Author: Soli Muzafarov

Our interlocutors are Jakhongir Jurayev, reanimatologist at Al-Jabr al-Ahmad hospital in Kuwait, compatriots Nikhola Madaliyeva and Umidjon Madaliyev, who work as general practitioners in England. “Raising the problem will prevent further death cases” Umidjon Madaliyev, member of the Royal Association of General Practitioners, doctor: There are several factors that lead to this situation: first of all, I believe that the healthcare system in Uzbekistan is not working properly, too much addiction to drugs, unknowingly consuming any medicines, drugs entering Uzbekistan are not properly inspected. Jakhongir Jurayev, reanimatologist at Al-Jabr Al-Ahmad hospital in Kuwait: But punishing or dissuading doctors who raise…

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Abdurakhmon Tashanov, chairman of the “Ezgulik” human rights society, also announced the release of Kadirov. It should be recalled that on June 26, 2019, the Tashkent city criminal court delivered a guilty verdict to the former Prosecutor General Rashid Kadirov and other participants in the criminal case. According to the court verdict, Rashid Kadirov was found guilty of committing grave crimes under a number of articles of the Criminal Code. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison and imposed a fine of 500 BCAs. In May 2018, during a meeting with activists in the Andijan region, the President of…

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Rüya Bayegan using prime minister Barzani’s right hand – Rania Majeed – to elbow her way back to KRG? Ankara, Erbil (4/1 – 45). Rüya Bayegan, the CEO of BGN International and its Turkey-based subsidiary Bayegan Group, was once considered an instrumental member of the petrochemical industry in Turkey. However, as of at least October 2022, Bayegan and her husband, Ercüment Bayegan, have been under investigation by Turkish authorities on allegations of fraud, document forgeries and tax evasion as a result of their role in the disastrous Yurtgas scandal. The recent contract between BGN International with the Indonesian state owned oil and gas company Pertamina raises…

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As a cold winter exposes vast energy deficits, Uzbekistan has picked three companies, including one from China, to build new solar installations. The country’s renewable energy drive should in theory be a cakewalk for companies from China, the world’s largest exporter of solar equipment. But this is one of the first solar energy projects won by a Chinese company in the country, and Tashkent appears happy for a diversity of partners in a sector that it sees as important for plugging electricity gaps in its provinces. The Energy Ministry said in a government briefing last week that a consortium of Chinese companies bidding as GD…

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