Tag Archives: society

Frustration grows in Azerbaijan

JAN. 25 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – It wasn’t until police reinforcements arrived on Jan. 24, according to media, that the authorities were able to regain control of the town of Ismayilli.

Since the previous afternoon, the town, about 200km north-west of Azerbaijan’s capital Baku, had been the scene of street fighting between police and young men frustrated by the lack of jobs and an increasingly high-handed political elite.

The fighting erupted on Jan. 23 after a car crash reportedly involving the son of a government minister. Both the trigger, alleged favouritism towards the political elite, and the resulting vicious backlash, were telling.

This was Azerbaijan’s worst violence for a decade. It came less than a year after similar, though smaller, street fighting, also triggered by the political elites’ arrogance, in another town.

The fighting in Ismayilli will no doubt draw a similar reaction from the authorities. They will pour in police to clampdown on dissenters and mount a PR campaign to discredit the protesters.

Azerbaijan’s economy is booming, luxury goods crowd Baku’s streets and millions are lavished on prestige projects such Eurovision last year. The street violence, though, suggests that there are large swathes of Azerbaijan’s under-classes who are not so happy.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 121, published on Jan. 25 2013)

 

Georgians demand Saakashvili resign

JAN. 20 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – Roughly 1,000 people protested outside Georgia’s presidential palace to demand that President Mikheil Saakashvili resign, one of the biggest political demonstrations since a parliamentary election in October. Georgians are due to vote in a presidential election in Oct. 2013.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 121, published on Jan. 25 2013)

 

Kyrgyz villages experience food shortages

JAN. 21 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – Villages in southern Kyrgyzstan are experiencing food shortages after Uzbekistan shut checkpoints running through its enclave of Sokh following rioting on Jan. 5/6, media reported. The checkpoints guard the only road linking villages in Kyrgyzstan’s impoverished Batken province to the rest of the country.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 121, published on Jan. 25 2013)

 

Baby girl comes into the world during Russia-Armenia flight

JAN. 12 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – A woman gave birth to a healthy baby girl aboard an Armavia flight midway between Siberia and Yerevan. Media reported that the mother named her newborn daughter Hasmik after the Armavia stewardess who helped deliver her. Armavia is Armenia’s national airline.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 120, published on Jan. 18 2013)

 

Kazakhstan invests in railway

DEC. 28 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan opened a faster rail link between Astana and the west of the country, media reported, highlighting the authorities’ drive to improve infrastructure. The train, running nearly 1,500km to Aktobe, will make the journey in 16 hours, knocking 11 hours off the previous time.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 119, published on Jan. 11 2013)

 

Ethnic tensions flare up in southern Kyrgyzstan

JAN. 11 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – The hard facts may be sketchy but a sense of fragility has returned to southern Kyrgyzstan after brief fighting between ethnic Uzbeks and Kyrgyz broke out last week.

Ethnic divisions have fractured society in southern Kyrgyzstan for generations. In June 2010 violence broke out in and around Osh, the main city in the south. Around 400 people died in the fighting and thousands of ethnic Uzbeks fled across the nearby border to Uzbekistan.

Since 2010, there have been sporadic reports of flare-ups, but generally the situation has been controlled. Tense but controlled. The reports from Sokh, an enclave within Kyrgyzstan that belongs to Uzbekistan, were different though. According to media reports, clashes broke out after an altercation between Kyrgyz border guards and Uzbek residents of Sokh on Jan. 5 over the construction of new electrical pylons.

Accounts then differ, but the basic premise was that there was some sporadic fighting, shots were fired and hostages were taken on both sides. Some cars and property were also destroyed.

Media organisations estimated that hundreds of people had been involved in the fracas. The exact number is still not clear. What is clear, however, is that ethnic divisions in southern Kyrgyzstan are as dangerous as ever.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 119, published on Jan. 11 2013)

 

Azerbaijan to make soccer shirt deal

JAN. 4 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan is close to agreeing a deal with top Spanish soccer side Athletico Madrid to sponsor their shirt for the next 1-1/2 seasons, media reported. Flush with cash from energy revenues, Azerbaijan has been on an international marketing drive.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 119, published on Jan. 11 2013)

 

Kyrgyz clerics ban New Year

DEC. 27 2012 (The Conway Bulletin) – In what is perhaps a sign of hardening Islamic sentiment, senior Muslim clerics in Kyrgyzstan have called for New Year celebrations to be scrapped as they are “un-Islamic”, media reported. Most people in Kyrgyzstan are Muslim, although religion does not dominate public life.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 118, published on Dec. 28 2012)

 

Uzbekistan bans Santa

DEC. 10 2012 (The Conway Bulletin) – The authorities in Uzbekistan have banned Uncle Frost, the Russian version of Santa Claus, from national TV, Russian news agency RIA-Novosti reported. RIA-Novosti said a group of hard-line Uzbek nationalists had forced through the ban on Uncle Frost and other Russian folklore characters.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 117, published on Dec. 14 2012)

 

Russia monitors Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan for revolutions

DEC. 10 2012 (The Conway Bulletin) – Perhaps it was just scare-mongering, but Nikolai Patrushev, the head of Russia’s National Security Council and a close adviser to president Vladimir Putin, said that his staff were monitoring Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan for signs of any re-emergence of the so-called colour revolutions, Russian media reported.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 117, published on Dec. 14 2012)