Central Asian Leaders Suffocating Democracy
Leaders in Central Asia are turning their countries into authoritarian states.
Leaders in Central Asia are turning their countries into authoritarian states.
Dazzled by the prospect of soaring profits on the world cotton market, the Uzbek government seems unlikely to share its good fortune with the impoverished workforce.
Exiled Uzbek terrorists appear determined to continue their struggle against the Taskent authorities
Under pressure from other Central Asian states, the Tajik authorities have expelled one of the region's most dangerous terrorist groups.
Foreign companies frustrated with the slow pace of reform in Uzbekistan are pulling out of the country
A diplomatic storm has blown up in Central Asia after the Kazak authorities discovered the Tajik embassy chauffeur was using his boss's car to ferry drugs across the republic
Chechen refugees sheltering in Kyrgyzstan are finding it hard to make ends meet
Uzbeks have little idea of what's happening in their own country let alone abroad
Kyrgyz deputies challenge the government over a secret memorandum proposing an exchange of territory with Uzbekistan
Uzbek kindergartens and primary schools shelve nursery rhymes in favour of President Karimov's writings