Page 39 - bne IntelliNews Georgia country report October 2017
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transit   costs.   Though   Indian   investments   aimed   at   turning   Chabahar   into   a modern   and   sizeable   port   set   amid   a   free   trade   zone     have   progressed   slowly , the   Iranians   eventually   hope   to   see   great   volumes   of   freight   making   their   way from   the   hub   to   Afghanistan   and   Azerbaijan,   among   other   countries.   The Indians   are   intent   on   avoiding   traditional   adversary   Pakistan   by   using   the route.
Abbas   Nazari,   director   general   for   international   affairs   at   RAI,   announced   the cut   in   tariffs.
The   International   North-South   Corridor   (INSTC)   is   an   envisaged 7,200-kilometre   multimodal   transport   network   which,   using   major   junctions including   Chabahar,   Tehran,   Bandar   Abbas,   Bandar   Anzali,   Baku,   Astrakhan and   Moscow   is   to   incorporate   sea,   rail   and   truck   goods   transit   routes   to connect      Iran,   Central   Asia,   the   South   Caucasus   and   the   Indian   sub-continent.
9.1.3    Agriculture   sector   news
Favouritism   has   decimated   the   number   of   Georgian   companies   that   rear and   sell   sheep,   an   investigation   by   Studio   Monitor,   an   associate   of   the Organised   Crime   and   Corruption   Reporting   Project   (OCCRP),   revealed   on August   16.
Georgia's   sheep   industry   took   off   a   decade   ago,   when   a   Georgian   farmer brought   Turkish   and   Lebanese   investors   to   Georgia.   They   became   interested in   grass-fed   sheep   that   are   customarily   sacrificed   in   Muslim   communities   for the   Eid   al-Adha   holiday.
By   2008,   the   price   paid   for   one   head   of   sheep   went   from   almost   nothing   to $60,   one   of   the   farmers   interviewed   for   the   investigation   reported;   the   price continued   to   increase,   moving   up   by   50%   in   2009.   Meanwhile,   the   number   of companies   active   in   this   niche   increased   from   two   in   2008   to   21   in   2009,   while exports   shot   up   from   25,271   sheep   worth   $1.1mn   in   2008   to   266,540   sheep worth   $17.1mn   in   2009.
But   state   controls   introduced   in   2011   decimated   the   industry   to   the   point   where only   five   exporters   remained   in   2013,   the   investigation   argued.   Out   of   the   four companies   that   are   still   active   in   sheep   rearing   at   the   moment,   two   of   them reportedly   have   connections   with   a   former   minister   of   agriculture,   Otar   Donelia, who   is   currently   the   head   of   parliament's   agriculture   committee
.
Thus,   Victoria   LLC   and   Alkernazi   LLC,   the   two   companies,   were   registered   at the   same   address   in   Tbilisi   nine   days   apart   in   2013.   Victoria   was   founded   by Gia   Adamia,   whose   nephew   is   a   close   friend   and   former   classmate   of Donelia's,   the   investigation   claimed.
The   farmers   who   have   quit   the   industry   allege   that   this   link   has   resulted   in government   favouritism   for   the   companies   and   roadblocks   for   everyone   else, driving   them   out   of   business.
Meanwhile,   one   of   the   first   foreign   investors   in   the   business,   a   Turkish businessman   going   by   the   name   of   Yildiz,   said   that   he   lost   his   suppliers   and customers   after   the   government   introduced   stricter   controls   and   that,   in   2014, he   was   subjected   to   intimidation   by   the   finance   ministry,   who   called   him   in   but
39       GEORGIA  Country  Report   October  2017                                                                                                                                                                                www.intellinews.com


































































































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