www.dci.gov.ie/http://www.dci.gov.ie/
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    states interests, both large and small, in reducing transaction costs, providing important

    transactional information and hence facilitating the mechanics of international

    interactions.4

    For small states such as Ireland, international institutions such as the

    United Nations (UN), the European Union (EU) and the Organization for Security and

    Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) provide important vehicles for engaging with states

    outside its core foreign policy priorities without the need to commit extensive

    resources that may be better utilized elsewhere. Cost-benefit concerns have been a key

    issue in the development of the Irish foreign service since its inception at

    independence in 1922.5

    As a consequence multi-lateral organizations have provided

    important vehicles for Irelands engagement with the wider world at relatively low

    transactional cost. However, with such transactional benefits come other potential

    costs. One possible consequence is that Irish foreign policy, in the absence of bilateral

    engagement, will largely echo that of these larger institutions (and by extension those

    larger states most influential within these bodies) and as a consequence be somewhat

    passive in policy formulation and execution. This paper argues that this has in fact

    occurred with respect to Irelands engagement with Central Asia when compared to

    Irelands bilateral engagement with Asia as a whole. As a result, Ireland has largely

    engaged with the region through a Euro-centric lens, driven in the main by EU and

    OSCE related obligations and structures. This has had some benefits it has provided

    a relatively low-cost mechanism for some Irish engagement; but it has come with some

    costs chiefly neglect by the Irish government of the strategic trade potential of the

    region, and the marginalisation of the poorer states of the region from an aid

    perspective in favour of areas within the eastern Europe / CIS zone considered to be of

    greater geo-strategic importance.

    4 For a seminal book in this area, cf Keohane, R., After Hegemony: Cooperation and Discord in the

    World Political Economy (Princeton, 1984).5 Patrick Keatinge, The Formulation of Irish Foreign Policy (Dublin, 1974).

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    Newly independent states of Central Asia

    The Central Asian region comprises five states of the former USSR including

    Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan and is strategically

    placed between Russia, China, Iran and Afghanistan. The region comprises a

    combined population of just over 59 million people, with Uzbekistan the largest in

    population terms (population: 26.85 million, comprising 45% of the regions total

    population), followed by Kazakhstan (population: 15.19 million, 26%), Tajikistan

    (population 7.16 million, 12%), Kyrgyzstan (population 5.15 million, 9%) and

    Turkmenistan (population 4.95 million, 8%). However, in terms of size, Kazakhstan

    dwarfs its neighbors, followed by Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and

    Tajikistan.6 Since independence in 1991 the experience of each of these states has

    varied. Kazakhstan has perhaps faired best of the five Central Asian states. Significant

    oil and gas reserves and astute management of its relations with foreign governments

    and oil companies has left it in a relatively strong position, with the country described

    as the new oil Dorado by one commentator writing on the region.7 Oil production has

    expanded considerably since independence, reaching a post independence peak of over

    1bn barrels per day in 2003 and 2004.8

    The President of Kazakhstan, Nursultan

    Nazarbayev, was the party boss during the communist era, and has governed the

    country since. He was recently re-elected in December 2005 in an election that in the

    opinion of an international monitoring team (that included OSCE, Council of Europe

    and European Parliament observers), was adjudged did not meet international

    standards, despite some improvements on the previous election.9

    6 Central Intelligence Agency, The World Factbook, available at

    http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.html (19th January 2006). All population estimatesat July 2005.7 Lutz Kleveman, The New Great Game, Blood and Oil in Central Asia, (New York, 2003), 74.8 Economist Intelligence Unit, Kazakhstan, Country Profile, 2005, (London, 2005), 27.9International Election Monitoring Mission, Presidential Election, Republic of Kazakhstan, Statement

    of Preliminary Findings and Results, press release, 5 December 2005, available athttp://www.osce.org/documents/odihr/2005/12/17232_en.pdf (20 January 2006)

    http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.htmlhttp://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.htmlhttp://www.osce.org/documents/odihr/2005/12/17232_en.pdfhttp://www.osce.org/documents/odihr/2005/12/17232_en.pdfhttp://www.osce.org/documents/odihr/2005/12/17232_en.pdfhttp://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.html
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    Like Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan continues to be ruled by a former party boss from

    the Soviet era - President Islam Karimov. In recent years his regime has effectively

    denied any possibility for meaningful political opposition and has been severely

    criticized for its human rights records, particularly in the wake of the Andijan incident

    in May 2005. During this incident, Uzbek government troops opened fire on

    demonstrators, in what Human Rights Watch described as a massacre. The Uzbek

    government claims 173 people were killed, while HRW estimated the number dead at

    between 300 and 400.10

    Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan offer more mixed pictures than

    Uzbekistan. Turkmenistan was governed in megalomaniacal fashion by Saparmurat

    Niyazov, self proclaimed Turkmenbashi (Father of All Turks) until his unexpected

    death in December 2006, and is now in a state of flux, though newly elected President

    Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov appears to be moving quickly to institute reforms.11

    Turkmenistan is an important producer of natural gas, some of which makes its way to

    European markets and has come to increased prominence recently as an alternative

    source of natural gas to Russia for some EU states.12

    Kyrgyzstan is currently going through a period of political uncertainty, with the

    former President since independence, Askar Akaev, having been removed from office

    in 2005 through a contentious phase of street protests, and replaced by Kurmanbek

    Bakiev. Since then, the capital city has been affected by periodic bouts of street

    demonstrations as various factions vie to impose their will through direct action.

    Despite such disturbances in the capital, however, for the time being the general

    situation in Kyrgyzstan is reasonably stable, though it remains unclear what the long-

    10 Human Rights Watch, Bullets Were Falling Like Rain, The Andijan Massacre , May 13, 2005,

    (London, 2005), available athttp://hrw.org/reports/2005/uzbekistan0605/(accessed 05 Feb 2006).11Bruce Pannier, Turkmenistan: New Predident Appears to be fulfilling campaign pledges, RadioFree Europe / Radio Liberty, 28th February 2007, available at

    http://www.rferl.org/features/2007/2/9146AOFB-DFBE-4A89-86D-CA273DFF62DD.html[accessed4th May 2007].12Chivers, C.J. & Khalip, N., Intrigue Follows Death of a President for Life in The New York Times,

    22nd December 2006, p23.

    http://hrw.org/reports/2005/uzbekistan0605/http://hrw.org/reports/2005/uzbekistan0605/http://hrw.org/reports/2005/uzbekistan0605/http://www.rferl.org/features/2007/2/9146AOFB-DFBE-4A89-86D-CA273DFF62DD.htmlhttp://www.rferl.org/features/2007/2/9146AOFB-DFBE-4A89-86D-CA273DFF62DD.htmlhttp://www.rferl.org/features/2007/2/9146AOFB-DFBE-4A89-86D-CA273DFF62DD.htmlhttp://hrw.org/reports/2005/uzbekistan0605/
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    term prospects for improved governance are. Tajikistan remains under the leadership

    of President Imomali Rahmon.13

    Rahmon came to prominence in late 1992, while

    Tajikistan was in the middle of a civil war. In one of the worst civil conflicts in the

    former Soviet Union in the 1990s, between 60,000 and 100,000 people were killed,

    approximately 600,000 one tenth of the population, were internally displaced, and

    another 80,000 fled the country.14

    Since the signature of a peace agreement in 1997 the

    country has stabilized considerably, though power remains focused around the

    President and his supporters, with only limited scope for political competition.

    The overall socio-economic development levels of most of these states (with

    the possible exceptions of Kazakhstan, and to a lesser extent, Turkmenistan), place

    them close to the category of less developed states. A review of the Human

    Development Report from 2006 shows Tajikistan (ranked 122 of 177 countries

    ranked), Uzbekistan (ranked 113) and Kyrgyzstan (ranked 110) to be the worst off in

    the region. Kazakhstan, the best off, has a Human Development Index Ranking (HDI)

    of 79; next is Turkmenistan at 105.15This places all states in the region in UNDPs

    medium human development category. Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan

    comprise three of the four lowest ranked states (along with Moldova, ranked 114) from

    the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe in the HDI index. Tajikistan and

    Kyrgyzstan, unlike their neighbors, do not have access to significant wealth from

    natural resources; both are extremely mountainous, and as a result, are the source of

    much of the water used for irrigated agriculture (particularly cotton) downstream in the

    other three states. Tajikistan situation is exacerbated by its over-reliance on cotton

    13 Formerly known as Rahmanov, the President recently changed his name abandoning the Slavic style

    ov , calling on his compatriots to do the same see Najibullah, F. Central Asia: Name Debate

    Reflects Regions Mixed History published byRFE/RL, 4th April, 2007 available athttp://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/4/6B1BE677-0544-4460-AC96-81A9D399A403.html

    (accessed 4th May 2007).14International Crisis Group, Tajikistan: An Uncertain Peace, (Dushanbe and Brussels, 2001), 2.15 UNDP, Human Development Report, (New York, 2006) available at

    http://hdr.undp.org/hdr2006/statistics (12th May 2007). Note that, with the exception of Kazakhstan, all

    rankings have either stayed constant or worsened when compared to 2005 rankings.

    http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/4/6B1BE677-0544-4460-AC96-81A9D399A403.htmlhttp://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/4/6B1BE677-0544-4460-AC96-81A9D399A403.htmlhttp://hdr.undp.org/hdr2006/statisticshttp://hdr.undp.org/hdr2006/statisticshttp://hdr.undp.org/hdr2006/statisticshttp://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/4/6B1BE677-0544-4460-AC96-81A9D399A403.html
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    production on its limited arable land, and extensive exploitation of cotton labor.16

    While Tajikistans situation has improved somewhat in recent years, the situation

    during the war was so bad that in 1994, the Tajik government asked to U.N. to

    consider granting it the status of a least-developed country.17

    One legacy of the Soviet system is continued high levels of economic inter-

    dependence between Central Asian states, and with other states of the former USSR.

