Education Cut Bad for Women
A decision to end distance-learning courses in Tajikistan will have serious consequences for women who have no other practical way of continuing in education, experts say.
A decision to end distance-learning courses in Tajikistan will have serious consequences for women who have no other practical way of continuing in education, experts say.
The electricity supply has deteriorated to a point where people in remote parts of Tajikistan are only getting an hour a day.
Social and economic problems leave many children in Tajikistan fending for themselves on the streets.
Builders cut corners to restore architectural treasures.
In Soviet times, Tajikistan used to be famous for its ballet troupe, but now those dancers who have not emigrated are fighting an uphill battle to maintain standards.
In a report on the northern region of Soghd, Kamari Ahrorzoda asked just how bad a year 2008 was for residents of an area that used to be Tajikistan’s economic powerhouse.
The Supreme Court of Tajikistan has outlawed the Salafi movement, a fundamentalist strand of Islam that is growing in popularity among young people in urban areas of Tajikistan.
High incidence of “escapes” from children’s homes indicates serious problems.
Tajikistan is desperately short of teachers, in many cases because newly-qualified staff do not want to take jobs in the countryside.
Familiar patterns of harassment and obstruction, with new focus on curtailing internet.