Roberto Abraham Scaruffi: RFE/RL Headlines

Thursday 28 May 2009

RFE/RL Headlines

RFE/RL Headlines
 
RFE/RL Headlines
27.05.2009
A daily digest of the English-language news and analysis written by the staff of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

 
News

Alarm Bells In Ferghana Alarm Bells In Ferghana
Islamists claim responsibility for fresh attacks in Uzbekistan and Tashkent points fingers across the border at Kyrgyzstan, while outsiders say it's too early to place blame. But they're quick to note that instability could spread quickly in Ferghana Valley, a hotbed of social unrest in Central Asia. More
 
From Our Bureaus

Another Top Kazakh Uranium Company Official Arrested Another Top Kazakh Uranium Company Official Arrested
Baurzhan Ibraev, the vice president of the Kazakh state uranium company Kazatomprom, has been arrested. More
 
West Afghan Officials Destroy Books Coming From Iran
Officials in Afghanistan's Nimroz Province say thousands of books thought to have been printed in Iran were thrown into the Helmand River this month. More
 
Iraqi Parliament's Mission To Kirkuk Ends In Failure Iraqi Parliament's Mission To Kirkuk Ends In Failure
The fact-finding trip to multiethnic Kirkuk deadlocked in failure and its members returned to Baghdad to report to the major political factions, RFE/RL's Radio Free Iraq reports. More
 
PACE To Restore 'Special Guest' Status For Belarus
A final decision on the issue will be made at PACE's next meeting in Paris in June. More
 
Daghestan's Deputy Mufti Shot Dead Daghestan's Deputy Mufti Shot Dead
The Russian Prosecutor-General's Office is investigating the assassination of Daghestan's deputy mufti, or religious authority. More
 
Watchdog

Russian Lawyer Believes Criminal Case Against Him Will Be Dismissed Russian Lawyer Believes Criminal Case Against Him Will Be Dismissed
Embattled Russian defense lawyer Boris Kuznetsov, who has been granted political asylum in the United States, has told journalists he believes the criminal case against him will soon be dismissed without prejudice. More
 
RSF Urges Iranian Candidates To Defend Press Freedom
The media rights watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) is urging candidates running in Iran's upcoming presidential election to commit to the unconditional release of the 13 journalists and bloggers currently being held in the country. More
 
Transmission

Blogger Vs. Russian Police Blogger Vs. Russian Police
Yesterday we published a commentary by RFE/RL Russian Service columnist Olga Serebryanaya about a Russian Livejournal mob that is pressuring Moscow police not to cover up an alleged hit-and-run accident that resulted in the death of a pregnant woman on May 13. More
 
The Cold Turkey Wasn't Enough
A Serbian Orthodox priest was removed as head of a church-backed drug rehabilitation center Wednesday, after a video broadcast on national television showed him beating a patient with a shovel. More
 
Russian Group Grabs Stake In Facebook Russian Group Grabs Stake In Facebook
The buyer, Digital Sky Technologies, already owns chunks in Web companies that account for 70 percent of all page views on the Russian-speaking Internet, according to the firm. More
 
Where Is Mrs. Putin? Where Is Mrs. Putin?
It seems the topic of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s personal life never gets old. Last year the Moscow tabloid “Moskovsky korrespondent” got itself into hot water by reporting that Putin planned to divorce his wife, Lyudmila, and marry State Duma Deputy and former rhythmic gymnast Alina Kabayeva. More
 
Biden In The Balkans Biden In The Balkans
Hazim Imamovic from Olovo, a small town in central Bosnia, had been so excited about the speech the U.S. vice president delivered last week in the parliament that he decided to give a present to Joe Biden -- a piece of his own land. More
 
The Power Vertical

Green Shoots? Green Shoots?
It certainly won’t come as news to Power Vertical readers that the electoral system in Russia is a rigged sham. We can’t say it any better than former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev (thanks to La Russophobe for the citation), who said on May 21: “The electoral system has been revised to serve the interests of a single party, the interests of those who are now at the helm. Step by step, we have been going back to the past.” More
 
Caucasus Report

Georgian Opposition Mulls More Radical Forms Of Protest Georgian Opposition Mulls More Radical Forms Of Protest
Seven weeks after the Georgian opposition launched its campaign to force President Mikheil Saakashvili to resign, up to 55,000 people congregated at a soccer stadium in Tbilisi on May 26 in support of that demand. Despite dwindling participation at their protest actions in recent weeks, opposition leaders had said earlier they hoped to mobilize 100,000 protesters. More
 
Rosneft, Abkhazia Sign Agreement On Oil, Gas Reserves Rosneft, Abkhazia Sign Agreement On Oil, Gas Reserves
Abkhaz Economy Minister Kristina Ozgan and Rosneft President Sergei Bogdanchikov signed an agreement in Sukhumi on May 26 under which Rosneft acquires the rights for a period of five years to prospect for oil and natural gas off Abkhazia's Black Sea coast. Rosneft will also build a string of gas stations in Abkhazia and sell gasoline, diesel, and heating oil. More
 