    However, the break-up of the Soviet Union has allowed these states to begin to engage

    once more with the rest of Asia. Despite large Muslim populations throughout the

    region, much of this engagement has been with the Far East, rather than the Middle

    East. Second and third generation ethnic Korean populations in parts of Central Asia (a

    legacy of Stalins re-location policies), particularly in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan,

    have facilitated the development of contacts with South Korea, for example.18

    Institutionally, the Shanghai Co-operation organization was established in 1991

    between China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan to

    facilitate diplomatic, security and trade links between states in the region.19

    Ireland and Asiaan overview

    While Irelands bilateral engagement with prominent Asian states dates back to the

    establishment of its first embassy on the continent in India in 1964,20

    it is only in the

    last ten years that a strategic plan has been developed to act as a road map for

    engagement over the longer term. This in part reflects the relative novelty of structured

    public strategic planning in Irish foreign policy in general, and also, to some extent,

    16 International Crisis Group, The Curse of Cotton: Central Asias Destructive Monoculture,

    (Dushanbe and Brussels, 2005), 9-10.17 Aziz Niyazi, Tajikistan I: The Regional Dimension of the Conflict in Michael Waller, Bruno

    Coppieters and Alexei Malaskenko (eds), Conflicting Loyalties and the State in Post-Soviet Russia andEurasia, (London, 1998), 145.18 James Critchlow, The Ethnic Factor in Central Asian Foreign Policy in Roman Szporluk (ed.),

    National Identity and Ethnicity in Russia and the New States of Eurasia, (London: 1994), pp269-270.19Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Peoples Republic of China, Shanghai Co -operation Organization,

    01 June 2004, available athttp://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/topics/sco/t57970.htm(26 January 2006)20 Keating, The Formulation of Irish Foreign Policy, 112.

    http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/topics/sco/t57970.htmhttp://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/topics/sco/t57970.htmhttp://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/topics/sco/t57970.htmhttp://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/topics/sco/t57970.htm
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    the relatively low priority accorded to Ireland-Asia relations. Given limited resources,

    tools available for bilateral engagement in Asia have been relatively limited, and can

    be characterized in terms of economic relations, development co-operation and

    humanitarian aid, with Ireland also engaging to a lesser extent on human rights

    issues.21

    As we shall see, bilateral engagement with respect to trade has in recent years

    tended to focus on high value Pacific Rim countries, while Irelands aid and human

    rights engagement has often been driven by domestic connections through Irish

    NGOs, missionaries or (in the case of Timor Leste and Burma) Irish advocacy groups.

    On the political and economic front, comparisons of the Celtic Tiger and the

    East Asian Tigers notwithstanding, it was not until 1998 that Ireland developed its

    Asia Strategy.22

    The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), in its strategy statement

    for the period 2005 to 2007, states that the DFA will broaden and strengthen Irelands

    political relations with countries in the Asian region, and contribute to the

    strengthening of multi-lateral processes in the Asian region. Ireland now has eleven

    embassies in Asia, including The Peoples Republic of China, India, Iran, Israel, Japan,

    Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Turkey and Saudi Arabia, with a new embassy recently

    opened in 2005 in Vietnam.In addition, two other embassies in Egypt and Russia,

    21Consideration of Irelands engagement with Asia as whole through multi-lateral institutions such asthe UN, ASEAN, the Non-aligned Movement etc., are outside of the scope of this article; the point is to

    highlight the degree to which Ireland has had significant bilateral, as opposed to multilateral

    engagement with the region though Irish government multilateral engagement with Central Asia will be

    considered because of its significance to this piece. However, it is to be noted that Ireland has made asignificant contribution to peacekeeping in the region, most notably in Lebanon (for 23 years, ending

    2001 and recommencing in late 2006), but also shorter deployments to a number of locations, including

    Israel / Palestine (from 1958 onwards), and in the Sinai desert (1973), India / Pakistan (1965-66; 1987-

    1992), in Iran (prior to 1978) and on the Iran / Iraq border (from 1988 1991), Afghanistan (1988-90,

    1994-96, 1996-99), Kuwait (since 1991), in Indonesia / Irian Jaya (1962), Cambodia (1991-1993) and in

    Timor Leste (1999 onwards). A small number of Irish army personnel were also deployed to Sri Lankato assist with tsunami relief operations in January 2005. For further details see: The Irish Defense

    Forces, Overseas service available athttp://www.military.ie/overseas/asia.htm (accessed 05 February

    2006).22For consideration of Irelands political and trade engagement with the Middle East since the 1950s,

    see Rory Miller, The Politics of Trade and Diplomacy: Irelands Evolving Relationship with theMuslim Middle East inIrish Studies in International Affairs , Volume 15, 2004, 123-146.

    http://www.military.ie/overseas/asia.htmhttp://www.military.ie/overseas/asia.htmhttp://www.military.ie/overseas/asia.htmhttp://www.military.ie/overseas/asia.htm
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    represent Irish interests in some Asian countries.23

    Ireland also has representative

    offices in the Palestine and Timor Leste.24

    A look at the geographical dispersion of the

    embassies shows a cluster in South Asia and the Pacific Rim China, India, Japan,

    Korea, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam, reflecting Irelands strategic focus on these

    regions. This closely mirrors priority countries set out in the Asia strategy, which

    include China, Japan, Korea, Singapore, India, Malaysia, Indonesia and Vietnam.25

    This is understandable, given the size of the economies, levels of economic

    development, potential markets (both for the export of Irish goods, and for the

    provision of services by Irish organizations, including lucrative higher education

    provided to students from these regions in universities in Ireland), not to mention

    possibilities of inward investment from these countries to Ireland. Enterprise Ireland

    takes an even narrower view, with its new First Flight Five Stages Programme

    (launched in 2005) targeting China, Korea, India and Japan as key target markets with

    opportunities for Irish businesses.26

    Irelands commitment to these areas has been

    highlighted by recent high-level Irish government visits to both China and India.

    Irelands role in Asia with respect to aid has been relatively limited reflecting

    Irelands consistent focus on Africa as the main target for development aid and

    humanitarian assistance.27

    As late as 1996, Irelands development assistance to Asia

    was described as meagre by one commentator, who noted the increased priority

    being given to Asia within the EU, but a relatively low key Irish response.28

    Low key

    it may have been, but the Irish government has nonetheless maintained a fairly

    23 The Irish embassy in Cairo represents Irish interests in Jordan and Lebanon, while the embassy in

    Moscow Irish interests in most of Central Asia (see below).24

    Ireland also honorary consuls in India (as well as an honorary consul general), Indonesia, Jordan,

    Korea, Lebanon, Oman, Pakistan, The Philippines, Sri Lanka, Syria, and Turkey.25 Department for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, A Decade of the Asia Strategy, 1999 2009,

    (Dublin, 2005), 3.26 Enterprise Ireland, First Flight Five Stages, available at http://www.enterprise-

    ireland.com/Exports/First+Flight+Five+Stages.htm(27 January 2006)27 See, for example, Development Co-operation Ireland, Africa remains the focus of Governments AidProgramme, press release, 18 January 2005, available atwww.apso.ie(01 January 2005].28 David Shanks, Few Eastern Promises, Developing World: Changing Irish Priorities, An

    International Report with The Irish Times , 13th November, 1996, 3.

