Tajik Metal Thieves Cause Havoc
Residents suffer traffic accidents and power cuts as criminals strip transport and power infrastructure.
Residents suffer traffic accidents and power cuts as criminals strip transport and power infrastructure.
The revelation that a well-ensconced government could fall so fast is cause for alarm or delight, depending which side you are on in the Central Asian republics.
Some believe Russian troops’ departure from Afghan frontier will boost drug trade, but others say trafficking was rampant anyway.
Poverty and bureaucracy frustrate efforts to find homes for orphans and abandoned children.
So many traders lost goods to looting and arson in March that some are considering pulling out of the Kyrgyz market.
Tashkent’s neighbours had little choice but to support its recent violent suppression of dissent in the east of the country.
A once close relationship is souring rapidly as the Uzbek leadership rejects the United States’ right to ask what happened in Andijan.
A former minister sees huge challenges awaiting the president whom voters will pick on July 10.
Most observers believe the election was largely fair, although the losing candidates from the “new opposition” dispute Kurmanbek Bakiev's overwhelming victory.
Regional leaders join China and Russia in stressing the need for US bases to close, and for external forces to stop meddling.