Andijan Survivors Speak of Ambush
Victims of the Andijan killings recount how Uzbek security forces tried to ambush fleeing survivors.
Victims of the Andijan killings recount how Uzbek security forces tried to ambush fleeing survivors.
Interim authorities in Bishkek say there’s a possibility that hundreds of Uzbeks who fled into Kyrgyzstan in the last few days may be sent home.
The two leading election candidates agree not to compete but to work together as future president and prime minister.
The government’s failure to ease up on independent media in the wake of recent elections suggest it may be a more permanent trend.
A sense of insecurity has gripped many citizens in the wake of Kyrgyzstan’s March revolution.
Tashkent holds Islamic militants responsible for the Andijan demonstration, but most of those involved simply appear to have been citizens desperate for a better life.
The government is refusing to register youth groups it fears are plotting a revolution.
Many of the activists who helped bring current the Kyrgyz leadership to power are outraged at its decision to send refugees to an uncertain fate.
Changes to laws on religion and the media will give government prosecutors new powers of censorship.
Kyrgyzstan’s ex-president and its new government are swapping allegations of wrongdoing through international lawyers.