    http://www.enterprise-ireland.com/Exports/First+Flight+Five+Stages.htmhttp://www.enterprise-ireland.com/Exports/First+Flight+Five+Stages.htmhttp://www.enterprise-ireland.com/Exports/First+Flight+Five+Stages.htmhttp://www.apso.ie/http://www.apso.ie/http://www.apso.ie/http://www.apso.ie/http://www.enterprise-ireland.com/Exports/First+Flight+Five+Stages.htmhttp://www.enterprise-ireland.com/Exports/First+Flight+Five+Stages.htm
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    consistent stream of low-level assistance to Asian states with bilateral aid gaining

    increased prominence in recent years.The main institutional vehicles on the aid side

    for this engagement have been direct country-to-country assistance through the

    bilateral aid programme, and assistance to non-governmental organizations (NGOs)

    through project co-financing and humanitarian assistance.29

    Ireland first began its bilateral aid programme soon after accession to the EEC

    in 1973. Five countries were selected as priority countries for Irish government

    assistance, four in Africa and one in Asia they were Sudan, Lesotho, Zambia,

    Tanzania and India. India, however, did not feature prominently as a recipient of Irish

    bilateral aid, despite its initial status as a priority country, receiving only 1% of total

    aid disbursed to the five countries in 1978, the first year for which country by country

    statistics are available.30

    The India programme, having failed to take off in the initial

    set up period of the other bilateral programmes, was subsequently dropped as a priority

    country, leaving Irelands bilateral assistance entirely focused on African states. This

    pattern continued through to the 1990s with the additions of Mozambique, Ethiopia

    and Uganda (and the demotion of Sudan) as priority countries for bilateral assistance,

    though the Occupied Territories did occupy a special position, receiving consistent

    Irish government support from 1986 onwards.31

    Irelands engagement with Asian

    states subsequently expanded in the late 1990s, principally through Irelands

    involvement with Timor Leste and Vietnamto the extent that by 2005, some 10.2%

    of total Irish bilateral aid was spent in Asia, with an additional 1.3% spent in the

    Middle East / Gulf.32

    Irish engagement has been driven by both humanitarian and

    29 This ignores DCI funding under Block Grants and the Multi-Annual Programme Scheme as country

    allocation decisions rest primarily with the NGO in receipt of the funds, rather than with DCI. That said,

    DCI funding has been channeled through these two mechanisms to Asian countries where recipientNGOs (including GOAL, Concern, Trcaire, World Vision and Oxfam) have operations.30 As calculated from statistical annex available in Department of Foreign Affairs, Irelands Bilateral

    Programme, (Dublin: 1979), 39.31 Department of Foreign Affairs,Irish Aid: Consolidation and Growth, A Strategy Plan, (Dublin,

    1993), 26.32 DFA, Irish Aid Annual Report 2005 , 109.

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    development assistance (both bilateral and through NGOs); Timor Leste became

    something of a cause celebre in the 1990s, culminating in its designation as a priority

    aid country in March 2003.33

    This has been rapidly followed by a decision to establish

    Vietnam as Irelands eighth priority aid country. This programme is also expected to

    direct some bilateral assistance towards the neighbouring states of Laos and

    Cambodia.34

    It is to be noted that Vietnams Human Development Index ranking of

    109 in 2006, is something of an outlier among Irelands bilateral aid countries. It is

    comparable in terms of ranking with two Central Asian states, Uzbekistan and

    Kyrgyzstan and considerably better off than Tajikistan.35

    It is also unusual in that

    Vietnam is listed as a priority country for increased trade relations in Irelands Asia

    Strategy. This combined strategy is innovative for Irelands Aid programme in that it

    mixes trade promotion and aidsomething that reflects current development advocacy

    at the international level, but at the same time is somewhat inconsistent with the

    overall trust of Irelands aid strategy, which is to focus on the poorest states. This issue

    has been recognized, to some extent, in the Irish Aid White paper, which states that

    Irish assistance to Vietnam will be time bound because of economic growth in the

    country, and the Irish Aid presence there will be used to facilitate a regional

    programme targeting Cambodia and Laos, both of which are considerably worse off.36

    The extent of this time limitation is not clear, however. In the past Ireland has been

    slow to close down a priority country, and has done so in only two casesIndia in the

    33Development Co-operation Ireland,Annual Report, 2003, (Dublin, 2004), 43.

    34Development Co-operation Ireland, Irish Government announces huge increase in Overseas Aid,

    press release, 18 November 2004, available at http://www.dci.gov.ie/latest_news.asp?article=474 (26

    January 2006).35

    The Occupied Territories are ranked 100 but are not classified as a priority country; Timor Leste is

    ranked 142. Countries with a ranking of 147 or lower were considered to be in the Low Human

    Development on the 2006 HDI index, the lowest ranking being Niger, ranked 177. With the exception

    of Yemen (ranked 150), all Low Human Development countries are located in Africa. G iven theselection of Vietnam as a priority country is interesting to note those Asian states that receive a lower

    rank, and hence, on a needs basis, it could be argued, were more in need than Vietnam. Timor Leste is

    the lowest ranked Asian state, followed by Papua New Guinea (139), Nepal (138), Bangladesh (137),Bhutan (135), Pakistan (134), Laos (133), Myanmar (130), Cambodia (129), India (126), Tajikistan

    (122), Mongolia (116), Uzbekistan (113), Kyrgyztan (110) and Vietnam (109).36 Department of Foreign Affairs, White Paper on Irish Aid, (Dublin, 2006), 90.

    http://www.dci.gov.ie/latest_news.asp?article=474http://www.dci.gov.ie/latest_news.asp?article=474http://www.dci.gov.ie/latest_news.asp?article=474
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    1970s, which never really got going, and Sudan, a country programme which was

    initially de-prioritized in 1993 and subsequently closed in 1998.37

    This relatively

    recent extension of bilateral aid to Vietnam would appear to represent the extent of

    growth in bilateral assistance to Asia for the time being, with West Africa now being

    considered for other possible bilateral aid countries.38

    The other two major funding mechanisms for Irish bilateral engagement in

    Asia relate primarily to the funding of NGOs working in the region, through co-

    financing of projects and humanitarian assistance.39

    Throughout the 1980s, and into

    the mid 1990s, the NGO co-financing scheme represented the most important

    mechanism for Irish government support to NGO development projects in Asia.

    However, patterns of disbursement depended heavily on the presence of (usually) Irish

    based partners typically NGOs and missionaries, and the quality of proposals

    received in any given funding cycle.40

    Nonetheless, a review of Irish Aid annual

    reports shows that three countries have received relatively consistent levels of support

    throughout - India (where the principal Irish contacts were GOAL, GORTA, Christian

    Aid, Trcaire and missionaries), Bangladesh (principally through Concern, and to a

    lesser extent, Trcaire) and from the early 1990s onwards, Cambodia (again through

    Concern, Trcaire and to a lesser extent, GOAL). The later focus on Cambodia

    reflected the changed political circumstances there and the consequent return of

    37 Rob Kevlihan, Irish Bilateral Aid to Sudan From Modernization to Conditionality: Lessons

    Learned and Future Prospects inIrish Studies in International Affairs, Vol. 15, 2004, 147-166.38 Interestingly, the Shanks piece from 1996 (see reference above) mentions that although about four

    years ago commercial voices urged the inclusion of a bi-lateral aid relationship with at least one Asian

    countryit was decided that Irish policy should not be ru led by pure self-interest. Vietnam is referred

    to as one country that was considered. Amongst Irish semi state organizations that might have sought to

    exercise some influence, the ESB in particular, has been active in Vietnam. Domestic considerations in

    the selection of Vietnam as a priority country at a time when it is more prosperous than it was in theearly 1990s cannot, therefore, be ruled out.39 One has to be careful here with terminology. Irish Aid refers to country-to-country aid as bilateral

    aid. However if one is looking at bilateral engagement, than, in my view, it is appropriate to considerthe extent to which Irish Aid allocated funding to a particular country, irrespective of whether it was

    channeled through the local government or NGOs operational on the ground.40 Per interview conducted with Irish Aid official responsible for the co-financing scheme, Dublin, 1999.

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    refugees from neighbouring countries.41

    However, assistance was by no means

    confined to a handful of countries. The range of projects in other countries supported

    through this scheme can be seen by a simple listing of the countries in which projects

    were supported over a fifteen year period from 1982 to 1997 they include:

    Afghanistan, Burma, China, Indonesia, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Laos, Lebanon, Nepal,

    Occupied Territories of Palestine, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand and

    Vietnam.42

    Humanitarian aid or disaster relief expenditure as it was described until

    1992, also followed a similar disbursement pattern, again, at least until the late 1990s,

    apparently heavily biased towards the presence of operational Irish NGOs, and of

    course, the occurrence of prominent natural or man-made disasters. Recipient

    countries in Asia have ranged widely: countries assisted over the period 1982 to 1997

    for example, included Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Burma, Cambodia, China, India,

    Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Japan, Jordan, Laos, Lebanon, North Korea, Pakistan, the

    Occupied Territories, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkey, and Yemen.43

    Patterning of

    humanitarian assistance also largely depends on the scale of humanitarian disasters

    and related international response to those disasters, in any given year. Irelands

    response in 2005 in Asia is particularly noteworthyan unprecedented Euro 28.3m, or

    40% of all humanitarian assistance disbursed was allocated to Asia in that year, in

    large part because of two large humanitarian disasters the Asian tsunami and the

    South Asian earthquake.44

    Irish engagement on human rights issues in Asia has been moderated, in some

    instances, by trade interests (particularly with respect to China). Nonetheless, Ireland

    41Tony Farmar,Believing in Action, Concern, The First Thirty Years, 196898, (Dublin, 2002), 169.

