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Showing posts with the label Central Asia

An endlessly complex subject - can we unravel the causes of violence in Kyrgyzstan?

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Martin Amis is yet to visit Russia but he has written two books about the country.  For the latest, House of Meetings , he claimed to have read ‘a yard of books’, researching his subject.  Orlando Figes, whose poison pen subsequently attracted headlines, disagreed, claiming the novel was based on ’very modest’ reading. I’d have to agree that Amis’ book was poor and its predecessor, Koba the Dread , which purported to consider the skewed morality of western intellectuals’ infatuation with Stalin, was little better.  His failure reminds the casual observer, drawing on a modest collection of journalism and articles about Kyrgyzstan, that those sources are entirely insufficient to understand a hugely complex situation. The Ferghana Valley, an ethnic hotbed, where the borders of modern Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan converge, has witnessed the latest horrific outbreak of violence in Central Asia.  The information outlet with the greatest presence in the region,...