Kyrgyzstan: Trial of Strength
Opposition leaders hold out for high-level talks after thousands of protesters foil police attempt to wrest control of major southern cities.
Opposition leaders hold out for high-level talks after thousands of protesters foil police attempt to wrest control of major southern cities.
Shops plundered and some set on fire, with some suggesting the looting is partly a deliberate ploy to discredit Kyrgyzstan’s new rulers.
Legacy of conflict leaves Tajiks cautious about unrest of any kind, even if some see the outcome in Kyrgyzstan as positive.
At local level, political change has brought a free-for-all where official jobs seem to go to anyone who can grab them.
Prosecutors insist Moscow was wrong to release Democratic leader Mahmadruzi Iskandarov.
Crumbling roads and careless driving contributing to surge in fatal accidents.
Judges and prosecutors are at odds as a struggle for judicial powers is played out.
Students buy their way through university without attending lectures, just to get a diploma.
Questions are asked about how a high-profile figure turned up in detention in Tajikistan when he was last seen as a free man in Russia.
Poverty and bureaucracy frustrate efforts to find homes for orphans and abandoned children.