The head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Tajikistan will take part in the 77th session of the UN General Assembly

The delegation of Tajikistan headed by the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the country Sirojiddin Muhriddin will take part in the 77th session of the UN General Assembly in New York.

It will be held from September 13 to 26, said the press secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Tajikistan Shokhin Samadi.

According to him, the head of the Tajik Foreign Ministry will join the event from September 19.

Shokhin Samadi did not rule out bilateral meetings of the head of the department within the framework of the General Assembly, but did not say with whom exactly negotiations could be held.

Meanwhile, as reported on the UN website, the session is scheduled to discuss a wide range of issues.

Source: Asia-Plus

President of Tajikistan congratulated the new King of Great Britain

President of Tajikistan Emomali Rahmon today sent a congratulatory telegram to the new King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland Charles III.

The head of Tajikistan wished him good health, the people of Great Britain - sustainable development, peace, stability, progress and prosperity, the presidential press service reported.

The telegram notes that the United Kingdom was among the first to recognize the independence of Tajikistan

Rahmon expressed hope that the constructive partnership of the countries, thanks to consistent joint efforts, will continue to develop and expand in line with the principles of friendship, mutual understanding, and mutual respect.

Source: Asia-Plus

Abdullo Gurbati’s film received an award at an international competition in Kazakhstan

On September 11, the official closing of the VII Baiqonyr International Short Film Festival took place. And on September 12, the names of the winners were already published on the official website of the festival. The only film-participant from Tajikistan received the award of the international competition.

The festival was held in Almaty from 7 to 11 September. Documentary film by arrested Tajik journalist Abdullo Gurbati “Too Big” wins “Best Documentary”.

The film tells about a 13-year-old boy named Abdurahmon. Due to lack of money, he is forced to leave school and work in the market. He dreams of attending school, but he cannot afford it because the family has no money.

Abdullo Gurbati was arrested after being summoned to the prosecutor's office of the Shokhmansur district in the case of Daler Imomali, another detained Tajik journalist and blogger. At first he was detained for assaulting a police officer, but then he was charged with membership in the Islamic Renaissance Party. In mid-August, it was reported that Gurbati's case had been brought to court.

The film “Too Big” will also be screened at the Tashkent Film Festival.

Source: Asia-Plus

Chairman of the Ulema Council of Tajikistan Will Attend VII Congress of Leaders of World and Traditional Religions

Chairman of the Ulema Council of the Islamic Center of Tajikistan Saidmukarram Abdukodirzoda will take part in the VII Congress of Leaders of World and Traditional Religions.

The congress will be held from September 15 through September 16 in Kazakh capital, Nursultan, under the title “The role of leaders of world and traditional religions in the socio-spiritual development of mankind in the post-pandemic period.”

Abdukodirzoda will deliver speech in Arabic on the theme “The contribution of religious leaders to the promotion of world dialogue and peace, the fight against extremism, radicalism and terrorism, especially on a religious basis.”

Hundreds of representatives from 50 countries are expected to take part and deliver speech at the congress.

According to Kazakh media, the congress is also expected to be attended by Pope Francis, Supreme Imam of Al-Azhar (Egypt) Sheikh Ahmed at-Tayyib and other spiritual leaders.

Following the congress, participants will adopt a declaration on strengthening ties between civilizations and religions, as well as on topical problems of the world community.

Source: National information agency of Tajikistan

Ukraine War Overshadows SCO Summit in Uzbekistan

TASHKENT — Excitement is building in Uzbekistan ahead of this week’s Shanghai Cooperation Organization meeting, where Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping will be the most prominent among more than a dozen world leaders visiting the Central Asian nation.

“The world is coming to Samarkand” has been the theme of the preparations for the annual meeting, to be hosted by the group’s current chairman, Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev.

“All SCO member states are our closest neighbors, friends and strategic partners,” he said in a prepared statement ahead of the summit.

Mirziyoyev, who believes that Samarkand, the medieval capital of the empire of Uzbekistan’s national hero Amir Temur, will be a dramatic backdrop for the gathering of leaders from eight SCO member and three observer states alongside several dialogue partner countries.

