Showing posts with label Kyrgyzstan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kyrgyzstan. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

'stansick

I've been missing Kyrgyzstan of late... So I made this video. Makes me wonder why I ever left. Enjoy! (The song is by Tata Ulan, and the pairing of pictures and song probably will make more sense to people who speak Russian and know a bit about Kyrgyzstan. I tried to match lyrics to pictures wherever possible.)

Sunday, December 26, 2010

post-holiday links post

sahn2
I spent Christmas Day at Gwen's -
click here or on the supercute picture above to see the pictures, most of which are of Sahn :-)

DSCN9128-1
I re-edited my photos from Solburun 2008 -
click here or on the photo above to view the whole set, and click here to read the blog post. Enjoy!!

Simon's Cat shows us why some of us just can't do trees.

And lastly, TIME Magazine ran an interesting story about required HIV testing for foreign English teachers working in Korea. (h/t, The Marmot's Hole)

Friday, August 06, 2010

Friday, July 02, 2010

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Kyrgyzstan on NPR and Facebook

Click here and listen to a short segment from NPR's All Things Considered on the current situation in Kyrgyzstan. The referendum on Kyrgyzstan's new constitution went off without a hitch (unless you consider all the Uzbeks who couldn't/didn't participate). Below is a facebook conversation my friends and I had on this subject:

facebook conversation w/ my friends about Kyrgyzstan

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Referendum Sunday in Kyrgyzstan

While I think it's great that Kyrgyzstan is having a referendum to determine whether or not the new government and new constitution are legitimate... having said referendum while unrest continues in the south, while tens of thousands of Uzbek citizens of Kyrgyzstan are still in refugee camps across the border in Uzbekistan, and while the remaining Uzbeks in the south fear to leave their homes doesn't really do much to scream "legitimacy!" - but the referendum is, nonetheless, scheduled for tomorrow. Read more:

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Osh: before the (most recent) violence

I didn't have the opportunity to spend as much time as I would've liked in Osh, although I did enjoy my time there back in 2008 (which you can read about by clicking here). If you click on the photograph below, it will take you to my set of photos from my short time in Osh. I look at the photographs and wonder about the people in them. Are they alive? Injured? In refugee camps just across the Uzbek border?

Jayma Bazaar, Osh
To see the photos, click the picture above or click here.

This just makes me cry.




Monday, June 21, 2010

This week in Kyrgyzstan...

I haven't followed the events in Southern Kyrgyzstan at all since last Monday, as I have been very, very sick. Was in the ER on Tuesday and at my doctor's office on Friday, and still don't feel so hot. Some kind of less than pleasant viral infection. Blech.

I'm just now sitting down at my laptop in an attempt to figure out what's happened since I last read the news. It seems that the rioting has stopped. Some ethnic Uzbeks are returning to what remains of their former lives - while many ethnic Uzbeks refuse to leave Uzbekistan or the Uzbek/Kyrgyz border.

Allegations continue to spread that former President Bakiyev and his son, Maksim, were responsible for instigating the violence in Southern Kyrgyzstan - including a telephone call in which Maksim allegedly instructs someone to round up 500 Kyrgyz men willing to commit atrocities. Additionally, Maksim has fled to the UK and is seeking assylum. Boooo.












Kyrgyz violence – allegations of genocide
Cases of cash paid for Kyrgyz unrest
Desperately needed humanitarian aid comes in Kyrgyzstan
Kyrgyzstan: Stalin's deadly legacy
Son of former Kyrgyz president seeks asylum in the UK
Kyrgyzstan bloodshed: Princeling Maxim Bakiyev and the alleged phone conversation
Uzbeks return amid Kyrgyzstan fears
Barriers Removed in Kyrgyzstan Despite Uzbek Protests
Foreign Policy: Why Kyrgyzstan Matters
Uzbek slaughter in Kyrgyzstan 'organised by outsiders'
Why Isn't Russia Intervening in Kyrgyzstan?
Victims recount horrors of ethnic violence in Kyrgyzstan
Saving Central Asia

Sunday, June 13, 2010

More Kyrgyzstan Links

I call it a massacre! is a distressing English language post by Kyrgyz blogger Tolkun Umaraliev, analyzing the Kyrgyz/Uzbek ethnic violence in the south of Kyrgyzstan over the past few days. Includes numerous photos and links to quite a few distressing YouTube videos.

Tons of photos of the scene at the Kyrgyz/Uzbek border taken by Dalton Bennett can be seen here. Also, I am very jealous of Dalton Bennet.

Even more photos by newseurasia.net author "murzaki" can be seen here.

Kyrgyzstan asks for Russia to send troops...

That's a headline that certainly doesn't bode well for Kyrgyzstan's future, but that's how things stand over there these days. Interim President Roza Otunbayaeva has asked Russia to send in peacekeepers:

The situation is spinning out of control. We need foreign military help and we have asked Russia to send it. We must do our utmost to save people's lives. There are reports that armaments and weapons have fallen into the hands of raging gangs in Osh. The security forces in the capital Bishkek are on high alert following the events of yesterday, when mobs demanded guns and buses to go to the south. Roza Otunbayeva,
from here.

I'm not sure whether it's fortunate or unfortunate, but thus far,
Russia has declined to send in military assistance.

Meanwhile, thousands of ethnic Uzbeks (mostly women and children) seem to be making for Uzbekistan, while at the same time begging for help from Uzbek troops:


Another (and in my opinion, better) video can be seen here, I just can't embed it.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

I'm still on vacation...

...and things are still haywire in Kyrgyzstan, apparently. Here are some links, but again, can't do much detailed blogging/researching while I'm on the road.

Friday, May 14, 2010

I'm on vacation, but....

....there's counter-revolutionary clashes going on in Kyrgyzstan. I'll give you a few links, but unfortunately, I won't be able to cover the events like I did the ones last month. My poor K-stan :-(

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Hindsight 20/20?

Really? More examples of things I could've told you six months ago, a year ago, whenever. And yet everyone seems so surprised. It was obvious (to me, anyway) that after the US got kicked out of Uzbekistan they kissed Bakiev's ass in order to make sure they didn't lose their foothold in Kyrgyzstan. Meanwhile, these analysts seem a tad too late in their analyses. Also, I've seen numerous article (like this one) which try to make it out to be that the US presence at Manas was the reason for the ouster of Bakiev. Um, no. Certainly the fuel contract sending dollars directly into the Bakiev family coffers added to the anger and resentment of the Kyrgyz citizens against corruption in the government... but a key factor? No.



Wednesday, April 21, 2010

More on ethnic clashes in Kyrgyzstan

Here's an English language Reuters video and article on the ethnic clashes outside of Bishkek. I'd read elsewhere (can't remember where) that the Russians, knowing that the Turks were the focus of the crowd, painted "Russians" on their doors to keep the looters out... These two articles make the spraying of "Russians" on the doors out to be something a little different. where lies the truth?