May 14, 2010 / Foreign Policy
Philip Shishkin
Sometime in the seventh or eighth century -- the exact dates are obscure in the foggy confluence of history and myth -- a warrior named Manas united the Kyrgyz tribes in a rebellion against China.
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May 14, 2010 / Foreign Policy
Philip Shishkin
It's been more than a month since the storming of the presidential palace in Bishkek. But the aftershocks of the uprising are still rattling Kyrgyzstan.
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May 10, 2010 / Untold Stories
Philip Shishkin
On April 7, some 85 people were killed during the storm of the presidential palace in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. Many more got wounded.
May 3, 2010 / Untold Stories
Philip Shishkin
Late at night on April 7, Erkin Bulekbayev walked out of prison and into one of the toughest jobs in Kyrgyzstan: looking for evidence of financial crimes allegedly committed by the ousted regime.
April 23, 2010 / Untold Stories
Philip Shishkin
Of all the intrigues in the political life of Kyrgyzstan, few can rival the mystery of Gennady Pavlyuk, a local journalist with a sharp pen.
April 23, 2010 / Untold Stories
Philip Shishkin
A few days ago outside of Bishkek, people flooded onto a field and started parceling out land for themselves according to a master list someone had drawn up. There was a problem: that land already...
April 18, 2010 / Untold Stories
Philip Shishkin
These days, I sleep while walking, so if I lose my train of thought, perhaps you could nudge me,” Roza Otunbayeva, the interim leader of Kyrgyzstan, said on Saturday. She was drinking strong tea to...
April 15, 2010 / Untold Stories
Philip Shishkin
Philip Shishkin, for the Pulitzer Center Jalalabad, Kyrgyzstan