News Watch

During a summer 2013 trip to Central Asia (covered in last month’s issue), I took this photograph at a racetrack in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan’s capital. The country’s ruler loves horseracing, so he built hippodromes in the large cities where the beautiful Akhal-Teke horses, a breed from that country that was almost wiped out during the Soviet era, are raced. We did not see any formal gambling there. Instead, we saw many young people dressed in their finest who had gone to the...

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Twenty-one people were killed during protests surrounding a special election in Bangkok and southern Thailand on Feb. 2 that had been called by Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra’s government. 

At press time, protesters still controlled some sections of Sukhumvit Road and Lumpini Park in Bangkok, with sporadic demonstrations in other areas of the capital. The protests, which began in November, had been mostly peaceful, leaving the city’s tourist destinations intact, but occasionally...

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In Venezuela, protests against the soaring crime rate, high inflation and a lack of basic necessities began on Feb. 2 in San Cristobal and spread to the capital, Caracas, where anti- and pro-government groups staged rival demonstrations.

Antigovernment protesters erected barricades across roads, causing traffic in some areas to come to a standstill. Demonstrations in support of President Nicolas Maduro took place in other parts of the city. At press time, 17 people had been killed and...

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On Feb. 5, factory workers in Tuzla, Bosnia-Herzegovina, demonstrated outside the cantonal government building, as they had weekly for six months, protesting claims of government corruption, unpaid wages and a lack of jobs. When they attempted to forcibly enter the building, however, it sparked violence between them and the special police, inspiring antigovernment demonstrations in other parts of the country.

In Sarajevo, protesters fought police and set several government buildings...

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Weeks of heavy rains caused massive flooding throughout Bolivia, particularly in the central and northern lowlands, in February. At press time, the floods had caused the deaths of 59 people and more than 100,000 cattle.

Bolivia’s rainy season lasts from November until April, but the 2013-2014 season has been particularly disastrous. With homes flooded and crops rotting, over 58,000 families have been affected. Rivers filled with sewage and rotting animal carcasses have inundated wells...

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The US State Department advises deferring travel to Ukraine, particularly to the east and south and the capital city of Kyiv (Kiev). 

In Kyiv, protests began on Nov. 21, 2013, following the government’s announcement that it was suspending plans to sign an association agreement with the European Union. On Nov. 30, police severely injured several demonstrators in an attempt to remove them from Independence Square. Protesters then resolved to hold the square and adjacent buildings. ...

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The Department of State warns of an increasing frequency of terrorist bombing attacks throughout Lebanon.

On Aug. 15, 2013, a car bomb in the Rouweis neighborhood in south Beirut killed at least 27 and injured over 200. On Aug. 23, car bombs were detonated outside of two mosques in Tripoli, killing over 40 and injuring more than 500. On Nov. 19, two suicide bombers targeted the Iranian Embassy in south Beirut, leaving at least 25 people dead and 150 injured. On Dec. 27, a car bomb in...

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The US government recommends avoiding all travel to Somalia, where Al-Shabaab-planned assassinations, suicide bombings and armed attacks in civilian-populated areas are frequent. There is a particular threat in places where large crowds gather and Westerners frequent.

In the capital, Mogadishu, Al-Shabaab executed a car bomb attack on a popular restaurant on Sept. 7, 2013, killing 15, on a hotel on Nov. 8, killing 15, on a police station on Nov 12, killing 12, on another hotel on Jan...

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