Uzbekistan: State-Run Pilgrimage Prompts Complaints
Secret police surveillance and extortion by officials mars the hajj experience.
Secret police surveillance and extortion by officials mars the hajj experience.
At the Batken market in southern Kyrgyzstan, the old trade of sharpening tools is in particular demand this winter.
Officials complain of biased reporting, while opponents fear end to media freedom.
While the focus in Kyrgyzstan is often on ambitious hydroelectric projects like the Kambarata dam, water-powered turbines of more modest proportions are quietly whirring away in the background.
As it becomes clear that Russia will no longer host as many migrant workers as before because of the economic downturn, reporter Almaz Turdubaev investigated how this would impact the job market inside Kyrgyzstan.
Instead of exporting sugar, Kyrgyzstan now imports it while disillusioned beet farmers switch to other crops.
In this report, Malika Aidarova looked at how a village survives without a supply of clean drinking water.
In our second feature on Kyrgyzstan, Oxana Polyakova looks at the problems that can affect newborn babies because of lack of awareness about ante-natal health issues.
Rural schools in Kyrgyzstan continue to be short of teaching staff as the profession is so poorly paid.
In the first programme for Kyrgyzstan from the new IWPR Central Asian Radio series, Eleonora Beyshenbek-Kyzy asks whether graduates from religious colleges should be allowed to teach in Kyrgyzstan’s state schools.