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Published in: oDRUkraine: bulldozing the Orange building
President Yanukovych is steadily demolishing the gains of the Orange Revolution. This turn towards Moscow looks...
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Published in: oDRRussia back in the dock over 'Forbidden Art'
Three years ago an exhibition at Moscow’s Sakharov Centre of previously banned work entitled Forbidden Art led to...
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Published in: oDRPoetry in pictures: a film about Joseph Brodsky
Andrei Khrzhanovskii’s recent Russian film about the poet Joseph Brodsky evokes elements of his childhood, internal...
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Published in: oDRKhodorkovsky trial: a regime in the dock
The accusations against Khodorkovsky have collapsed now that two senior establishment figures have testified. He may...
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Published in: oDRWhen enemies are better than friends
Rather than emphasising friends and allies, today's Russian leaders prefer to single out their enemies, writes...
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Published in: oDRVoznesensky: elegy for a fashionable poet
The poet Andrei Voznesensky died on 1 June. One of the former “big 4” Soviet poets, he managed to hang on to his...
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Published in: oDRKyrgyzstan: referendum in a time of upheaval
Judith Beyer observes the run-up to Kyrgyzstan’s constitutional referendum from the vantage point of the...
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Published in: oDRCentral Asia: the erupting volcano
The West turned a blind eye to the potential volatility of Central Asia because it was convenient, in Carlo Ungaro's...
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Published in: oDRThe ethnicisation of violence in Southern Kyrgyzstan
Media talk of ‘ethnic conflict’ in Kyrgyzstan is misleading, in that it takes ethnicity to be causal. This does not...
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Published in: oDRAnimals in the Courtroom
Ex-Yukos bosses Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev stand accused of a crime that even prosecutors are finding...
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Published in: oDRThe Black Widows of Dagestan: Media Hype and Genuine Harm
On April 9 2010, after explosions in the Moscow metro killed 39 people, rumours were circulated of 1,000 ‘black...
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Published in: oDRDoes Russia need a memory law?
Russia’s Duma has been trying to draft a ‘memory law’, in order to protect the Soviet version of the events of World...
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Published in: oDRHerb and Spices: Tatarstan's drug problems
In the third of a series on drugs in Russia's regions, Oleg Pavlov reports from the Republic of Tatarstan, 400 miles...
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Published in: oDRWhy are Kyrgyzstan’s slum dwellers so angry?
If you want to understand what has motivated the uprising of Kyrgyzstan’s poor, you need look no further than the...
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Published in: oDRPoppy seed and mushrooms: Oryol's drug problems
The Oryol Region in central Russia has been fairly successful in dealing with its drug problems, but the approaches...
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Published in: oDRDiviner's Sage and Hawaiian Rose: Sakhalin's drug problems
Throwing money at a problem doesn’t always solve it. Allocations for drug control have been increased on Sakhalin,...
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Published in: oDRTurkmenbashi is dead! Long live Turkmenbashi?
A recently published book about President Berdymukhamedov of Turkmenistan confirms that the cult of personality is...
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Published in: oDRGeorgia's Promising Elections
The recent local elections in Georgia were deemed “free and fair”, but the opposition remains fragmented. Parliament...
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Published in: oDRGeorgia's Muddled Elections
Does President Saakashvili really deserve international plaudits for his party’s decisive victory in Georgia’s...
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Published in: oDRRector takes on Ukranian Security Services
On May 18, the Ukrainian Security Services paid a strange visit to Borys Gudziak, rector of the Ukrainian Catholic...