|
UZBEKISTAN: NEW POLITICAL PARTY HOLDS CONGRESS IN UZBEKISTAN.(Free Peasants Party)(Brief Article)
From:
IPR Strategic Business Information Database
| Date:
December 8, 2003
| COPYRIGHT 2003 Info-Prod (Middle East) Ltd. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.Copyright information
|
The Free Peasants Party, an opposition group that in recent months has been going through the steps required for registration with the Uzbek authorities, held its constituent congress in Tashkent on 6 December, centrasia.ru reported the same day. According to the report, the congress brought together more than 150 participants from various regions of Uzbek...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
UZBEKISTAN: NEW POLITICAL PARTY HOLDS CONGRESS IN UZBEKISTAN.(Free Peasants Party)(Brief Article)
IPR Strategic Business Information Database
; The Free Peasants Party, an opposition group that in recent months has been going through the steps required for registration with the Uzbek authorities, held its constituent congress in Tashkent on 6 December, centrasia.ru reported the same day. According to the report, the congress brought
|
|
NEW POLITICAL PARTY HOLDS CONGRESS IN UZBEKISTAN
Info-Prod Research (Middle East)
; The Free Peasants Party, an opposition group that in recent months has been going through the steps required for registration with the Uzbek authorities, held its constituent congress in Tashkent on 6 December, centrasia.ru reported the same day. According to the report, the congress brought
|
|
UZBEKISTAN'S TIANANMEN
The Boston Globe
; THE BLOODY protests in Uzbekistan's Andijan square have exposed the Bush administration's Janus-faced policy on regime change. Recent talk of spreading democracy and bringing freedom to the oppressed sits very uneasily with the "yes, he is a bastard but he is our bastard" approach, reminiscent of
|
|
'745 killed' in shootings.(News)
The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland)
; AN Uzbek opposition leader yesterday said her party had compiled a list of 745 people allegedly killed by government troops in Uzbekistan. Nigara Khidoyatova, the head of the Free Peasants party, said that 542 people had been killed in Andijan and 203 people in Pakhtabad, another city in the
|
|
Peasant's revolt: Poland. (coalition between Democratic Left Alliance and Peasants' Party likely to collapse)(Europe)(Brief Article)
The Economist (US)
; THIS is getting interesting. With barely a month to go before a general election, the four-year-old coalition between the Peasants' Party and the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD) is on the verge of collapse. The Peasants' Party, junior partner in the government, provoked the crisis by submitting to
|
|
POLISH PREMIER TO LET SMALLER PARTY TRY TO FORM COALITION
The Boston Globe
; ... priority given to agriculture and the food economy in Poland's policy," he said in the statement, which was carried by the PAP news agency. The United Peasants Party, which claims a membership of 500,000, has been allied with the Communists since its creation ...
|
|
Communists jolted in bid to form Pole government
Chicago Sun-Times
; WARSAW Poland's Communist Party bosses Wednesday faced a crisis in forming the next government after a leader of a traditionally allied party said his members would join Solidarity in voting against a Communist-led government. Solidarity, meanwhile, announced strike plans. The parliamentary leader
|
|
Prewar Parties Reviving in Romania; Anti-Communist Groups Plan to Challenge Salvation Front's Rule
The Washington Post
; As a young man, Grigore Brancusi spent two years in the Carpathian mountains waging a quixotic guerrilla war against Romania's Communist regime. Now aged nearly 80, he says that a new generation has finally been able to realize his dream of a free Romania. The nephew of a celebrated Romanian
|
|
Polish Cabinet Crisis Continues; Premier Suggests Non-Communist Should Form Governing Coalition
The Washington Post
; Poland's Communist Prime Minister Czeslaw Kiszczak announced tonight that he was abandoning efforts to form a government and would hand the task over to the leader of the United Peasants' Party, a small socialist organization that has long been a junior partner in the Communist-led ruling
|
|
Jaruzelski Urges Talks on Crisis; Polish Leader Warns of Deepening Political, Economic Instability
The Washington Post
; President Wojciech Jaruzelski, citing "the deepening instability of Poland's political and economic situation," called today for an emergency meeting of the country's major political and social leaders to resolve a governmental struggle for power that is challenging the Communist Party's
|