A chain of hotels considering religious rituals, the ziyarat-hotels must be established in Uzbekistan noted Aziz Abduhakimov, the Chairman of the Committee for Tourism Development in his interview for VisitUzbekistan journal.
“In the nearest future ziyarat tourism would be become the main direction in the development of internal and external tourism in our country. However there are still several things we must do for the conveniences of visitors in our airports, railway and bus stations which are washing and pray rooms. We are planning to establish a chain of hotels that foresees religious rituals of visitors. Besides, “Halal” and “Kosher” standards are expected to be introduced”.
According to his words, with the introduction of non-visa agreement between Turkey and Uzbekistan the number of visitors-ziyarat tourists to Uzbekistan from Turkey is expected to be raised to 3-4 times that is around 100-150 thousand visitors annually.
Earlier it was informed that during the official visit of R.T. Erdogan, Turkish President the memorandum was signed between the Committee for Tourism Development of Uzbekistan and its Turkish partners.
Press Service,
Muslim Board of Uzbekistan
The Central Bank expects to establish at least 10 full-fledged Islamic banks by 2030. Also, “Islamic windows” — branches providing Sharia financial services — will appear in three state banks. The Central Bank considers Islamic finance as a tool for withdrawing funds from the shadow economy.
Why is this important
According to a UNDP survey, 68% of Uzbekistan’s population does not want to use traditional banking services due to religious beliefs. Launching Islamic banks will expand financial inclusion, increase bank assets, and reduce the share of the shadow economy. This is the largest transformation of the financial system since independence.
What happened
Draft law
The document introduces the concepts of “Islamic banking activity”, “Islamic financial operations”, “investment deposit”, and others. A separate license is provided for Islamic banks. Classical banks will be able to organize “Islamic windows” if they have a license.
Islamic products: Murabaha (deferred trade financing), Mudaraba (investment partnership), Mushoraka (joint venture), Wakala (agency financing), Salam (prepayment of goods).
Features of regulation
Assessment of demand
The Deputy Chairman of the Central Bank clarified: when we talk about 50-60% of the population preferring Islamic finance, we are talking about those who prefer it. Those who categorically refuse traditional services are significantly fewer.
Context
Islamic finance prohibits the collection of interest (riba) and speculative operations. Instead, partnership models are used, where the bank and the client share profits and risks. Uzbekistan is a predominantly Muslim country (90%+ of the population), where a significant portion of citizens avoid traditional banks for religious reasons.
Creating 10 Islamic banks by 2030 is an ambitious task, given that there are currently around 35 commercial banks operating in the country. “Islamic windows” in state banks will allow large players (Uzpromstroybank, Halyk Bank, Asaka Bank) to enter a new segment of clients without creating separate structures.
The Central Bank sees Islamic finance as a tool for combating the shadow economy: religiously motivated citizens who do not trust traditional banks will be able to legalize funds through Sharia products.
A separate tax regime may include benefits for Murabaha-type operations, where the bank formally purchases goods and resells them to the client with a markup — to avoid double taxation.