Full Coverage: Kyrgyzstan
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» The OneWorld Guide to Kyrgyzstan
The aim of this Guide is to provide a brief introduction to human rights and sustainable development issues in Kyrgyzstan
22.02.2008
The European Union is eager to strengthen its economic partnerships with Central Asian nations, notably Turkmenistan, despite the extremely poor human rights records of countries in this region, writes David Cronin.
more...From: Inter Press Service (IPS) Related topics/regions: [Europe] [Kazakhstan] [Tajikistan] [Turkmenistan] [Uzbekistan] Image: Uzbek refugees after the 2005 Andijan massacre, believed to be the worst mass killing since the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre in China. © SandS / Eurasianet (Open Society Institute)
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18.01.2008
Rebiya, a woman from the Uighur community in western China, was forced to flee her home due to her father's involvement in controversial political matters and now struggles to attain citizenship in Kyrgyzstan, her land of refuge.
more...From: Refugees International Related topics/regions: [China] |
03.01.2008
In Kyrgyzstan and many other Central Asian countries, social norms bar women drug users from self-help programs, such as needle exchange, and facilitate their exploitation by other members of society.
more...From: Eurasianet (Open Society Institute) Related topics/regions: [Narcotics] [Gender] Image: Liza, a former sex worker, was introduced to heroin as a pain killer. © Eurasianet (Open Society Institute)
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03.10.2007
As the outcome of the Ukrainian election threatens to peel away the orange revolution, Misha Kechaqmadze traces the success of post-Soviet regimes to stamp out the march to democracy.
more...Related topics/regions: [Belarus] [Georgia] [Russian Federation] [Ukraine] [Democracy] Image: Vladimir Putin © Radio Netherlands
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08.08.2007
Kyrgyzstan's new president was elected with the promise to respect the law and civil freedoms, but now women activists are mobilizing amid reports that the government is accountable for a deterioration of the human rights situation.
more...From: Eurasianet (Open Society Institute) Image: A Kyrgyz activist. © Eurasianet (Open Society Institute)
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06.06.2007
Martin Fluch teaches German at KyrgyzstanÂ’s secondary school #18. Short on books but long on energy, he has embarked on a 680-kilometer run to raise money and awareness for his country's under-supplied and under-staffed educational system.
more...From: Eurasianet (Open Society Institute) Image: Martin Fluch in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan. © Eurasianet (Open Society Institute)
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13.09.2006
SAN FRANCISCO, Sep 13 (OneWorld) - The Bush Administration is objecting to a groundbreaking treaty that set up a nuclear weapon-free zone in Central Asia.
more...From: OneWorld US Related topics/regions: [Kazakhstan] [Tajikistan] [Turkmenistan] [Uzbekistan] [Geopolitics] [Nuclear arms] |
11.09.2006
Five Central Asian states committed themselves to never acquiring, manufacturing, possessing, or testing nuclear weapons by signing a treaty Thursday to create a Central Asian nuclear-weapon-free zone.
more...From: Arms Control Association Related topics/regions: [Uzbekistan] [Turkmenistan] [Tajikistan] [Kazakhstan] Image: © Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
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20.03.2006
A presidential decree set to make Friday's first anniversary of Kyrgyzstan's revolution a national holiday has members of the business and upper classes up in arms.
more...From: Eurasianet (Open Society Institute) Related topics/regions: [Democracy] [Governance] |
29.07.2005
Over 400 Uzbek refugees who fled to Kyrgyzstan after MayÂ’s Andijan massacre are to be given new homes abroad, despite Uzbek pressure that Kyrgyzstan return the refugees. The U.N.'s refugee chief in Kyrgyzstan refused to say where the refugees will go, though speculation points to the Czech Republic, Ukraine, or Canada.
more...From: Institute for War and Peace Reporting Related topics/regions: [Uzbekistan] [Refugees] [Human rights] Image: Uzbek Refugees Arrive at Manas Air Base, North of Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan © Vyacheslav Oseledko / Institute for War and Peace Reporting
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12.07.2005
Acting President Kurmanbek Bakiyev won a landslide victory in KyrgyzstanÂ’s presidential elections Sunday, calling the vote a "victory of our people's revolution." Promising to fight corruption and reduce presidential power, it was Bakiyev's announcement to reconsider a U.S. military base in Kyrgyzstan that struck a chord in Washington.
