Tag Archives: society

More anti-government protests in Azerbaijan

APRIL 2 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Opposition groups in Azerbaijan said police arrested 15 activists the day before a planned anti-government rally. Concerned that popular uprisings in the Middle East may spread, the authorities in Azerbaijan have cracked down on protests. Police detained dozens of demonstrators at an unsanctioned rally on April 2.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 34, published on April 4 2011)

Tajik President says to hoard food

MARCH 25 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – In a thinly veiled warning that food prices in Tajikistan will continue to rise and that supplies are running low, local media quoted President Emomali Rakhmon telling people in a northern province to hoard food over the next two years. Food prices have soared in Central Asia, worrying governments which fear unrest. Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan have been worst hit.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 33, published on March 28 2011)

Anti-government protests escalate in Armenia

MARCH 17 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – In a sign of escalating tension in Armenia, around 10,000 anti-government protesters defied riot police to temporarily occupy the centre of Yerevan’s main square. Police had barracked off Freedom Square but withdrew when the crowd approached. Protesters have called for snap elections.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 32, published on March 21 2011)

Armenia’s anti-government protests continue

MARCH 21 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Anti-government protesters in Armenia may draw inspiration from revolutions in North Africa and the Middle East but their demonstrations are very different in character.

This year protests in Armenia have grown steadily and on March 17 roughly 10,000 people occupied Freedom Square, Yerevan’s main square. Protesters have promised a revolution unless President Serzh Sargsyan calls an election. They accuse him of nepotism and corruption, allegations he denies.

But unlike the Tunisia and Egypt uprisings these protests are neither leaderless nor spontaneous.

Opposition groups in Armenia and their leaders are well established. Levon Ter-Petrosyan is a former president and heads the Armenian National Congress. His fiery speeches have whipped up anti-government sentiment.

He is not the only opposition leader. The US-born Raffi Hovannisyan is a member of parliament and leader of the more moderate Heritage Party.

Hovannisian started a hunger strike in Freedom Square on March 15. Two days later the protesters occupied the square but Ter-Petrosyan and Hovannisyan avoided speaking to one another, a visible sign of their disagreements. These divisions weaken the opposition.

The protesters and their demands also appear rooted to 2008 when Mr Sargsyan won a disputed election victory and 8 demonstrators died in a clash with the security forces.

Armenia’s next presidential election is set for 2013 and Mr Sargsyan has already said he will stand.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 32, published on March 21 2011)

Azerbaijan’s police snuff out protests

MARCH 11/12 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Police in Azerbaijan arrested about 150 people in Baku during demonstrations that some protesters had hoped would trigger uprisings similar to those in the Middle East. The protesters organised the demonstrations via Facebook but a heavy police presence snuffed out any momentum.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 31, published on March 14 2011)

Police raid Turkish businesses in Uzbekistan

MARCH 10 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Masked police raided several Turkish businesses in Tashkent including one of the city’s biggest supermarket Turkuaz, media reported. The authorities said the businesses were fronts for Islamic extremism, accusations the businesses deny. The raids follow similar action against Turkish business in December and may be part of turf war.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 31, published on March 14 2011)

Uzbekistan frets about Soviet-era subversive art

MARCH 14 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Nukus, an impoverished town on the western edge of the Karakum desert in Uzbekistan, is an unlikely place for one of the world’s finest collections of Russian avant-garde art. But this was where Igor Savitsky stashed banned paintings by artists the Soviet Union had sent to the gulags.

Savitsky lived in Nukus and used the town’s obscurity to hide the art in the 1950s and 1960s. By the time embarrassed local Communist officials discovered the 38,000 piece collection later it was too late. Savitsky had built up what an art critic described as “a treasure trove of art historical surprises”.

Now a documentary entitled “The Desert of Forbidden Art” about the collection has premiered in New York (March 11). The trailer can be viewed at www.desertofforbiddenart.com.

In May 2003, the editor of this newsletter visited the Savitsky Museum in Nukus. In an interview, Marinika Babanazarova, its director, described the subversive nature of the collection.

“He used his personal contacts, charm and eloquence to collect the paintings,” she said according to notes. “It became a sort of underground network as the artists or their relatives would offer him paintings because they knew he would preserve them. He was trusted.”

Perhaps this is why the Uzbek authorities appear less than impressed by the international attention the collection has generated recently. Media reported that they barred Ms Babanazarova from flying to Washington for a screening. Uzbek officials have not commented.

For Uzbekistan, it appears, Savitsky’s painting collection has retained its subversive edge.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 31, published on March 14 2011)

London taxi cabs coming to Azerbaijan

MARCH 3 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – The black London taxi cab will become a familiar sight in Azerbaijan’s capital Baku this year after the privately-owned Baku Taxi Company ordered 1,000 vehicles from Manganese Bronze, the British firm that makes the vehicle, according to the company. Manganese Bronze said this was the largest ever single order for the taxi cabs and was worth about $27m.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 30, published on March 7 2011)

Thousands join anti-government march in Armenia

MARCH 1 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Thousands of anti-government demonstrators marched through Yerevan to mark the deaths in 2008 of eight people during clashes between security forces and protesters. Opposition leaders said 50,000 people attended the rally while the authorities said 10,000 had marched, Armenian media reported.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 30, published on March 7 2011)

Ethnic violence threatens to flare in Kyrgyzstan

MARCH 1 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Hundreds of Kyrgyz torched the house of an Uzbek they accused of organising the murder of a local official, media reported. The attack in a town near Osh in the south of Kyrgyzstan roused fears of a repeat of ethnic violence that killed 400 people in June 2010.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 30, published on March 7 2011)