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Journalists in Zimbabwe

NPR has a feature on how Zimbabwe represents inhospitable terrain for journalists. One journalist explores why: In Zimbabwe, practicing journalism is forbidden. Reporters caught working without government permission face beatings, long prison sentences, or worse. The job becomes especially perilous when the story about the local police force, focusing on police brutality So why do […]

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Great Decisions Fall 2007 Updates

The Foreign Policy Association has posted its Great Decisions series updates for fall 2007. Please avail yourself of these wonderful resources. (Here is the South Africa update.)

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"Great Decisions" Fall Update on Mexico

The Foreign Policy Association's “Great Decisions” 2007 Fall Update on Mexico can be found here. The update includes a summary of President Calderon's first six months in office.

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Afghanistan: knowledge aid

Providing for education is a big part of a sustained aid: providing teachers, doctors, and nurses, with the tools and means to bring knowledge and self-help to Afghanistan's citizens and to the nation as a whole.  Frequently with aid we think of supplies.  Yet knowledge is something that cannot be taken away, from the mentoring of a surgeon […]

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Tajikistan trade: agreements, kiss-offs, opportunities

Tajikistan trade: agreements, kiss-offs, opportunities

Qatar & friendly trade: This week, Qatar's Minister of Finance and Acting Minister of Economy and Commerce Mr. Yousuf Hussein Kamal visited Tajikistan.  While in Tajikistan, he and President Rakhmon arranged a cornucopia of economic agreements.  These include setting up a council of business leaders from the Chambers of Commerce and Industry in both states, […]

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Strange Bedfellows

Over at The Mail & Guardian the University of the Witwatersrand's Achille Mbembe wonders what Thabo Mbeki, chief architect of the “African Renaissance,” is playing at with regard to his apparent endorsement of French President Nicolas Sarkozy's galling recent comments in West Africa. At least on the issue of Pan-Africanism, Mbeki has earned the benefit […]

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Giving SADC “Room to Breathe”

Peter Kagwanja, research director and senior African fellow at South Africa's Human Science Research Council and president of the Africa Policy Institute argues that SADC's mediation of the crisis in Zimbabwe “must be given a chance to breathe.” But he also believes that Zimbabwe's salvation will only come through change: [P]olitical theatre aside, the SADC […]

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Kazakhstan v. ENI: Showdown @ Kashagan

Kazakhstan v. ENI: Showdown @ Kashagan

It's official: Kashagan oil extraction work has been shut down pending new negotiations with the consortium led by independent oil company ENI.  This is not affecting anyone's current oil supply, but it will be of interest to world stockbrokers, oil-market analysts, and Central Asia watchers.  I love this stuff, myself, so Let's Go: this is […]

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SADC’s Questions, Questions for SADC

According to the Mail & Guardian, SADC's plan for Zimbabwe's economic recovery is a non-starter because, well, SADC and its member nations do not have the necessary funds and the prospect of such support coming from the west in sufficient qualities is highly improbable.: The economic rescue package for Zimbabwe, touted at the Southern African […]

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Kyrgyzstan: Naryn Justice, August 13th

I found this while looking for news for the Central Asia Beat of last week, but it was well worth returning to:  accounts of torture in Naryn by the police.  The International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights works to raise awareness of human rights violations in Central Asia, improve local human rights defenders personal security […]

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Kyrgyzstan: Photo Album

Short little entry: I’m always thrilled when Central Asia hits the big-time.  This time, The New York Times:  and this time, it's a five-piece slide show by photographer Carolyn Drake called “A Land at a Crossroads”.  And let me tell you that I hope it's true.  A crossroads should mean trade, and trade is needed. 

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The Central Asia Beat, August 20-26

The Central Asia Beat, August 20-26

Bringing you news from the steppes and the mountains in one tidy package.  Almost everyone appears to be lying on their sofas with a cold compress after the heady weeks of SCO activities just past, so this’ll be brief. . . uh, more brief. Kazakhstan: –Another attempt to extradite Mr. Rakhat Aliev, according to Thursday's RFE/RL […]

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Casual Friday: Kyrgyz export struts to 4 U.S. states

Casual Friday: Kyrgyz export struts to 4 U.S. states

News: Starting in September, Kyrgyzstan's award-winning Shpilka vodka will be available in package stores in Florida, Missouri, Louisiana, and Oregon.  Shpilka means “stiletto heel”, and a marketing campaign has been envisioned that appeals to female purchasers: a bottle with flowing lines, no doubt a picture of high heels on the label, et cetera. According to Nick Passmore […]

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The Afghanistan Aggregator, August 20-26

Get Smart and Thanks Due: First off, Afghanistanica has a great post on Afghanistan scholars to watch, read, and learn from.  Thank you, C. ! Another article on the mystery of not-enough translators for Afghanistan, also at Afghanistanica.  Read it and weep.  Then get mad. Mr. Foust at Registan.net on basic flaws in reconstruction aid […]

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Unnaming For the Sake of Probity

Changing the names of places, infrastructure, and institutions in South Africa tends to be a flashpoint for controversy, as I’ve discussed in this forum on several occasions. A recent story from the Daily News gets at what some might see as the lighter side of the shifting nomenclature phenomenon: The name eThekwini is to be […]

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