IWPR staff
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A chief prosecutor who was the president’s enforcer falls foul of the system she served.
Two momentous events - the Kyrgyz revolution and the Andijan shootings - have coloured the way Central Asian governments view media freedom.
Government stops any sign of Islamic fervour outside the officially-sanctioned channels through which it manages religion.
IWPR reporter confirms that there is nothing left of the celebrated stone crosses of Jugha.
Parties hail testimony as a boon for their respective cases, while observers say the procedure was something of a letdown.
Small Jewish community believe destruction of their place of worship leaves them facing a bleak future.
The man accused of responsibility for much of the bloodshed in the Balkans in the Nineties dies in bed.
Angren was once the pride of Soviet Uzbekistan, but residents now scrape a miserable existence.
Bosnian lawyers face the daunting task of proving not only that genocide occurred in Bosnia, but also that responsibility lay with an entire state.
Angren was once the pride of Soviet Uzbekistan, but residents now scrape a miserable existence.