    42 Based on review of DCI Annual reports from 1982 until 1997.43 Ibid.44

    Percentage calculated based on figures presented in DFA, Irish Aid Annual Report 2005, p36. Theserepresent amounts allocated by the Irish government only. Irish Aid estimates that an additional Euro

    100m was raised by Irish NGOs, making Ireland the fifth largest contributor to the tsunami response

    worldwide (ibid, p4-5). The scale of Irelands response, both public and private, is an indication of thegrowing international importance of Irish development and humanitarian assistance, supported by the

    Irish governments drive to increase its aid budget, together with increased public prosperity and, as aconsequence, generosity, in Ireland more generally.

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    has been prominent in some high profile initiatives, including activism on Timor

    Leste. Collier also highlights Irish activism on Burma from the mid 1990s, initially

    under the aegis as Minister for Foreign Affairs of Dick Spring, with domestic actors

    notably Burma Action Ireland acting as catalysts for Irish government action from

    1996 onwards.45

    To conclude, Ireland has been active on a number of bilateral fronts with Asian

    statesboth economically and through aid interventions and, to a lesser extent, human

    rights activism. It is to be noted, however, that (with the exception of some

    humanitarian assistance to Tajikistan), Central Asia does not feature in this account of

    bilateral initiatives. Upon closer inspection we shall see that Ireland has engaged with

    this region, but not to any great extent on a bilateral basis; rather it has been driven by

    existing multi-lateral agencies and their institutional mandates and structures.

    Ireland and Central Asia

    Compared to Irelands overall engagement in Asian states described above, Irelands

    engagement with Central Asia has been relatively small scale. What activity that has

    occurred has been dominated by multi-lateral institutional mechanisms, and has been

    largely Euro-centric, rather than Asia-centric in focus, with past membership of the

    USSR being the key reference point for continued current engagement. The main

    vehicles for this engagement have been multilateral organizations with an interest or

    mandate in the regionprincipally the EU and the OSCE, together with some smaller

    scale engagement through UN agencies. This reliance on multilateral structures has

    largely provided the Euro-centric lens through which Ireland views Central Asia; as a

    consequence, Central Asia, when compared with more pressing Irish concerns in the

    45 Niamh Collier, Human Rights in Irish Foreign Policy: Ireland and Burma, in Irish Studies in

    International Affairs, Vol. 14, 2003, 117-121.

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    Balkans and to a lesser extent in the Caucasus region, has been left in a relatively

    marginalized position.

    Central Asia in Irish foreign policy strategy statements

    Irelands relatively low level of engagement in both foreign policy and aid terms with

    Central Asia is clear from Challenges and Opportunities Abroad, Irelands first

    attempt to develop an explicit statement of Irelands interests and engagement with the

    rest of the world. The white paper has only two pages devoted to the states of the

    former Soviet Union as a whole and barely refers to Central Asia, focusing instead

    (understandably given the limited space) on Russia and Ukraine. However, section

    3.1.20 of the document does recognize that Ireland, together with its EU partners, has

    a clear interest in continuing its support for the consolidation of democracy, economic

    reform and the strengthening of political and economic freedoms in Russia and in the

    other members of the CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States).46

    This continued classification of the region as part of the former Soviet Union

    continues to the present day, both at strategic and operational levels. DFAs Strategy

    statement for the period 2005 2007 echoes the 1986 White Paper, focusing on

    developing relations with states in the Central Asian region to promote stability,

    democracy, human rights and economic progress, in a separate section from that

    devoted to the Asia strategy,47

    while the 2006 White Paper on Irish Aid follows the

    same line.48

    Operationally, bilateral relations with four of the five Central Asian states

    (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, but not Turkmenistan) fall to the

    46 Department of Foreign Affairs, Challenges and Opportunities Abroad, White Paper on Foreign

    Policy, (Dublin, 1996), 87.47

    It is noteworthy that stability has been added as an Irish concern to the original list of democracy,human rights and economic reform / growth, perhaps reflecting Irish government concerns regarding

    possible instability in the region because of Islamic extremism post 9/11.48 Department of Foreign Affairs, White Paper on Irish Aid, (Dublin, 2006), 93. The author made asubmission as part of the White paper consultation process suggesting a change in tack on the part of

    Irish Aid with respect to Central Asia. However, the White Paper is quite explicit in its continued focus

    on the Balkans region.

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    Irish Ambassador and his staff based in Moscow, whose additional responsibilities

    include the Russian Federation, Armenia, Belarus and Georgia.49

    The Irish diplomatic

    presence in Moscow dates to the Soviet erafull diplomatic relations were established

    between Ireland and the USSR in 1973, though even after the establishment of the

    Irish presence there, trade relations between Ireland and the USSR remained at very

    low levels.50

    In recent times, it would appear that Central Asia is of less concern to the

    Moscow embassy than relations with the south Caucasus region the Department of

    Foreign Affairs website, for instance distinguishes between the latter region (where the

    political section of DFA liaises closely with the Moscow embassy) and Central Asia,

    where relations are framed in the context of EU and OSCE membership, and are

    monitored directly by the political section without the same mention of close work

    with the Moscow embassy.51

    As is so often the case with parts of the world that are

    peripheral to Irelands core interests, diplomatic coverage is thin on the ground, which

    in and of itself places constraints on what can be done.

    Irish aid to Central Asiathe limits of bilateral engagement

    Given the relative marginality of Central Asia in Irish foreign policy concerns,

    bilateral engagement with the countries of the region has been relatively insignificant,

    largely confined to small amounts of Irish humanitarian and development assistance,

    delivered from the 1990s onwards. The Irish government did not deliver any assistance

    or aid to Central Asia prior to the 1990s. This in large part reflects political realities,

    particularly during the Cold War. As constituent parts of the Soviet Union, these areas

    49 Department of Foreign Affairs, Minister for Foreign Affairs announces new Ambassadorial

    Appointments, press release, 02 May 2003, available at

    www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_releases/20030502/1172.htm (24 February 2005). The DFA websitehttp://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/embassies/default.asp?m=e does not list Turkmenistan as a country with

    which Ireland has diplomatic representation (26 January 2006), a point confirmed in correspondence by

    the author with the Irish embassy in Moscow (March 2006).50 Patrick Keatinge,A Singular Stance, Irish Neutrality in the 1980s, (Dublin, 1984), 94.51DFA, Ireland and Eastern Europe, available athttp://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=308

    (accessed 12th May 2007).

    http://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_releases/20030502/1172.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_releases/20030502/1172.htmhttp://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/embassies/default.asp?m=ehttp://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/embassies/default.asp?m=ehttp://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=308http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=308http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=308http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=308http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/embassies/default.asp?m=ehttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_releases/20030502/1172.htm
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    were largely inaccessible to outsiders. Western NGOs and missionaries (including

    Irish organizations) would not have been permitted to work in these areas during much

    of the Cold War, and, as a result, given the Irish governments predilection for

    responding almost exclusively to proposals from Irish based organizations during this

    time, there was little or no scope for Irish activities in the region. A review of available

    information from Irish Aid annual reports shows only one grant disbursed to support

    activities within the USSRa donation of IRP 100,000 for humanitarian assistance to

    the Irish Red Cross to support earthquake relief in Armenia in 1988.52

    The break-up of

    the Soviet Union provided new opportunities and needs, for the delivery of

    assistance throughout the former USSR and Eastern Europe. Despite this, Irish

    involvement in the region remained relatively low-key. This was driven by three

    factorsa concentration of limited aid resources on Eastern Europe and regions of the

    former USSR closer to what was then the EUs border, a scarcity of Irish NGOs in the

    region that might have pulled in Irish government funding, and by the continued

    consideration of the Central Asian region under the former Soviet rubric, with a

    resultant emphasis on economic reform, democratization, human rights and transition

    generallynone of which match with Irelands trade and aid related engagements in

    Asia more generally.

    Irelands Eurocentric approach to Central Asia is reflected in the primary Irish

    funding mechanism established to allow of delivery of assistance to the region - a

    Balkans and CIS funding scheme. Because of Irelands focus on other parts of the

    world, particularly Africa, total funds allocated to the Balkans and CIS have

    traditionally been limited to approximately 2% of total assistance, at least until 2004.53

    However, neither the 2005 Annual Report nor the recent White Paper on Irish

    Assistance mentions this limit, indicating possible shifting in the Irish government

    52 Department of Foreign Affairs,Irelands Official Development Assistance, 1988, (Dublin, 1989), 41.53 Development Co-operation Ireland,Annual Report, 2004, (Dublin, 2005), 28.