Putin and Xi, who are expected to meet one-on-one on the sidelines of the two-day event, will be joined by leaders from India, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan and Tajikistan.

Leaders from the SCO observer nations — Belarus, Iran and Mongolia — are also expected at the September 15-16 summit, with the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey and Turkmenistan invited as special guests. Afghanistan’s future in the group is not certain because of the Taliban takeover.

The SCO was originally a Chinese vehicle, founded as the “Shanghai Five” to help settle lingering border disputes. Today, its member states include more than 3.5 billion people. Mirziyoyev aims to boost its unity and impact. “After a three-year pandemic that has caused serious disruption in trade, economic and industrial ties, the countries and peoples of the SCO need to communicate directly,” he said Monday in Tashkent.

But Evan Feigenbaum, vice president at the Carnegie Endowment in Washington and a former deputy assistant secretary of state, says that unity has been elusive.

“The group struggles to tackle core security issues because it includes longtime antagonists like India and Pakistan. And it has struggled to drive regional economic integration because it is neither a trade pact nor an investment vehicle and its members often disagree about specific infrastructure and development schemes,” he told VOA.

The biggest challenge to Uzbekistan’s big summit lies to the west—in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Some SCO members like Kazakhstan have publicly signaled their discomfort with Russia’s war.

Feigenbaum noted that while China has “fostered a strategic entente with Moscow” to counter Washington, “it has tried to straddle on the war by leavening its diplomatic support for Russia with a policy of complying with most Western sanctions.”

In attending the SCO summit, Xi is making his first trip outside China in nearly three years. “If he abandons this ‘Beijing straddle’ and leans ever harder into Chinese support for Russia, he risks driving a wedge with Central Asian neighbors while injecting rancor into the group” instead of the “unity” Mirziyoyev wants.

Uzbekistan’s one-year SCO chairmanship “has fallen in a dynamic and fraught period when one global era comes to an end and another begins,” Feigenbaum said.

VOA’s conversations with Uzbek intellectuals and professionals reflect this excitement but also cynicism about the summit.

Javohir Kudratov, a doctor, believes that Uzbekistan seeks prestige, credibility and investment by staging such a grandiose event in its “Silk Road jewel city,” highlighting that SCO members generate a quarter of the world’s GDP.

“Millions within the bloc rightly want concrete results and benefits from this event. But we also realize that the summit looks more like a ‘chaykhana’ for the leaders of countries who don’t get along and who have not been out for a while,” says Kudratov.

Chaykhana is a Central Asian teahouse where men dally over a cup of tea, share traditional dishes like plov, and discuss current affairs. It’s not a place for solutions but can enable candid exchanges.

Feruza Azimova, a young researcher in Tashkent, agreed with Kudratov, adding that each guest will come with his list of grievances and proposals. “I’m not sure what we gain from this summit other than private discussions. I doubt those will translate into anything real that we can see and feel.”

Uzbekistan has built dozens of new structures in Samarkand for this summit, spending millions. It’s useful investment, say officials, since the city needs world class hotels, business centers and conference halls.

Uzbeks are also excited about the expected talks between the leaders of Russia and China, Azerbaijan and Armenia, Iran and Turkey.

“Let’s see whether we just get dry official statements,” said a Samarkand-based entrepreneur who has business interests in Turkey, Russia and China. Requesting anonymity, he pointed to deep corruption within the SCO, arguing that the bloc is still run by Moscow and Beijing, no matter how hard Uzbekistan has pushed for relevance by focusing on security, economy and climate.

“The SCO is strong if each of us is strong,” Mirziyoyev said in his Monday statement. “The ongoing armed conflicts in different parts of the world destabilize trade and investment flows, exacerbate the problems of ensuring food and energy security.”

“Global climate shocks, growing scarcity of natural and water resources, decline in biodiversity, spread of dangerous infectious diseases have exposed the vulnerability of our societies as never before.”