more...From: Guardian Unlimited Related topics/regions: [United States] [Politics] [Democracy] [Geopolitics] [Arms & military] |
20.06.2005
Bride kidnapping is so prevalent in Kyrgyzstan that nearly half of ethnic Kyrgyz women are married this way. Kidnapped and often raped, women are held until they consent to marry their captor. Often overlooked by authorities, some officials are calling for attention to be paid--by including the practice under future anti-trafficking legislation.
more...From: Peace X Peace Related topics/regions: [Human rights] [Gender] Image: Despite the 'Tulip Revolution,' KyrgyzstanÂ’s new government has yet to address bride kidnapping. © Peace X Peace
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26.05.2005
The weak interim regime in Kyrgyzstan has caved in to strong-armed pressure from President Karimov to return the refugees who fled from the Andijan massacre. Fears for their safety in Uzbekistan are intense.
more...From: Institute for War and Peace Reporting Related topics/regions: [Uzbekistan] [Refugees] |
16.05.2005
The violence in Andijan has generated a stream of refugees desperate to cross the border into Kyrgyzstan. But the Kyrgyz authorities are in no hurry to allow them in whilst the heavyhanded Uzbeks are prepared to open fire to prevent then leaving.
more...From: Institute for War and Peace Reporting Related topics/regions: [Uzbekistan] [Refugees] |
28.03.2005
The instant analysis by many political analysts--as well as the Bush administration--is to classify Kyrgyzstan as part of the global domino effect of democracy, but the lack of control and agreement among those who have taken power is worrisome, says the editor of an online journal specializing in Central Asia, and the country could wander down a dangerous path in coming weeks, even emerging as a new safe haven for international terrorist operations.
more...From: Eurasianet (Open Society Institute) Related topics/regions: [Politics] [Democracy] [Geopolitics] Image: Beta department stores were among many looted in Kyrgyzstan's capital, Bishkek, overnight after the fall of the Akayev government on Thursday. © Azamat Ababakirov / Eurasianet (Open Society Institute)
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24.03.2005
Protestors overwhelmed riot police guarding the government compound in Kyrgyzstan's capital, Bishkek, this morning, and freed opposition leader Felix Kulov fom prison. President Akayev's whereabouts were not known, but some reports held that he had fled to Russia and may have resigned.
more...From: Guardian Unlimited Related topics/regions: [Politics] [Democracy] [Governance] Image: Holding signs that read 'Birge' in Cyrillic--or 'Together'--Kyrgyz opposition protestors rally in Bishkek on Wednesday © Eurasianet (Open Society Institute)
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24.03.2005
Despite his ruthless reputation, President Akayev of Kyrgyzstan has settled for low key tactics in dealing with the people's revolution in the southern provinces of the country. What will happen today as protests move to the capital Bishkek?
more...From: Eurasianet (Open Society Institute) Related topics/regions: [Democracy] |
23.03.2005
A popular uprising stemming from disputes over last week's parliamentary elections in Kyrgyzstan have raised comparisons with recent political transitions in Ukraine and Georgia. The coming days could be decisive; the president has called for an investigation into election irregularities, but it may be too little too late to appease protestors who have already formed a 'People's Power Authority' in the south of the country.
more...From: Eurasianet (Open Society Institute) Related topics/regions: [Politics] [Activism] [Democracy] [Governance] Image: Kyrgyz opposition supporters waving V signs at a demonstration in Osh, southern Kyrgyzstan, on March 21, 2005 © SandS Photo / Eurasianet (Open Society Institute)
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01.10.2004
Unesco is supporting a workshop on free and open source software (FOSS) for
Moreeducation in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. The countryÂ’s education ministry and institutions as well as organisations from Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan will discuss the ethical and legal issues related to FOSS and its implementation in Central Asia. From: UNESCO - Communication, Information and Informatics Sector Related topics/regions: [Education] [ICT] |
18.05.2004
The impact of ICTs on local culture in countries of Central Asia is the focus of this multi-year research project. It has already come out with some findings on the implications of internet on society.
MoreRelated topics/regions: [Asia and the Pacific] [Kazakhstan] [Tajikistan] [Turkmenistan] [Uzbekistan] [Economy] [Communication] [Culture] [ICT] [Internet] |