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    position on this issue, though actual assistance disbursed in 2005 was well under 2% of

    total Irish Official Development Assistance.54

    The states of Central Asia fall within

    this funding constraint as members of the CIS.55

    Central Asia is marginalized even

    within this 2% framework, despite at least three of the Central Asian states

    (Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan) being among the worst off in the former

    Soviet Union and Eastern Europe (see HDI rankings above). A review of the most

    recently available Annual Reports for 2005 and 2004 shows that Ireland spent

    (between multilateral and bilateral assistance) a total of Euro 6.528m (2004: 6.2m) on

    the Balkans and CIS, including both multi-lateral and bilateral expenditure,

    representing a 5% increase on the previous year.56

    Of this, only Euro 336,100 (2004:

    114,000) was spent in Central Asian countries, with the bulk of the expenditure, Euro

    3m, (2004: 3.2m) being allocated to the Balkans.57

    This reflects a consistent pattern

    that has prioritized assistance to the Balkans over assistance to other parts of Eastern

    Europe or the CIS. Initially, this focus was expected to last until at least 2006, with

    Irish Aid at one point appeared making a commitment to focus on CIS / Caucasus /

    Central Asia as additional resources become available thereafter.58

    However, in the

    2006 White Paper this commitment appears to have been abandoned in favour of

    54 Total amounts disbursed under the Balkans and CIS scheme totaled Euro 6.528m; total Irish ODA

    totaled 578.46m, resulting in 1.13% of total ODA being spent through the Balkans and CIS fund

    (figures sourced from DFA,Irish AidAnnual Report 2005 (Dublin, 2006).55

    Though Turkmenistans recent (August 2005) downgrading of its engagement with the CIS from fullmember to associate member might, theoretically, exclude it from this category. However, given the

    almost complete lack of engagement by Ireland with Turkmenistan, it seems unlikely that this will

    become an issue in the near future.56 This increase is relatively modest, but should be set against a 12% increase in funding in the previous

    year (per calculations based on figures cited in Irish Aid Annual Reports, 2005 and 2004).57

    Based on figures provided in Development Co-operation Ireland / Irish Aid Annual Reports from2004 (cf page 28) and 2005 (cf page 26). Note, however, that the detailed statistical annex for 2005 (cf

    2005 Annual Report, page 77) lists only two Central Asia projects, one to UNDP for capacity building

    of the electoral administration in Kyrgyzstan (Euro 220,000) and a smaller OSCE grant for mediaconferences in the region (Euro 10,000).58 Development Co-operation Ireland, Balkans and CIS Funding Scheme, Guidelines and Application

    Form, (Dublin, 2004) i.

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    continued prioritization of the West Balkans, apparently because of concerns with

    maintaining security and stability in a region much closer to home than Central Asia.59

    Continued low levels of Irish assistance to Central Asia after the end of the

    Cold War are also at least partially explicable by the absence of Irish non-

    governmental organizations there. Indeed, the former Soviet Union as a whole did not

    attract large-scale interventions from Irish NGOs, despite significant humanitarian

    needs in Tajikistan, and Chechnya, amongst other places. To the extent that the Irish

    government did disburse humanitarian aid in the former Soviet Union in the 1990s,

    with the exception of assistance channeled through the Red Cross, it is noteworthy that

    much of it was allocated to non-traditional (and non-Irish) NGO partners, such as

    Mdicins Sans Frontires, Save the Children-US, Halo Trust and inter-governmental

    organizations such as the World Food Programme, the World Health Organization and

    the International Organization for Migration.60

    Irish government assistance to Central

    Asia in this context has been limited to relatively small amounts of humanitarian

    assistance (both cash and in kind) in Tajikistan.61 This lack of engagement by the

    larger Irish NGOs in the former Soviet Union as a whole remains unexplained, though

    competing priorities in other regions, not least Africa, a succession of other priorities

    (Somalia, The Great Lakes, The Balkans, East Timor, Hurricane Mitch etc), and

    difficult and unfamiliar security and operational environments may in part explain it.

    The operational patterns of the big three Irish NGOs (GOAL, Concern and Trcaire)

    also tended to mirror previous Irish missionary involvement, particularly in the 1980s

    and early 1990s, reflecting to some extent their early reliance on networks established

    by Irish religious, despite the non-denominational character of two of these three

    59 DFA, Irish Aid White Paper, 93.60

    Some smaller Irish NGOs do work in the former Soviet Union, including the Chernobyl Childrens

    Appeal in Belarus and From Russia With Love in Russia. The Christina Noble Childrens foundationshould also be mentioned because of its focus on activities in two Asian states, both heavily influenced

    by the USSRMongolia and Vietnam.61 Provided in 1996 and 1997 to the International Federation of the Red Cross and ICRC. Irish

    government contributions were also made the World Food Programme to respond to droughts in

    Tajikistan in 2000 and 2001.

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    organizations. The only major engagement these larger Irish NGOs have had with

    Central Asia to date was the use of states bordering Afghanistan as logistical hubs

    (particularly Turkmenistan and Tajikistan) by organizations such as GOAL and

    Concern to support humanitarian operations into Afghanistan for brief periods, notably

    during the post 9/11 Northern Alliance push south to take Kabul, relocating operations

    inside Afghanistan once stability allowed.62

    63

    However, at least one smaller Irish

    NGO, the Chernobyl Orphans Fund, has been involved in bringing small numbers of

    children to Ireland for medical treatment for chronic medical conditions brought about

    as a result of Soviet nuclear testing conducted in the country.64

    Ireland and the OSCEsporadic engagement

    As the leading regional inter-governmental organization that includes western

    European and former Soviet sphere states as members, the OSCE has taken an active

    role in the region. However, Irelands participation in OSCE activities in the Central

    Asian region has been relatively restrained. One of the more noteworthy engagements

    in recent times was the participation of a small team of Irish election observers to in

    OSCE election monitoring of the Kazakhstan presidential election in December 2005

    elections that the OSCE concluded were not free and fair.65

    The importance of this

    election to the OSCE was heightened because of Kazakhstans recently expressed

    interest in taking over the Chairmanship of the organization. This is itself unusual in

    62Per discussions with aid workers involved in these operations.

    63Tajikistan also acted as a safe haven in case of emergencies in Northern Afghanistan for Irish aid

    workers both before the earlier advances of Taliban forces into the north of the country: see for

    example, Paul Cullen, Concern pair escape by raft to Tajikistan in The Irish Times, 24th

    August 1998,

    available athttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/world/1998/0824/archive.989824.html(accessed 10th

    May 2007), and in more recent post US invasion times, cf Denis McClean, Concern pulls out of

    Afghanistan in The Irish Times, 8th October, 2004, available at

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/world/2004/1008/364763559FR08MCCLEAN.html(Accessed 10thMay 2007).64Katie Donovan, Children of the bomb in The Irish Times, 16

    th February 2000, available at

    http://www.ireland.com/newspapers/features/2000/0216/archive.00021600096.html(accessed 10th May2007).65 The author also participated as a locally recruited OSCE election observer in Almaty, Kazakhstan in

    these elections.

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/world/1998/0824/archive.989824.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/world/1998/0824/archive.989824.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/world/1998/0824/archive.989824.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/world/2004/1008/364763559FR08MCCLEAN.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/world/2004/1008/364763559FR08MCCLEAN.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspapers/features/2000/0216/archive.00021600096.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspapers/features/2000/0216/archive.00021600096.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspapers/features/2000/0216/archive.00021600096.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/world/2004/1008/364763559FR08MCCLEAN.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/world/1998/0824/archive.989824.html
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    that countrys do not usually announce their intention to accede to the chairmanship,

    putting Kazakhstan in a situation where it has placed considerable international

    prestige at risk should it be unsuccessful in its candidacy. Irelands small role in this

    election received almost no attention domestically in Ireland, though a subsequent

    RTE report served to further highlight the distance Kazakhstan still has to go to be

    considered an open and truly democratic society.66

    As far as Kazakhstans bid for the

    OSCE Presidency goes, Ireland decided not to take a public position early on,67

    reflecting a general wait and see attitude by OSCE member states as a whole.68

    Other Irish engagements with the region through the OSCE appear to have

    been sporadic, often being no more than side meetings between Ministers at OSCE

    meetings,69

    or very occasional visits by Irish officials as a result of multilateral

    commitments. An example of the latter was Ambassador Brendan Morans (Irelands

    then Ambassador to the OSCE)visit to Almaty, Kazakhstan, in May 2003 as part of

    the OSCE delegation, in part because of Irelands upcoming Presidency of the EU. In

    this context, he emphasized the importance of the Central Asian region for the EU,

    highlighting the importance of democratic reforms, human rights, political freedom

    and independent mass media.70

    Ireland has also financed some OSCE activities in the

    region, though in general Irish assistance, constrained by the classification of Central

    Asia within the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) zone, has taken a back

    seat to Irish interests in the Balkans. Irelands limited funding has included

    66Margaret Ward, Report from the Eurasian Media Forum, 29

    thApril 2006, available on-line (audio

    version) at http://dynamic.rte.ie/av/worldreport/2136258.smil (accessed May 2006).67 Per email correspondence with DFA official, March 2006.68

    RFE/RL, OSCE Chairman in Office Urges Political Reform in Kazakhstan,Newsline, Vol. 11, No.

