Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07TASHKENT769
2007-04-13 10:42:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Tashkent
Cable title:  

SCANDINAVIAN-TURKISH FIRM MAY BUY COSCOM AND

Tags:  EINV ECPS PGOV RU TU UZ 
pdf how-to read a cable
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PP RUEHDBU
DE RUEHNT #0769/01 1031042
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 131042Z APR 07
FM AMEMBASSY TASHKENT
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 7696
INFO RUEHEK/AMEMBASSY BISHKEK 3582
RUEHTA/AMEMBASSY ASTANA 9094
RUEHDBU/AMEMBASSY DUSHANBE 3454
RUEHAH/AMEMBASSY ASHGABAT 2987
RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 7050
RUEHBUL/AMEMBASSY KABUL 1859
RUEHCH/AMEMBASSY CHISINAU 0351
RUEHKB/AMEMBASSY BAKU 0518
RUEHSI/AMEMBASSY TBILISI 1252
RUEHAK/AMEMBASSY ANKARA 2710
RUEHHE/AMEMBASSY HELSINKI 0297
RUEHSM/AMEMBASSY STOCKHOLM 0157
RUEHIT/AMCONSUL ISTANBUL 0371
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 TASHKENT 000769 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR SCA/CEN AND EEB

E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/13/2017
TAGS: EINV ECPS PGOV RU TU UZ
SUBJECT: SCANDINAVIAN-TURKISH FIRM MAY BUY COSCOM AND
SISTER COMPANIES IN CENTRAL ASIA

REF: A. TASHKENT 516 (NOTAL)


B. TASHKENT 278 (NOTAL)

C. TASHKENT 323 (NOTAL)

Classified By: AMB. JON R. PURNELL, FOR REASONS 1.4 (B, D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 TASHKENT 000769

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR SCA/CEN AND EEB

E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/13/2017
TAGS: EINV ECPS PGOV RU TU UZ
SUBJECT: SCANDINAVIAN-TURKISH FIRM MAY BUY COSCOM AND
SISTER COMPANIES IN CENTRAL ASIA

REF: A. TASHKENT 516 (NOTAL)


B. TASHKENT 278 (NOTAL)

C. TASHKENT 323 (NOTAL)

Classified By: AMB. JON R. PURNELL, FOR REASONS 1.4 (B, D)


1. (C) Summary: Scandinavian-Turkish joint venture Fintur
Holdings may win the Uzbek government's approval to purchase
U.S.-based MCT Corporation, the parent of telecom provider
COSCOM. COSCOM's General Manager believes that Fintur has
made the right approach to the Uzbeks, including lobbying
President Karimov's daughter, Gulnora, who had earlier
supported a Russian firm in the takeover battle. Fintur
already has operations in Azerbaijan, Georgia, Moldova, and
Kazakhstan. The purchase of MCT would extend its reach into
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Afghanistan. A takeover by
Fintur would also likely end the persistent legal problems
that COSCOM has had since MCT began trying to sell the firm
last year. End summary.


2. (SBU) The Amcit General Manager of majority U.S.-owned
cellular provider COSCOM told Poloff that COSCOM's parent
company, Virginia-based MCT Corporation, has a potential
buyer that may be acceptable to the Uzbek government. He
said that Istanbul-based Fintur Holdings is interested in
purchasing 100 percent of MCT. MCT, in turn, owns over 85
percent of COSCOM and significant shares of Tajikistan-based
telecom firms Somoncom and Indigo, and Afghanistan-based
Roshan. Fintur is a joint venture of the Swedish-Finnish
firm TeliaSonera and leading Turkish mobile communications
provider Turkcell. Fintur already controls telecom firms in
Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Moldova. The purchase
of MCT would thus complement Fintur's existing market.


3. (C) Since beginning talks with MCT, Fintur's Chief
Executive Officer has visited Tashkent several times for
talks with Uzbek officials. The company has lobbied with the
office of President Karimov, the National Security Service,
and the National Security Council. COSCOM's General Manager
said that various government contacts have given him positive

signals indicating that the government may endorse Fintur's
purchase of MCT.


4. (C) According to COSCOM's General Manager, one notable
interlocutor in Fintur's negotiations is President Karimov's
elder daughter, Gulnora. Gulnora is reputed to have had a
hand in the legal machinations that resulted in COSCOM's
suspension in February (refs A, B). The Uzbek telecom
agency's heavy-handed legal and regulatory sanctions against
COSCOM in late 2006 and early this year were accompanied by
repeated signals to the company from Russian telecom holding
company Sistema, suggesting that COSCOM's problems would go
away if MCT agreed to sell the firm to Sistema's subsidiary
MTS, Russia's leading telecom firm. COSCOM officials told
the Embassy that they believed Gulnora Karimova had close
ties to Sistema and stood to gain personally from COSCOM's
sale to MTS. Gulnora, herself, even told Poloff during an
impromptu meeting that she wanted COSCOM to be sold to MTS,
though she said a Scandinavian buyer would also be acceptable
(ref C). Now that Fintur is negotiating to buy COSCOM and
its sister companies, it has been reportedly negotiating with
Gulnora indirectly, through the good offices of Bekzod
Akhmedov, a director of MTS's Uzbekistan affiliate. Since
negotiations with Fintur began, according to COSCOM's General
Manager, the calls from Sistema have stopped.


5. (C) COSCOM's General Manager suggested that pressure to
sell to the Russian firm had ceased, in part, because of a
souring in Uzbek-Russian relations since late 2006. In
addition, he said that COSCOM has been consistently repeating
the message to Uzbek officials that complete Russian control
over Uzbekistan's cellular communications industry would be
bad for Uzbekistan's telecom market and its national
security. (Note: Russian firms already control the other two
leading Uzbek cellular providers. End note.) The General
Manager said that this message seems now to be reaching the
right people.

TASHKENT 00000769 002 OF 002




6. (C) Furthermore, the General Manager said that COSCOM's
public battle against the national telecom agency's various
legal and regulatory sanctions had apparently backfired
against telecom agency chairman Abdulla Aripov. The General
Manager said that, according to his sources in government,
Aripov may soon be removed from his position as a result of
Sistema's failure to gain control of COSCOM. The General
Manager did not exclude the possibility that Gulnora Karimova
and those close to her may have arranged a way to profit from
Fintur's takeover of COSCOM, just as they might have profited
from a takeover by Sistema.


7. (C) Comment: COSCOM's legal and regulatory troubles with
the Uzbek government began in earnest only in mid-2006 when
MCT began negotiating to sell its businesses to Qatar's
national telecom firm, Q-Tel, which the Uzbek government
deemed unacceptable (refs A, B). The Uzbeks' preferred
buyer, Sistema, offered terms which MCT's directors could not
accept. Fintur Holdings may be a compromise candidate
acceptable to both MCT and the Uzbeks. If the government
agrees to Fintur's purchase of MCT, it is likely that
COSCOM's legal problems will promptly disappear.

PURNELL