Iran prepared to invest $10 billion in Kyrgyzstan

GlobalPost

Iran wants to invest $10 billion in Kyrgyzstan and launch direct Tehran-Bishkek flights, reported the Times of Central Asia, a sign of warming relations between the Islamic Republic and the young Kyrgyz government. 

Kyrgyzstan installed a new government in December after eight months of turmoil following the ousting of former authoritarian leader Kurmanbek Bakiyev and the eruption of deadly ethnic clashes between the nation's Uzbek and Kyrgyz communities. Nearly 500 people were killed. 

More from GlobalPost: “Spies Against Armageddon" book says Israel's Mossad killed Iranian nuclear scientists

The semi-official Fars news agency said Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad met in Tehran with Kyrgyzstan's new finance minister, Akhylbek Japarov, on Tuesday and called for greater ties between the Islamic Republic and the strategic Central Asian nation, also home to a key US air base.

Officials discussed the resumption of direct flights between Bishkek and Tehran as well as other projects to boost their joint trade, developments welcomed by the Iranian parliament, according the state-run IRNA news agency

Iran's economy is struggling, recently hit with fresh sanctions over its controversial nuclear program, which the West fears is being used to make a bomb, a charge Iran denies.

The Islamic Republic imports meat, grain and metals from the predominantly Muslim Central Asian country and exports mostly clothing, food, and building materials, according to the Tehran Times

Both the United States and Russia actively court the Kyrgyz government, seeking to benefit from the nation's strategic location and resources. 

Will you support The World?

The story you just read is not locked behind a paywall because listeners and readers like you generously support our nonprofit newsroom. Now more than ever, we need your help to support our global reporting work and power the future of The World. Can we count on you?