The SCO has no history of tackling these issues, although it has developed cooperative structures on, for example, counternarcotics.

Sharofiddin Tulaganov, a political commentator in Tashkent, told VOA that the world should be pragmatic about the summit.

“It’s an annual event hosted by a chair. While it is remarkable that Xi will attend because he has not been out in the international arena since the pandemic, and the Russian leader has not been traveling much abroad because of the war in Ukraine, we still don’t know what these presidents will discuss,” he said.

“I expect Beijing to act as calm as ever, without emotion, urging the SCO to be more effective but not necessarily pushing for it to compete with NATO and act against the West.”

Tulaganov sees India and Pakistan taking the same geostrategic line. “These countries don’t want the SCO to position itself as an anti-Western bloc. Tashkent shares that view, promoting a “Samarkand spirit” of peace, mutual trust, and respect.

“China and Turkey are the only states at the summit who can ask Putin to stop the war in Ukraine, but we don’t know how they do that. It’s a polarized world and Uzbekistan clearly does not want to be pushed around and pressured to choose a side.”

Since Russia, China, Belarus, and Iran are all under Western sanctions, they may express their resentments toward Washington and Brussels. But no expert VOA talked with expects Washington or Brussels to be angered at Uzbekistan.

“We know that Americans and Europeans understand the geopolitical predicament Uzbekistan and rest of Central Asia are in,” said Tulaganov.

Source: Voice of America

Tajikistan and WHO signed an agreement on financial and technical assistance

Minister of Health and Social Protection of Tajikistan Jamoliddin Abdullozoda and Director of the WHO Regional Office for Europe Hans Kluge signed a new two-year cooperation agreement, the Ministry of Health of the Republic reports.

The signing of the agreement took place within the framework of the 72nd session of the WHO Regional Committee for Europe, which is taking place in Tel Aviv (Israel) and will end on September 14.

According to the Ministry of Health of Tajikistan, the document includes “important goals and plans to strengthen the country's healthcare system, for the implementation of which WHO will provide technical and financial assistance”.

The amount of assistance is not specified.

Source: Asia-Plus

Death of a father and daughter in a traffic accident

On September 12, 2022, at approximately 06:50, the driver of the Opel-Astra car, Risboev Bahadur Sarkaboevich, born in 1974, a resident of Mastchoh district, while driving on the highway of Navbahor rural community of this district, was killed by the administration. the vehicle did not go out, went to the right side of the road and overturned.

As a result, the driver Risboev B.S. and his minor daughter Risboeva Gulsevara Bahadurovna, born in 2006, were seriously injured and died on the spot.

Other passengers in this car, his wife Risboeva Zuhro Abdumajidovna, born in 1978, and his son Risboev Asadbek Olimbekovich, born in 2003, received various physical injuries and were hospitalized.

The investigation into this situation is ongoing.

Source: Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Tajikistan

Boxer Muhammadkhuja Yakubov inflicted a crushing defeat on an opponent from Argentina

Tajik boxer Muhammadkhuja Yakubov in the RCC Boxing Promotions tournament in Chelyabinsk won a confident victory over Argentinean Daniel Cordoba.

The fight was scheduled for eight rounds.

«Yakubov confidently started the fight, reports the sports.ru portal. - In the first round, Muhammadhuja constantly crushed the opponent, worked from a distance, and in the second, he almost knocked down Cordoba».

As noted, at the end of the second three-minute period, Yakubov pinned the opponent at the ropes and made a huge number of blows, but Carlos Daniel managed to survive until the gong.

Yakubov continued to beat the opponent in both the third and fourth rounds. The Tajik boxer completely controlled the situation in the ring, brought his punches to the target and constantly crushed the Argentine. In the fifth round, Yakubov knocked down Cordoba: the Argentine got down on one knee, then managed to continue the fight. Yakubov continued to attack, and in the final rounds the Argentine literally survived. He held out until the final gong, after which the obvious and unanimous decision of the judges was announced - Muhammad Yakubov won.

Source: Asia-Plus