Kyrgyzstan: Protesting About Everything
Seizing government buildings has becoming a regular activity for protestors who feel they have no other way of being heard.
Seizing government buildings has becoming a regular activity for protestors who feel they have no other way of being heard.
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.
A family planning campaign that looks benign is marred by allegations of forced sterilisation on a wide scale.
Everyone’s reading it, but only because studying the president’s book is compulsory for pre-school kids and surgeons alike.
A government commission set up to investigate the former administration’s finances faces political pressure and tortuous accounting.
Authorities make changes to how groups are funded, putting pressure on those backed with money from overseas.
State censorship and under funding has crippled Uzbek filmmaking.
United States embassy regrets use of force against protesters calling for return of farm seized by local authorities.
Some believe Russian troops’ departure from Afghan frontier will boost drug trade, but others say trafficking was rampant anyway.
The looting and violence that followed the March revolution has failed to dent Turkish investor confidence.