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Uzbekistan proposes new rules on protests
by Staff Writers
Tashkent (AFP) Aug 19, 2020

Reform-touting Uzbekistan on Wednesday published a draft bill on protests that would allow demonstrations within tight limits.

While the Central Asian country''s constitution formally permits public demonstrations, citizens have hardly ever been allowed to protest freely during the Central Asian country's 29 years of independence from the USSR.

Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev has rolled back some of the harsher restrictions devised under his predecessor and patron Islam Karimov, while keeping the authoritarian system largely intact.

Draft legislation published on a government portal sets out the proposed new rules for protests.

These include a requirement for organisers to apply for permission at least 15 working days before the planned date.

Another stipulation prohibits demonstrations within 300 metres (1,000 feet) of statues of historical and cultural importance, government buildings, courts and religious buildings.

Citizens would also be unable to hold demonstrations at the weekend or during the evenings on weekdays.

It is not clear when the bill will be forwarded to parliament.

With 33 million people, landlocked Uzbekistan is the most populous of the five countries of Central Asia that declared independence from the former Soviet Union in 1991.


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PKK says shot down Turkish helicopter in Iraq
Arbil, Iraq (AFP) Aug 17, 2020
The Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK) said Monday it had shot down a Turkish helicopter in Iraqi Kurdistan in retaliation for the death of one of its commanders last week. Last Tuesday's Turkish drone strike had also killed two high-ranking Iraqi officers, sparking renewed tensions with Baghdad. In a statement Monday, the PKK said its forces in the mountainous Zagros region had "been able to score a direct hit and shoot down a Turkish helicopter". "Ten minutes after the shooting-down of the first ... read more

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