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Tajikistan 2024 EITI Validation: call for views on stakeholder engagement

Call for views on progress in EITI implementation in Tajikistan

Closing date

Description

Tajikistan signed up to the EITI in 2013.  

In January 2020, Tajikistan’s Validation against the 2016 Standard found that it had achieved “meaningful progress” in implementing the EITI Standard. In November 2023, the EITI Board agreed the outcome of Tajikistan's targeted assessment with corrective actions on Requirements 1.1-1.5. Tajikistan’s next Validation against the 2019 EITI Standard is scheduled to commence on 1 July 2024 which will cover all EITI Requirements including those that were assessed during its targeted assessment in November 2023. 

In accordance with the Validation procedure, the EITI International Secretariat is seeking stakeholder views on the Tajikistan’s progress in implementing the EITI Standard between January 2020 and July 2024.  

Application instructions

Stakeholders are requested to send views to Olesia Tolochko ([email protected]) by 30 June 2024.   

About EITI

We believe that a country’s natural resources belong to its citizens. Our mission is to promote understanding of natural resource management, strengthen public and corporate governance and accountability, and provide the data to inform policymaking and multi-stakeholder dialogue in the extractive sector. By becoming a member of the Extractives Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), countries commit to disclose information along the extractive industry value chain – from how extraction rights are awarded, to how revenues make their way through government and how they benefit the public. Through participation in the EITI, more than 50 countries have agreed to a common set of rules governing what has to be disclosed and when – the EITI Standard. In each country that has joined the EITI, a multi-stakeholder group, composed of government, companies and civil society, supports implementation of the EITI Standard.

Objective

The EITI Standard requires that the government, extractive companies and civil society are fully, actively and effectively engaged in EITI implementation. The Secretariat is in particular seeking views on the following questions: 

  1. Are the government, extractive companies and civil society fully, actively and effectively engaged in EITI implementation? 

  1. Are there any obstacles or barriers to the participation of any of these constituencies or their sub-groups in EITI implementation? How have these barriers affected the overall quality and impact of EITI implementation in Tajikistan, including in the disclosure of data and data use in the extractive sector? 

  1. What are your views on the overall quality and impact of EITI implementation in Tajikistan? What are the areas for improvement?   

Civil society engagement in the EITI will be assessed in accordance with EITI Protocol: Participation of civil society4. Stakeholders are requested to provide input on Tajikistan’s adherence with the protocol.  

Any concerns related to potential breaches of the protocol should be accompanied with a description of the related incident, including its timing, actors involved and the link to the EITI process. If available, supporting documentation should be provided. Stakeholders may also indicate which provision of the civil society protocol they consider the breach(es) to relate to. Responses will be anonymised and be kept confidential. 

The Secretariat is seeking views on the following questions related to civil society engagement: 

  1. Are civil society organisations able to engage in public debate related to the EITI process and express opinions about the EITI process without restraint, coercion or reprisal? 

  1. Are civil society representatives able to operate freely in relation to the EITI process? 

  1. Are civil society representatives able to communicate and cooperate with each other regarding the EITI process? 

  1. Are civil society representatives able to be fully, actively and effectively engaged in the design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of the EITI process? 

  1. Are civil society representatives able to speak freely on transparency and natural resource governance issues, and ensure that the EITI contributes to public debate?  

For purposes of the protocol, ‘civil society representatives’ refer to civil society representatives who are substantively involved in the EITI process, including but not limited to members of the multi-stakeholder group. The ‘EITI process’ refers to activities related to preparing for EITI sign-up; MSG meetings; CSO constituency side-meetings on EITI, including interactions with MSG representatives; producing EITI Reports; producing materials or conducting analysis on EITI Reports; expressing views related to EITI activities; and expressing views related to natural resource governance.