Georgia Signals Readiness To Discuss Opening Border Crossing With Russia Georgia Signals Readiness To Discuss Opening Border Crossing With Russia
The Swiss Embassy in Tbilisi submitted to the Georgian Foreign Ministry on May 24 a proposal by the Russian Foreign Ministry to reopen the Verkhny/Zemo Lars border crossing between Georgia and the Russian Federation. More
 
Was Grenade Attack On Georgian TV Station Prompted By Murder Documentary? Was Grenade Attack On Georgian TV Station Prompted By Murder Documentary?
The station's general director suggested that the blast may have been intended to prevent the screening by Maestro on the evening of May 25 of a documentary film about the January 2006 killing of banker Sandro Girgvliani. More
 
Features

Analysts See Politics In Obama's Nomination Of Hispanic Woman To Court Analysts See Politics In Obama's Nomination Of Hispanic Woman To Court
President Barack Obama has nominated federal Judge Sonia Sotomayor to fill a vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court. Sotomayor is the daughter of immigrants from Puerto Rico and is the first Hispanic to be nominated to the nine-member tribunal. Some observers see her nomination as a political move, because it would give the court a representative of the United States' fastest-growing minority group and could have an impact on future elections. More
 
New European Charter Lays Down Guidelines New European Charter Lays Down Guidelines
In the German city of Hamburg on May 25, 46 journalists and editors in chief from 19 countries signed the "European Charter on Freedom of the Press." The charter establishes basic guidelines for protecting the press from government interference and ensuring journalists access to sources of information. The document's creators hope the charter's adoption will become a condition in future EU accession negotiations. More
 
Newspaper Industry Mulls How To Survive In Internet Age Newspaper Industry Mulls How To Survive In Internet Age
A wave of job cuts, bankruptcies, and closures has hit the newspaper industry, particularly in the United States. The recession and the availability of free news on the Internet are blamed for turning newspapers into what one prominent senator called an "endangered species." More
 
Kazakh Atomic Kingpin Suddenly Radioactive Kazakh Atomic Kingpin Suddenly Radioactive
He was once considered one of the richest and most powerful men in Kazakhstan: the head of a company with access to the world's second-largest reserves of uranium, with lucrative contracts with Russia, China, and India. But now Mukhtar Jakishev finds himself under arrest and possibly in line to join other corporate heads who have landed in Kazakh jails. More
 
Pakistani Civilians Flee Fighting, Not Difficulties Pakistani Civilians Flee Fighting, Not Difficulties
The Pakistani government's crackdown on Taliban fighters in the country's northwest has led to an exodus of residents so rapid and immense that it has dwarfed efforts to stave off a humanitarian crisis. Many have found shelter within welcoming communities or among relatives, but others are traveling immense distances in search of save haven. More
 
Video: Primer On Iran's Election Video: Primer On Iran's Election
With a little more than two weeks to go before Iranians go to the polls to pick a president, RFE/RL correspondent Golnaz Esfandiari sketches the candidates and outlines the political landscape. More
 
From Tehran And Pyongyang, Early Obama Challenges From Tehran And Pyongyang, Early Obama Challenges
U.S. President Barack Obama came to office promising to explore ways to talk with countries hostile to the United States -- such as North Korea and Iran. That was in contrast to the Bush administration’s labeling them as parts of an "axis of evil." But will events such as Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile tests, and Tehran’s stepped-up rhetoric, allow Obama to begin his effort? Or will they push Obama to adopt a harder line, too? More
 
Is A New Russia-Georgia War On The Horizon? Is A New Russia-Georgia War On The Horizon?
Georgia is marking its Independence Day, but few are in the mood to celebrate. Russia is concentrating troops near the border and fears of a new invasion are gathering momentum. What is Russia's end game in Georgia and how do they hope to achieve it? More
 
Commentary

Does Russia Even Need To Invade Georgia? Does Russia Even Need To Invade Georgia?
Nearly nine months after the war between Russia and Georgia last August, the situation surrounding the breakaway Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia remains tense. Some observers have warned that fighting in the region could flare up again within the next few months. But would a new war helpRussia achieve its objectives? More
 
Russia's Bloggers Stand Up To The Police Russia's Bloggers Stand Up To The Police
On May 21, Aleksei Shumm posted a notice on his Live Journal page saying his pregnant wife had been struck and killed while crossing Ysenevoi Avenue in Moscow on May 13. Several news agencies picked up the story and cited information as saying that material from the scene had been collected and passed on to investigators. That was the last Shumm heard about the matter until, nine days after his wife’s death, he learned that no case had been filed against the driver, who has been identified as a More
 
Iran Election Diary

Election Jokes Doing The Rounds In Iran Election Jokes Doing The Rounds In Iran
It's election season and that can mean only one thing in Iran: jokes. And many of them, perhaps unsurprisingly, poking fun at Ahmadinejad. More
 
Khatami's Azeri Joke Backfires
In the last two weeks, a video showing Iran’s former President Mohammad Khatami telling a joke about Iran’s Azeri minority has led to protests by Iranian Azeris and students in several cities including Tehran, Orumyeh, and Tabriz. (The video above is from a protest in Tabriz on May 25.) More
 
Facebook Is Back In Iran Facebook Is Back In Iran
Facebook was unblocked today in Iran just one day after President Mahmud Ahmadinejad criticized its recent closure. More