Rahmonov Warns of Afghan Terror Threat
The Taleban may have been toppled, but Tajikistan believes Afghanistan is still a source of real danger.
The Taleban may have been toppled, but Tajikistan believes Afghanistan is still a source of real danger.
Voices from Andijan speak about the continuing repression designed to stifle any debate on the May 2005 killings.
The first-ever ethnic Turkmen education minister takes steps to get his people to go to school.
People living on either side of the Turkmen-Uzbek border are reaping the benefits as increasing amounts of petrol are shifted illegally from Turkmenistan to Uzbekistan. The volume has increased threefold in the last two years.
Turn a corner in Istanbul’s famous Grand Bazaar, and you might imagine you are suddenly somewhere in Central Asia. This small part of the sprawling covered market is known as “Turkmen Street”. Here you will hear the Turkmen language spoken as often as Tur
While conspiracy theories are still the order of the day for public consumption, a Moscow-based commentator argues that Uzbek officials have realised that popular dissent has domestic roots.
Anyone who thought the government would ease off after Andijan is dead wrong, argues an Uzbekistan-based analyst.
Two momentous events - the Kyrgyz revolution and the Andijan shootings - have coloured the way Central Asian governments view media freedom.
Uzbek threats to turn off the gas supply could be an economic disaster.
Government stops any sign of Islamic fervour outside the officially-sanctioned channels through which it manages religion.