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Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty broadcasts in 28 languages. Most of our programs are available on FM and medium-wave frequencies of local radio stations in the countries of our broadcast area. If you are having problems listening to programs on the internet, please read our technical help document.
Moscow's once-booming real-estate market is in a state of crisis, and the signs are everywhere.
Ukrainians are marking the 75th anniversary of the 1932-33 famine that killed millions of their countrymen. In this audio slide show, two survivors remember details of one of the darkest chapters in their country's history.
In November 2008, Ukrainians marked the 75th anniversary of the 1932-33 famine that killed millions of their countrymen. In this audio slide show, two survivors remember details of one of the darkest chapters in their country's history.
Every Thursday at dusk, members of one of Iran's most beleaguered religious minorities gather at Tehran's railway station. With anxious, teary eyes, they are there to see off relatives and fellow Baha'is who have decided to pull up stakes forever and take the 8 p.m. train to a new life in Turkey and beyond.
A slide show of images from the aftermath of the brutal crackdown on protesters in Andijon, Uzbekistan, in 2005.
RFE/RL Georgian Service correspondent Koba Liklikadze was in the Georgian town of Gori, about 30 kilometers from the border of South Ossetia, as Russian bombs fell on civilian districts. He spoke with local residents fleeing the bombing and captured some scenes of devastation on camera. Click below for a multimedia slideshow from the scene:
Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic, captured by Serbian authorities after evading justice for more than a decade, is regarded as the mastermind of the worst atrocities in Europe since World War II. This photo gallery shows the war crimes suspect's devastating legacy in Bosnia.
For years, abandoned train cars have served as makeshift homes for hundreds of Azerbaijanis displaced by the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
With a mixture of grief and anger, survivors of the Beslan school hostage massacre prepared to mark the third anniversary of the tragedy.
Prague's picturesque Petrin Hill becomes the site of a unique theater performance in the summer of 2007.
Laughs echo across a dusty Kabul hilltop as children celebrate International Day of Peace by flying blue paper kites decorated with white doves.
A rare look inside Iran's infamous Evin prison, believed to hold hundreds of political prisoners as well as regular inmates.
Ukrainians vote in a new parliament on September 30, 2007, after President Viktor Yushchenko dissolves parliament and orders new elections
Hundreds of Tehran University students demonstrated against Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad as he gave a speech on October 8, 2007.
The success of the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917 ushered in a brief period of artistic innovation that projected the optimism of the time.
Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili on November 7, 2007, imposed a 15-day state of emergency following antigovernment protests.
A week before Russia's December 2, 2007, parliamentary polls, participants in 'Marches Of Dissent' find themselves on the wrong side of the law.
Voters chose from 11 parties in Russia's December 2, 2007, parliamentary elections, but the pro-presidential Unified Russia party ruled the day.
Lawmakers say they have a plan to safeguard the country's youth, starting with curfews, a Halloween ban, and a lot fewer nose rings. This photo gallery shows the Russian youth targeted by the proposed measures -- and those considered to be beyond help.
Georgians came out en masse in January 2008 to vote in an early presidential poll called after a crackdown following antigovernment protests.
Ahead of Serbia's presidential poll on January 20, 2008, Belgrade residents explain why the Kosovo issue is such an emotional one for Serbs.
Kosovo celebrates after declaring its independence from Serbia on February 18, 2008.
An explosion at the Chornobyl (also Chernobyl) nuclear power plant on April 26, 1986, sent radiation spewing across Ukraine, Belarus, and other parts of Europe in what become known as the worst civilian nuclear disaster in history. Dozens of people died in the initial cleanup and many thousands suffered health problems as a result of radiation, but the final health fallout is unknown.