With energy exports depressed, Turkmens turn to towel
smuggling
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[April 23, 2019]
By Mariya Gordeyeva
ALMATY (Reuters) - Beset by economic
hardship, enterprising Turkmens have found a way to supplement their
incomes - smuggling towels and bed linen into neighboring Kazakhstan.
Moving hundreds of items every trip in trademark Chinese plaid bags
which at times have clogged airport luggage belts, informal traders -
mostly women in their late forties and fifties - hand them over to
relatives or local partners to be resold for up to five times the
purchase price.
Dressed in traditional Central Asian garb such as headscarves and long
skirts, these women arrive on almost every flight from Ashgabat to
Almaty, Kazakhstan's biggest city.
Textiles are among the few items manufactured domestically from local
feedstock and prices for items produced by state-owned companies have
remained stable for years even as the Turkmen manat lost four-fifths of
its value on the black market due to Turkmenistan's falling gas export
revenue.
A deal to resume gas exports to Russia this month brought hope, but
turned out to be small and short-term.
Turkmenistan, where president Kurbanguly Berdimukhamedov rules with an
elaborate personality cult, is one of the world's most closed countries.
There are no opposition parties or media critical of the government and
Berdymukhamedov, often referred to as Arkadag (Protector), wields
sweeping powers.
Turkmenistan rarely allows visits by foreign journalists and the textile
trade offers a glimpse into the depth of its economic problems.
INDUSTRIAL SCALE
The trade attracted the attention of Almaty airport officials this year
when luggage from Turkmenistan started clogging its belts. The planes,
it turned out, were stuffed with textiles.
"My daughter trades at a bazaar (in Kazakhstan) and I bring her goods
little by little... which I buy from our (Turkmen) stores," said a
Turkmen woman picking up bags from the luggage belt in Almaty,
Kazakhstan's commercial hub.
Like all other people involved in this informal textiles trading, the
woman spoke on the condition of anonymity because traders like her dodge
customs duties by claiming their goods are personal belongings not meant
for resale.
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People, including passengers of a flight from the Turkmen capital
Ashgabat, gather in the baggage claim area upon their arrival at
Almaty International Airport, Kazakhstan April 5, 2019. REUTERS/Mariya
Gordeyeva
These de facto smuggling operations reached industrial scale in early 2019,
prompting the Almaty airport to lodge an official complaint with the Turkmen
flag carrier.
"There were parcels weighing over 50-60 kilograms (110-130 pounds) each," said
Marina Zabara, a complaints inspector at the airport.
Oversized parcels have since disappeared but the flow of textiles continues. A
Reuters reporter saw Turkmen travelers pick up parcels of textiles upon arrival
in Almaty this month.
"A woman from Turkmenistan moved to our village last year and offered us to sell
their textiles," said a Kazakh trader working at a market on the outskirts of
Almaty. "Her mother brings the goods as luggage, as many items as she can."
At Almaty's biggest market, traders display Turkmen bedding - often with
traditional patterns based on deer and sheep horns or abstract human figures -
from fully-packed cargo containers.
"The demand is good, with the most expensive bedding set priced at 10,000 tenge
($26)," said one trader.
Some hotels have also become wholesale buyers, Turkmens say.
The official exchange rate of the manat is 3.5 per dollar, but on the black
market a dollar fetches 18.6 manat.
A Kazakh citizen who used to live in Turkmenistan told Reuters that by buying
out luggage allowances from other travelers and bribing airline officials, a
"shuttle trader" can move up to 200 kilograms (441 pounds) in one trip.
(Additional reporting by Olzhas Auyezov in Almaty and Marat Gurt in Ashgabat,;
Writing by Olzhas Auyezov, editing by Ed Osmond)
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