Tag Archives: protest

Azerbaijan arrests opposition

FEB. 4 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – The authorities in Azerbaijan arrested two opposition leaders and accused them of orchestrating clashes between protesters and police in a provincial town last month. Human rights groups have said that the Azerbaijani authorities are using the clashes as an excuse to clampdown on their opponents.

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(News report from Issue No. 123, published on Feb. 8 2013)

 

Azerbaijani capital protests in support for Ismayilli

JAN. 26 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – Riot police in Baku detained roughly 40 people at a demonstration in support of protesters who had clashed with police two days earlier in the provincial town of Ismayilli, media reported. The authorities have poured in hundreds of reinforcements to quash the protesters in Ismayilli, roughly 200km north of Baku.

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(News report from Issue No. 122, published on Feb. 1 2013)

 

 

Azerbaijan’s police detains protesters

JAN. 26 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – Riot police in Baku detained roughly 40 people at a demonstration in support of protesters who had clashed with police two days earlier in the provincial town of Ismayilli, media reported. The authorities have poured in hundreds of reinforcements to quash the protesters in Ismayilli, roughly 200km north of Baku.

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(News report from Issue No. 122, published on Feb. 1 2013)

 

Azerbaijan regains control of Ismayilli

JAN. 18 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – It wasn’t until police reinforcements arrived on Jan. 24, according to media, that the authorities were able to regain control of the town of Ismayilli.

Since the previous afternoon, the town, about 200km north-west of Azerbaijan’s capital Baku, had been the scene of street fighting between police and young men frustrated by the lack of jobs and an increasingly high-handed political elite.

The fighting erupted on Jan. 23 after a car crash reportedly involving the son of a government minister. Both the trigger, alleged favouritism towards the political elite, and the resulting vicious backlash, were telling.

This was Azerbaijan’s worst violence for a decade. It came less than a year after similar, though smaller, street fighting, also triggered by the political elites’ arrogance, in another town.

The fighting in Ismayilli will no doubt draw a similar reaction from the authorities. They will pour in police to clampdown on dissenters and mount a PR campaign to discredit the protesters.

Azerbaijan’s economy is booming, luxury goods crowd Baku’s streets and millions are lavished on prestige projects such Eurovision last year. The street violence, though, suggests that there are large swathes of Azerbaijan’s under-classes who are not so happy.

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(News report from Issue No. 121, published on Jan. 25 2013)

 

Georgians protest against Saakashvili

JAN. 20 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – Roughly 1,000 people protested outside Georgia’s presidential palace to demand that President Mikheil Saakashvili resign, one of the biggest political demonstrations since a parliamentary election in October. Georgians are due to vote in a presidential election in Oct. 2013.

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(News report from Issue No. 121, published on Jan. 25 2013)

 

Georgians demand Saakashvili resign

JAN. 20 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) – Roughly 1,000 people protested outside Georgia’s presidential palace to demand that President Mikheil Saakashvili resign, one of the biggest political demonstrations since a parliamentary election in October. Georgians are due to vote in a presidential election in Oct. 2013.

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(News report from Issue No. 121, published on Jan. 25 2013)

 

Russia monitors Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan for revolutions

DEC. 10 2012 (The Conway Bulletin) – Perhaps it was just scare-mongering, but Nikolai Patrushev, the head of Russia’s National Security Council and a close adviser to president Vladimir Putin, said that his staff were monitoring Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan for signs of any re-emergence of the so-called colour revolutions, Russian media reported.

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(News report from Issue No. 117, published on Dec. 14 2012)

 

Protests build in the Kyrgyz south

OCT. 12 2012 (The Conway Bulletin) – Hundreds of people have gathered each day over the past week in Osh, southern Kyrgyzstan, to protest against the detention of nationalist parliamentarians who tried to break into government offices in Bishkek on Oct. 3, media reported. Sustained discontent in the south has the potential to destabilise Kyrgyzstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 108, published on Oct. 12 2012)

 

Kyrgyz police fires tear gas to potesters

OCT. 3 2012 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyz police fired tear gas in Bishkek to disperse about 2,000 people who were calling for the overthrow of the government after it pledged not to nationalise the Kumtor gold mine, media reported. About 200 people tried to climb over a fence surrounding the government’s headquarters in the worst violence in Bishkek since a revolution in 2010.

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(News report from Issue No. 107, published on Oct. 5 2012)

 

Muslims protest in Azerbaijan

SEP. 17 2012 (The Conway Bulletin) – Police in Baku detained 30 protesters marching towards the US embassy to demonstrate against an anti-Islamic film that has angered many Muslims, media reported. The police blocked the protest, which reporters estimated attracted 100 people, before it reached the embassy.

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(News report from Issue No. 105, published on Sep. 21 2012)