Tag Archives: society

HRW pressures Uzbekistan on Andijan inquiry

MAY 13 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) – The New York-based Human Rights Watch called on the US and the EU to press Uzbekistan to allow an independent inquiry into the killings at Andijan, in the east of the country nine years ago. Officially 187 people died when soldiers fired on a crowd, although government critics have said the real figure is far more.

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(News report from Issue No. 184, published on May 14 2014)

Amnesty highlights torture in Uzbekistan

MAY 13 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) – For its global campaign against torture, Amnesty International has focused its attention on Uzbekistan.

Amnesty said that torture in Uzbekistan is widespread and that it often passes without being punished. It said that the Uzbek security services often beat detainees and sometimes rape them in order to get a confession.

One of Amnesty’s five global case studies was of an Uzbek women who fled the country in 2005 after police opened fire on a crowd of protesters. She returned five years later, was detained at the airport and then sent to jail for trying to organise a revolution. Eye witnesses, according to Amnesty, said the woman’s face was bruised and that she looked unusually thin at her trial.

None of this is new, but it is still worth highlighting. It’s also worth highlighting that most countries in Central Asia have a poor record on torture and human rights.

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(News report from Issue No. 184, published on May 14 2014)

Name vanishes from Azerbaijani football shirt

MAY 9 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) – The day after Atletico Madrid beat London-based Chelsea in the UEFA Champions League semi-final Iranian newspaper Jam-e Jam published photos of the victorious team but with Azerbaijan, the team sponsor, edited out of the front of their shirts, BBC reported.

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(News report from Issue No. 184, published on May 14 2014)

South Kyrgyzstan survives without gas

MAY 8 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyzstan said that Uzbekistan was still restricting gas supplies to its southern city of Osh. Osh has reportedly been without gas for a few weeks, generating some social tension. Uzbekistan’s Soviet era gas system supplies southern Kyrgyzstan with gas. Relations between Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan are strained.

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(News report from Issue No. 184, published on May 14 2014)

Georgian wire-tapping claims

MAY 13 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) – Rustavi 2, Georgia’s main television station, is under investigation for alleged wire-tapping, media reported. Georgian society and politics is currently riven through with accusations of deceit and wire-tapping. The former government of Mikheil Saakashvili has accused the new government of a witch hunt.

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(News report from Issue No. 184, published on May 14 2014)

Kazakhstan rams home unity message

OSKEMEN/Kazakhstan, May 14 (The Conway Bulletin) — Yerkimbek Ayazbayev pointed at the billboard sitting on the top of the local government headquarters in this town in north-east Kazakhstan.

He read the slogan, written in both Kazakh and Russian, aloud: “Unity is the guarantee of success.” It had the ring of a Soviet-style mantra.

Under orders from central government, officials in northern Kazakhstan are urgently pressing this message home. They’re nervous because events in Ukraine have shaken up the former Soviet region’s fragile ethnic divisions.

Ayazbayev is a man with a mission. He runs the local branch of the Assembly of People of Kazakhstan, a government-backed body representing the interests of Kazakhstan’s myriad ethnic groups, which numbered over 120 at last count.

It’s the job of Ayazbayev, an ethnic Kazakh, to drive home the mantra of ethnic harmony. He does this, seemingly, with the zeal of a true believer.

“We’re a multi-ethnic state and let’s say so proudly,” he said.

Russians equal around 25% of the population nationwide, but here in Oskemen over two-thirds of people are ethnic Russian. Oskemen is the Kazakh name for the Soviet city of Ust Kamenogorsk.

Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev, 73, is hugely popular with Russians in Oskemen, but they are divided about the community’s prospects in the looming post-Nazarbayev future.

While the older generation is happy to stay in Kazakhstan, many of the younger ethnic Russians see their future over the border.

Student Anna Prokayeva plans to go and study in Russia. “I don’t want to come back to Kazakhstan,” she said. “This is my homeland, and no-one’s discriminating against me but I think I’ll feel more comfortable there.”

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(News report from Issue No. 184, published on May 14 2014)

Azerbaijan to feature in football final

APRIL 30 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan will play a prominent role in the UEFA Champions League Final, which has an estimated television audience of 175m. Atletico Madrid beat London side Chelsea in the semi-final to set up a final in Lisbon on May 24 against rivals Real Madrid. Azerbaijan sponsors Atletico Madrid’s shirt.

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(News report from Issue No. 183, published on May 7 2014)

Kazakhstan’s People’s IPO set for June

MAY 3 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s economy minister, Yerbolat Dossayev, said the so-called People’s IPO would finally go ahead next month. The People’s IPO has been continually delayed. Mr Dossayev said the first round of sell offs of state assets would include subsidies of energy company Kazmunaigas and railway company Temir Zholy.

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(News report from Issue No. 183, published on May 7 2014)

Walnut forests produce valuable commodity in Kyrgyzstan

ARSLANBOB/Kyrgyzstan, MAY 7 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) — In rural Kyrgyzstan, walnuts are important. Ilhon sighed as he leaned in and explained the significance of the walnut to the local economy of this small village in the Jalalabad region, south Kyrgyzstan.Surrounding the village is a 60,000 hectare walnut forest, providing a crop of about 1,000 tonnes each year.

In a country as poor as Kyrgyzstan, walnut crops can make up around a third of the average annual salary. The walnut season also provides a trickle-down effect on employment.

As well as the farmers, who lease the state-owned land to collect the walnut, other people are employed to shell walnuts and drivers to transport it to local markets. Most of the walnuts are then sent to Turkey, Iran and Iraq.

Still, it is just seasonal labour and when the season finishes its time to find fresh work.

Just like most of Kyrgyzstan, Ilhon and his brother look to Russia for help.

They head north to find casual labour, sending home most of what they earn. It’s tough and the pay isn’t great, but at least is does pay.

“Life is more difficult in winter,” Ilhon said of the drop in employment once the walnut season ends. “There is very little work around Arslanbob. Many of the men here go to Russia.”

There is another problem for Ilhon and others living and working in the walnut forests of south Kyrgyzstan. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union the forests have been increasingly poorly managed. These forests are the largest walnut forests in the world but they are also under threat.”

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(News report from Issue No. 183, published on May 7 2014)

Azerbaijan confirms F1 race

MAY 1 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) – Baku will host a Formula One race next year, AP quoted a spokeswoman at the Azerbaijani ministry of sport as saying. Speculation has built this year that Azerbaijan would host a leg of one of the most-watched and glamorous global sporting events.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 183, published on May 7 2014)