    66, Part 1\I, 11, April 2007.69 For example, a meeting by Irish Foreign Minister David Andrews in 1998 (ref: DFA, Minister

    Andrews says OSCE will help stabilize Kosovo, Press Release, available at

    http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/imdex.aspx?id=26894 (accessed 13th

    May 2007) and a meeting by

    Minster of State Treacy in late 2005 (ref. Department of Foreign Affairs, Minister of State Treacy calls

    for a Strengthening of the Role of the OSCE, press release, 5th December 2005, available at

    www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20051205/1929.htm (Accessed 3rd February 2006)).70Justin Burke, OSCEs office in Almaty holds pressconference,Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty,

    05 May 2003, available atwww.eurasianet.org/resource/kazakhstan/hypermail/200305/0006.shtml(5

    May 2005).

    http://dynamic.rte.ie/av/worldreport/2136258.smilhttp://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/imdex.aspx?id=26894http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/imdex.aspx?id=26894http://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20051205/1929.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20051205/1929.htmhttp://www.eurasianet.org/resource/kazakhstan/hypermail/200305/0006.shtmlhttp://www.eurasianet.org/resource/kazakhstan/hypermail/200305/0006.shtmlhttp://www.eurasianet.org/resource/kazakhstan/hypermail/200305/0006.shtmlhttp://www.eurasianet.org/resource/kazakhstan/hypermail/200305/0006.shtmlhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20051205/1929.htmhttp://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/imdex.aspx?id=26894http://dynamic.rte.ie/av/worldreport/2136258.smil
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    contributions for human rights and democratization in Central Asia through the OSCE

    from 1999 onwards.71

    This support was made to assist OSCE missions in all five states

    to promote respect for human rights and to assist in the development of legal and

    democratic political institutions and processes, through strengthening of the

    indigenous NGO sector and of relevant governmental and non-governmental

    institutions.72

    DCI has also provided on-going support for an OSCE Office for

    Democratic Institutions and Human Rights Officer (ODIHR) responsible for

    promoting freedom of religion and tolerance, part of whose work impinges on Central

    Asia.73

    Ireland and the EUhuman rights and health initiatives

    Irelands membership of the EU has also resulted in some engagement with the region,

    principally with respect to human rights issues and HIV/AIDS policy development.

    The EU itself has been relatively slow in developing a strategic approach to Central

    Asia, finally beginning to develop a Central Asia strategy only in 2007. The new

    strategy will intensify co-operation on rule of law, human rights and democratization,

    education, energy and transport, environment, trade and economic development co-

    operation, and regional security challenges (such as border management, drug

    trafficking and organized crime).74

    Given the tardiness of a coherent EU response to

    71DCI, 1999, ODonnell funds human rights projects in third world, DCI Press Release, 04 June

    1999, available atwww.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/19990604/450.htm[24.02.2005]72 Department of Foreign Affairs, ODonnell funds human rights projects in Third World, pressrelease, 04 June 1999, available at www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/19990604/450.htm (24

    February 2005).73 Development Co-operation Ireland, Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE),

    available atwww.apso.ie/print.asp(24 February 2005).74 Council of the European Union, Press Release, Council Conclusion on Central Asia, 2796 th ExternalRelations Council Meeting, Luxembourg, 23rd April, 2007, (EU: 2007) available at

    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/ueDocs/cms_Data/docs/pressData/en/gena/93790.pdf (accessed 6th

    May 2007).

    http://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/19990604/450.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/19990604/450.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/19990604/450.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/19990604/450.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/19990604/450.htmhttp://www.apso.ie/print.asphttp://www.apso.ie/print.asphttp://www.apso.ie/print.asphttp://www.consilium.europa.eu/ueDocs/cms_Data/docs/pressData/en/gena/93790.pdfhttp://www.consilium.europa.eu/ueDocs/cms_Data/docs/pressData/en/gena/93790.pdfhttp://www.consilium.europa.eu/ueDocs/cms_Data/docs/pressData/en/gena/93790.pdfhttp://www.apso.ie/print.asphttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/19990604/450.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/19990604/450.htm
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    Central Asia, it is unsurprising that Irelands engagement through EU membership has

    also been patchy.75

    Irelands engagement with respect to human rights in Central Asia is

    noteworthy because it shows the potential that membership of larger international

    institutions can have for smaller states (and indeed pressure groups within small

    states), as well as the responsibilities inherent in membership. It also illustrates the

    apparent limitations of small state influence. First to the responsibilities: Statutory

    Instruments 901 and 902 of 2005 applying sanctions against Uzbekistan in response to

    the Andijan incident have been issued by Minister for Finance Brian Cowen in

    accordance with EU policy, resulting in trade and financial sanctions against the

    Uzbek state, though this is hardly contrary to Irish interests, given Irelands negligible

    trading relationship with Uzbekistan.76

    Irelands initial response to the Andijan deaths

    was relatively cautious, with Minister Ahern confining his remarks to saying that the

    credible reports on the deaths of civilians were extremely disturbing.77

    However a

    subsequent press release claimed that Ireland had been forthright in its criticism of

    the Uzbek regime for the events of 2005 in Andijan, and was active in looking for an

    75 This tardiness was somewhat understandable when the EU eastern borders in northern Europe

    extended no further east than Germany. However, the expansion in EU membership in Eastern Europe

    has meant that Central Asia is now a region of greater salience to EU members states.76 A search of the Irish Times archive elicited only two trade references connecting Ireland and

    Uzbekistan one a reference to the Uzbekistan business interests of London quoted mining PLC,

    Minco, which has zinc mining interests in Ireland (Irish Times, Minco raises funds for drilling, 27th

    December, 2003, available at

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/1227/2698663144BZSHORTS.html (accessed 6th

    May 2007) and the second a report from 1996 on the success of ESB International in securing a contractwith two EU partners to review electrical systems in a number of CIS states, including Uzbekistan (Irish

    Times, ESB wins Russian review contract, 29th January, 1996, available at

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/1996/0129/archive.96012900094.html (accessed 6th May2007).77DFA, Statement by the Minister Dermot Ahern on events in Uzbekistan, Press Release, available at

    http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=25535(accessed 13th May 2007).

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/1227/2698663144BZSHORTS.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/1227/2698663144BZSHORTS.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/1996/0129/archive.96012900094.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/1996/0129/archive.96012900094.htmlhttp://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=25535http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=25535http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=25535http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/1996/0129/archive.96012900094.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/1227/2698663144BZSHORTS.html
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    EU response to the incident.78

    Irelands Minister of State, Noel Treacy, also raised the

    issue at an OSCE Ministerial conference held in December 2005.79

    The potential for small states and by extension, relatively small advocacy

    organizations within those states, to mobilize broader institutional support for issues of

    concern was illustrated in 2004. In that year the Irish Human Rights NGO, Frontline,

    successfully mobilized the Irish government to pressure the EU to issue a statement in

    defense of Kyrgyz human rights defender Tursunbek Akunov, who disappeared after

    organising a petition for the resignation of the then Kyrgyz president. A few days later,

    after direct pressure from Frontline to senior Kyrgyz officials and the EU statement,

    Akunov was freed by the government-backed militia that had taken him captive.80

    However, there appears to be limits to Irelands ability or willingness to

    exercise influence in this respect. The case of Uzbek human rights activist Mukhtabar

    Tojibaeva illustrates this point. Ms Tojibaeva was arrested in 2005 in Uzbekistan the

    day before she was due to travel to Dublin to attend the third Platform for the

    Protection of Human Rights organized by Frontline.81 Tojibaeva was subsequently

    sentenced to eight years imprisonment in March 2006, a sentence that was confirmed

    in May 2006.82

    83

    At time of writing (May 2007), Tojibaeva, along with other human

    rights defenders, remains in prison in Tashkent. Since her incarceration she reportedly

    spent some time consigned to the prisons psychiatric ward for a period in the summer

    78 Department of Foreign Affairs, Minister Aherns Statement to the Oireachtas Joint Committee on

    European Affairs, press release, 29 September 2005, available at

    www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20050929/1855.htm(accessed 3rd

    February 2006).79

    Department of Foreign Affairs, Minister of State Treacy calls for a Strengthening of th e Role of the

    OSCE, press release, 5th December 2005, available at

    www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20051205/1929.htm (Accessed 3rd

    February 2006).80

    Joe Humphreys, The Advocates, The Irish Times, 11th

    December, 2004, accessed online at

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/magazine/2004/1211/339547856MG1112ADVOCS.html [12 July

