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 TurkmenistanIssues with Oil ExportationIn the 1990s, Turkmenistan exported gas through a Russian pipeline,
bringing in about $1 billion per year. But in 1993, Russia closed down
Turkmenistan's only pipeline because it competed with Russia's own gas
exportation. Turkmenistan was limited to exporting gas to its impoverished
central Asian neighbors, who were unable to pay their bills. The nation
then opened a pipeline route to Iran, generally agreed to be the most
economical route for exporting Caspian oil, and thus ruffled the feathers
of Iran's enemy, the U.S. So far, the new plan has not brought in money,
and the country is living off loans from Western countries, such as
Germany, who hope to partner with the oil-rich, money-poor country. In
2003, Russia agreed to buy 60 billion cubic meters of gas from
Turkmenistan annually. At the time of the deal, Turkmenistan began to
restrict the rights of its ethnic Russian citizens, infuriating
Russia.
An alleged assassination attempt against Niyazov in Nov. 2002 (thought
by outsiders to have been staged) resulted in the conviction of 46
opposition leaders and critics of the government.
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