Tajikistan: Free Press in Financial Crisis
Upcoming curbs on advertising could finish off many independent papers.
Upcoming curbs on advertising could finish off many independent papers.
Some Russians say they no longer feel they belong, as parliament debates a law to give Kyrgyz language a greater role.
Not all the Soviet soldiers came home when the war in Afghanistan ended in 1989.
New legislation looks good on paper but opponents say will do nothing to make elections fairer.
Will Kazakstan choose to curry favour with Putin's Russia or continue to pander to her generous American sponsors?
Can Felix Kulov, a former vice-president and ex-mayor of Bishkek, muster a serious presidential challenge to the incumbent Askar Akaev? Political observers in Bishkek certainly think so.
Analysts speculate that President Nazarbaev is attempting to rein in an old political rival by removing his powerbase in southern Kazakstan
Military experts are sceptical about government plans to overhaul the armed forces
Kyrgyz are bitter over what they see as crippling IMF credit conditions
Impoverished Uzbek women are finding it so hard to get by that they are abandoning their children.