    2006].81

    Frontline, La publication dun rapport rvle que les dfenseurs des droits humans en Ouzbkistan

    sont victims de repression, novembre 2005, press release, available at

    www.frontlinedefenders.org/francais/communiqies/2193 (accessed 3rd February 2006).82 Frontline, Uzbek court sentences human rights defender to eight years, press release, 8th March2006, available atwww.frontlinedefenders.org/news.2505 [accessed at 9th March 2006].83Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Uzbek Court Upholds Sentence Against Rights Activist, Vol.10, No. 98, Part I, 31 May 2006.

    http://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20050929/1855.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20050929/1855.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20051205/1929.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20051205/1929.htmhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/magazine/2004/1211/339547856MG1112ADVOCS.html%20%5b12http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/magazine/2004/1211/339547856MG1112ADVOCS.html%20%5b12http://www.frontlinedefenders.org/francais/communiqies/2193http://www.frontlinedefenders.org/francais/communiqies/2193http://www.frontlinedefenders.org/news.2505http://www.frontlinedefenders.org/news.2505http://www.frontlinedefenders.org/news.2505http://www.frontlinedefenders.org/news.2505http://www.frontlinedefenders.org/francais/communiqies/2193http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/magazine/2004/1211/339547856MG1112ADVOCS.html%20%5b12http://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20051205/1929.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20050929/1855.htm
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    of 2006, has been denied access to her lawyer for over six months, has been denied

    regular family visits and has been locked in a punishment cell.84

    Curiously since

    Tojibaevas arrest in late 2005, the Irish government, at least in its public

    pronouncements, has been relatively quiet about this incident, a stance which stands in

    contrast to more strenuous efforts made by them with respect to a Sudanese human

    rights activist detained in 2005 prior to his planned trip to Dublin for another Frontline

    conference. Frontline has taken an active interest in human rights issues in the Central

    Asian region for a number of years and has had various Central Asian participants at

    events in Dublin since 2001. The organization continues to keep Uzbekistan in its

    sights through the announcement of the presentation of an award to another Uzbek

    human rights activist, Ahmadjon Madmuarov, in June 2006.85

    Mr. Madmuarov, who

    is also resident in Uzbekistan, traveled to Ireland surreptiously while on a trip to

    neighbouring Kyrgyzstan.86

    Given the success of previous organizations such as Tom

    Hylands activism in support of East Timor, and the activities of the Burma Action

    Group, in championing particular causes with the Irish government, Frontlines current

    stance may see increased engagement by the Irish government on the issue of human

    rights in Uzbekistan.

    Irelands other noteworthy engagement (and possibly its most significant to

    date from a policy perspective) on issues pertinent to Central Asia was the

    organization of a conference in Dublin during Irelands last Presidency of the EU. This

    latter conference, entitled Breaking the Barriers Partnership to fight HIV/AIDS in

    Europe and Central Asia represented an important initiative by the Irish government

    to highlight the growing problem of HIV/AIDS in the region and resulted in the

    84 Human Rights Watch, Under Siege and Working for Justice, , Human Rights Defenders in

    Uzbekistan, (New York: 2006), p6, available athttp://hrw.org/campaigns/uzbekistan/portraits_0407.pdf[Accessed 4th May 2007].85 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Uzbek Human Rights Activist Receives Award, Vol. 10, No.

    111, Part I, 19th June 2006.86Kitty Holland, Defending the enemies of the state, in The Irish Times, 17th June, 2006, available at

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/newsfeatures/2006/0617/3293883683WK17HUMANRIGHTS.html

    (accessed 6th May 2007).

    http://hrw.org/campaigns/uzbekistan/portraits_0407.pdfhttp://hrw.org/campaigns/uzbekistan/portraits_0407.pdfhttp://hrw.org/campaigns/uzbekistan/portraits_0407.pdfhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/newsfeatures/2006/0617/3293883683WK17HUMANRIGHTS.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/newsfeatures/2006/0617/3293883683WK17HUMANRIGHTS.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/newsfeatures/2006/0617/3293883683WK17HUMANRIGHTS.htmlhttp://hrw.org/campaigns/uzbekistan/portraits_0407.pdf
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    Dublin Declaration on Partnership to fight HIV/AIDS in Europe and Central Asia,

    adopted by 55 countries.87

    The declaration commits signatories to strengthening their

    response to HIV/AIDS, increasing inter-regional co-ordination on HIV/AIDS

    initiatives and increased funding for prevention and, care and sustained treatment

    initiatives.88

    However, the marginality of Central Asia to the enterprise despite the

    title of the conference, was emphasized by Irish funding decisions in its wake. The

    declaration was followed by the announcement by the Irish government of increased

    assistance to HIV/AIDS prevention programmes in Central and Southeastern Europe

    but not to Central Asia.89

    Ireland and the UNmore sporadic engagement

    Finally, Ireland has also had some very minor engagement with the region through the

    UN, principally on human rights, non-proliferation issues and peacekeeping. During its

    tenure on the UN Commission for Human Rights, Ireland supported a resolution

    expressing grave concern regarding the Turkmenistan governments crack down on the

    opposition, with the Irish Ambassador, Mary Whelan, speaking on behalf of the EU on

    the matter.90

    Ireland had previously co-sponsored a General Assembly resolution on

    Turkmenistan calling on the Turkmen administration to implement the findings of an

    OCSE rapporteur and to support facilitate the work of UNHCR and ICRC.91

    Significantly, given concerns over whether Irish economic interests might blunt human

    rights advocacy, Ireland does actually have some business interests in Turkmenistan.

    87Development Co-operation Ireland, 55 countries adopt Dublin Declaration on Partnership to fight

    HIV/AIDS in Europe and Central Asia, press release, 24 February 2004, available athttp://www.dci.gov.ie/latest_news.asp?article=348(accessed 19th January 2006).88

    Government of Ireland, Dublin Declaration on Partnership to fight HIV/AIDS in Europe and Central

    Asia, (Dublin, 2005).89 DCI, 2004. Ireland increases assistance to fight HIVAIDS in Central and South East Europe

    Minister Kitt, press release, 05 March 2004, available at

    www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20040305/1458.htm(accessed 24th February 2005).90Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, UN Commission Condemns Belarus, Turkmen Rights abuses,Features and Analysis, 14 April 2004, available atwww.rferl.org/reports/turkmen-report/2004/04/0-2--

    404.asp(accessed 3 February 2006).91 DFA, Address by Minister Cowen to the 11 th Ministerial Council of the OSCE, Maastricht, 1-2

    Deember 2003 Press Release, available at http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=25894

    (accessed 13th May 2007).

    http://www.dci.gov.ie/latest_news.asp?article=348http://www.dci.gov.ie/latest_news.asp?article=348http://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20040305/1458.htmhttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20040305/1458.htmhttp://www.rferl.org/reports/turkmen-report/2004/04/0-2--404.asphttp://www.rferl.org/reports/turkmen-report/2004/04/0-2--404.asphttp://www.rferl.org/reports/turkmen-report/2004/04/0-2--404.asphttp://www.rferl.org/reports/turkmen-report/2004/04/0-2--404.asphttp://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=25894http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=25894http://foreignaffairs.gov.ie/home/index.aspx?id=25894http://www.rferl.org/reports/turkmen-report/2004/04/0-2--404.asphttp://www.rferl.org/reports/turkmen-report/2004/04/0-2--404.asphttp://www.foreignaffairs.gov.ie/Press_Releases/20040305/1458.htmhttp://www.dci.gov.ie/latest_news.asp?article=348
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    Irish registered oil and gas exploration company, Dragon Oil, has been operational in

    Turkmenistan since 1999, and operates a joint venture with the Turkmen government

    in the Cheleken field in the Caspian Sea.92

    The company is Irish registered and quoted

    on the Dublin and London stock exchanges, though the Dublin operation appears to be

    something of a brass plate with the operational headquarters based in Dubai. A

    majority stake in the company is held by the Emirates Oil Company.93

    In 2004, one

    analyst noted that Dragon Oil was the biggest foreign oil producer among the joint

    ventures in Turkmenistan, indicating the importance of the company in the

    Turkmenistan energy sector.94

    Private Irish company Emerol has also been doing

    business in Turkmenistan since 1992 primarily in the area of environmental

    protection in oil, gas, chemical and petrochemical industries. Controversially, it was

    one of approximately 30 companies that paid to have President Niyazovs book,

    Rukhnama (Book of Spirit) translated into various languages the Irish company

    paying for it to be translated into Lithuanian. The book, written by Niyazov, was part

    of the cult of personality that surrounded his regime, and corporate sponsorship for

    translating and printing of this nature by private companies was criticized by some

    human rights groups.95

    On non-proliferation issues, Ireland provided political support

    in the UN through the New Agenda Coalition in 2002 for the Central Asia nuclear

    92 Alexander Gas & Oil Connections, Dragons offshore LAM 220102 well comes onstream,Company News, Central Asia, Vol 7, Issue 5, March 06, 2002, available at

    http://www.gasandoil.com/goc/company/cnc13104.htm (Accessed 5th

    February 2006)93 Irish Examiner, Dragon Oil profits increase as shares rise by 10%, 23 March, 2004, available atwww.archives.tem.ie/irishexaminer/2004/03/23/story531796099.asp (Accessed 6th February 2006).94 APS, Turkmenistan The Oil Producers in Review of Oil Markets Trends, Spetember 2004,available at www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_go1968/is_200409/ai_n6446375 (Accessed at 3rd

