Central Asia: Oct ‘07
Local and international media turn to IWPR for expert opinion on leading journalist’s killing following two in-depth reports on the crime.
Local and international media turn to IWPR for expert opinion on leading journalist’s killing following two in-depth reports on the crime.
Analysts say the country must simplify legislation and introduce transparency to entice new investors.
Despite the government’s optimism, local observers predict Kazakstan’s bid to chair the OSCE in 2009 will be turned down.
Experts call for new energy projects to be accompanied with transparent monitoring of their environmental effects.
Grand plans for a free flow of goods between east and west could be undermined by suspicious and uncooperative Central Asian leaderships.
IWPR workshops help journalists in remote region of Tajikistan become more widely read.
Six candidates, five political parties and only one possible winner.
Even repeated purges of senior interior ministry staff will not reduce abuses by an overbearing police force, say analysts.
The killing of Alisher Saipov may deter others from reporting on sensitive topics, and some of his colleagues think that is why he was gunned down.
After two years of argument about the constitution, President Bakiev is pushing through a quick solution – although not everyone is happy with his vision of how Kyrgyzstan should be governed.