    February 2006).95Peter Finn, A Turkmen Tome Gets Foreign Aid, Washington Post, 23

    rd February, 2005, pA13.

    http://www.gasandoil.com/goc/company/cnc13104.htmhttp://www.gasandoil.com/goc/company/cnc13104.htmhttp://www.archives.tem.ie/irishexaminer/2004/03/23/story531796099.asphttp://www.archives.tem.ie/irishexaminer/2004/03/23/story531796099.asphttp://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_go1968/is_200409/ai_n6446375http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_go1968/is_200409/ai_n6446375http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_go1968/is_200409/ai_n6446375http://www.archives.tem.ie/irishexaminer/2004/03/23/story531796099.asphttp://www.gasandoil.com/goc/company/cnc13104.htm
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    weapon free zone (CANWFZ) agreement.96

    Irish Gardai have also served with

    peacekeeping forces in Tajikistan during the transition to peace in the mid 1990s.97

    Other connections

    While by no means complete, the author has been able to trace some other passing

    connections between Ireland and the Central Asian region. Ireland has had a trickle of

    asylum seekers arriving from the region. A total of 169 people have applied for asylum

    from the region over a three year period from 2002 to 2004, accounting for just under

    0.7% of total asylum seekers. The majority came from Kazakhstan (117 applicants; 92

    in 2002 and 25 in 2003), followed by Uzbekistan (41 total; 28 in 2002 and 13 in 2004)

    and Kyrgyzstan (11 all in 2002).98

    Ireland has also deported eight people from the

    region in the same periodseven from Kazakhstan and one from Uzbekistan.99

    Another connection, other than the inevitable presence of Irish pubs (with at

    least five in Kazakhstan, at the last count) is with Northern Ireland. It is would seem

    noteworthy, given recent events in Kyrgyzstan (in particular the relatively restrained

    role played by the police there in responding to civil strife in the wake of contested

    elections that saw the change in leadership) that four mid-level police based in the

    Kyrgyz capital Bishkek, including a police trainer at the Kyrgyz police academy, were

    sent to Belfast for training in community policing by the OSCE, an activity described

    by the OSCE programme manager as one of their most successful initiatives in

    96 Scott Parrish, Central Asian States Achieve Breakthrough on Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone Treaty,

    Monterrey Institute of International Studies Research paper, available at

    www.cns.miis.edu/pubs/week/020930.htm[14th March 2005].97 Jim Cusack, Garda Silver Fox picked for key UN Policing Role, The Irish Times, 13

    th January

    1996, available at http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/1996/0113/archive.96011300007.html

    [12th July 2006].98 As calculated based on statistics released by Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform Michael

    McDowell, in response to a Dail question, per Dail Debates (Official Report Unrevised), Vol. 597

    No.4, Thursday 10 February 2005 available atwww.debates.oireachtas.ie/Ddebate.aspx?F=DAL20050210.xml&Dail=29&Ex=All& [24 February

    2005].99 Ibid.

    http://www.cns.miis.edu/pubs/week/020930.htmhttp://www.cns.miis.edu/pubs/week/020930.htmhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/1996/0113/archive.96011300007.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/1996/0113/archive.96011300007.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/1996/0113/archive.96011300007.htmlhttp://www.cns.miis.edu/pubs/week/020930.htm
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    working with police in Kyrgyzstan for three years.100

    The retrained response of the

    Kyrgyz police stands in contrast to the events in Andijan in neighbouring Uzbekistan

    noted above.101

    Scope for greater Irish engagement

    Despite the connections outlined above, Central Asias status as a constituent region of

    Asia and its geographical proximity to Europe, the bottom line is that the region has

    been relatively marginal to Ireland and Irish foreign and aid policy concerns. Given

    resource constraints within the Irish foreign service and other strategic priorities is this

    a reasonable approach? This section considers some of the possible opportunities

    offered by Central Asia in the event of future Irish engagement.

    First, to trade. The wealthiest country in the region, Kazakhstan offers

    possibilities as a market for Irish goods and services particularly consumer goods,

    third level education services and possibly work in the banking and financial services

    sectors (Kazakhstan is the regional leader in financial services), together with direct

    investment opportunities in the oil and gas and mining sectors. Third level education

    may offer one of the least risky growth opportunities. The Kazakh government has a

    scholarship programme known as Bolashak () to support study overseas by

    Kazakh students. In 2006/07 the government planned financial support to 3,000

    students to study overseas at third level. The Irish embassy in Moscow has expressed

    and interest in this scheme and is seeking to promote the Irish third level sector with

    the Kazakh government102

    Irish companies have also done business in the financial

    sector in Kazakhstan before Bank of Ireland, for example, implemented a technical

    assistance programme to 16 commercial banks through the Kazakh Institute of

    100 Per interview with OSCE Programme Manager, Almaty, Kazakhstan, March 2005.101 Though it would appear that the Uzbek military, rather than police, took a leading role in responding

    during the Andijan incident.102 Per email correspondence with DFA official in the Irish Embassy in Moscow, March 2006.

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    Bankers in the early 1990s with EU TACIS funding.103

    Irish based companies have

    also been involved in the oil and gas,104

    mining105

    and media106

    sectors, amongst

    others. Nonetheless, Kazakhstan remains a difficult place to do business, with

    dominance of sectors of the economy by Kazakh elites and general corruption levels

    creating a difficult operational environment for investors, especially outside of the

    energy sector. The other states in the region offer less in terms of trade, though both

    Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan have significant energy sectors. However, Irish

    involvement in Uzbekistan is currently subject to trade sanctions (see above).

    However, the recent change in government in Turkmenistan signals a possibly

    improved business environment there.

    Outside of trade issues, the relatively marginal status of Central Asia,

    particularly in aid terms, while perhaps justified in the past, now seems unwarranted

    given general developmental conditions within the region and the proximity of the

    region to Europe and the EUparticularly with the recent expansion eastwards of EU

    states. While Kazakhstan is relatively well off, the other states in the region certainly

    are not when compared to other regions and states in the Balkans and CIS. However,

    determining the nature of any increased assistance and modalities of assistance

    (multilateral, bilateral, through NGOs etc) will require more detailed analysis, given

    103Source: Bank of Ireland International Services, 1995 New Markets, New Horizons. This is a

    glossy promotional brochure in the possession of the author.104Jamie Smyth, Kentech clinches Euro19m oil and gas with Japanese firm in The Irish Times, 18

    th

    November 2004, available at

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2004/1118/4191523784BZJAMIE2.html(accessed 6th May

    2007).105See for example, Celtic Resources wants to write off Euro8.3m, court told in The Irish Times, 16

    th

    December 2003, available at

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/1216/2135122260BZCELTIC.html(accessed 6th May

    2007), Colm Ward, Celtic resources gold mine production beats forecast in The Irish Times, 1st

    March, 2003, available at

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/0301/1676034658BWCELTIC.html(accesed 6th May

    2007), Ennex posts pre-tax loss of Euro 259,000, The Irish Times, 28th September, 2002, available at

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2002/0928/4247886282BZENNEX.html(accessed 6th May

    2007).106Lorna Siggins, Media executive sells major US shows from Galway in The Irish Times, 5 th April

    1999, available athttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/1999/0405/archive.99040500010.html

    (accessed 10th May 2007).

    http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2004/1118/4191523784BZJAMIE2.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2004/1118/4191523784BZJAMIE2.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/1216/2135122260BZCELTIC.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/1216/2135122260BZCELTIC.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/0301/1676034658BWCELTIC.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/0301/1676034658BWCELTIC.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2002/0928/4247886282BZENNEX.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2002/0928/4247886282BZENNEX.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/1999/0405/archive.99040500010.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/1999/0405/archive.99040500010.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/1999/0405/archive.99040500010.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/1999/0405/archive.99040500010.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2002/0928/4247886282BZENNEX.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/0301/1676034658BWCELTIC.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2003/1216/2135122260BZCELTIC.htmlhttp://www.ireland.com/newspaper/finance/2004/1118/4191523784BZJAMIE2.html
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    issues of poor governance and suspicion regarding foreign engagement in

    democratization and human rights issues in the region. The Irish governments recent

    commitment to HIV/AIDS prevention in the Dublin declaration may offer one obvious

    sectoral area of focus. Central Asia as yet has relatively low HIV/AIDS prevalence

    rates, but one of the fastest growing rates in the worldindicating that now is the time

    engage on this is