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Multimedia / Video Archive

RFE/RL's Videos Of The Year

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December 30, 2009
The videos produced by RFE/RL in 2009 covered a range of subjects from corruption and catastrophes to celebrations and success against impossible odds. Here are five of the top videos that show life in our broadcast region and the hopes and hardships of the people who live there.
December 2009

Video Breaking The Silence On Stalin's Crimes

Few people in the former Soviet countries today speak about Josef Stalin’s Great Purge. But after years of silence, 82-year-old Bubura Kydyralieva decided to reveal her family’s story about the executions of scores of Kyrgyz victims in 1938.

Video Champions In A War-Torn Country

Iraq's wheelchair basketball team is a regional powerhouse in its sport. Some of the athletes suffered injuries as the result of years of conflict in their country, but the players are the victors on another battlefield.

Video Belgrade-Sarajevo Train Link Resumes

The Olympic Express was once the pride of the Yugoslav railways, but the wars of the 1990s brought the train to a halt. Now the route is operating again, but the shabby train cars and lack of passengers underline the toll of the past two decades.

Video Vote Fraud In Azeri Municipal Elections?

Caught on film: A reporter from RFE/RL's Azerbaijani Service visits two polling stations during the municipal elections in Azerbaijan and finds the same group of women and a man voting at both places.

Video Female Kyrgyz Police In Anticorruption Drive

Kyrgyzstan suffers from a high rate of fatal road accidents and widespread corruption. At the suggestion of President Kurmanbek Bakiev, the Interior Ministry has created a special unit of female traffic officers to crack down on both problems at once.

Video Economy Trumps Climate Change In Armenia

In places like Armenia, the dire warnings of advocates who urge action on climate change don't get much attention.

Video Being Disabled In Armenia

Disabled people are an invisible minority in Armenia, rarely seen on the streets or in public. Many feel that can't get the prized disability certification that allows them to receive government benefits without a bribe to an official.

Video Tajik Singer Built Prosthesis, New Life

Khoja Abdulaziz Ashurov grew up in a small Tajik village where there was no assistance for the disabled, but he has refused to let his disability stand in his way. After building his own prosthetic leg, he began a career in the capital, Dushanbe.

Video Help For The Handicapped In Prague

As one of Europe’s top tourist destinations, Prague has made a special effort to welcome visitors with disabilities. Disabled tourists encounter the same facilities in the Czech capital that exist in any Western European city.

Video Dancing With A Disability

Olena Tchinka suffered serious injuries in an accident, but she has never stopped dancing. With the help of prosthetics and a wheelchair, she runs a dance studio, performs in dance competitions, and inspires the students who attend her school.

Video Flash Analysis - Obama's New AfPak Strategy

RFE/RL Radio Free Afghanistan Director Akbar Ayazi outlines Afghan public sentiment over U.S. President Barack Obama's new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan.

November 2009

Video In Tbilisi, A Neighborhood For The Blind

The neighborhood of Ponichala in Tbilisi is home to many of the city's blind residents. Many live in poverty and suffer from a sense of isolation. But some blind residents enjoy the benefits of living near one another and sharing their troubles.

Video Tajik Women Prisoners Freed By Amnesty

Tajikistan has granted an amnesty to dozens of female prisoners convicted on drug charges. Some of the women had turned to trafficking because of poverty and desperation -- the conditions that still await them after their release.

Video Czechs Commemorate The 1989 Velvet Revolution

Thousands of people marched through the center of Prague on November 17, retracing the steps of the 1989 student march that kicked off Czechoslovakia's Velvet Revolution.

Video Life On The German Border

Horst and Rita Zinke lived for more than 40 years in the "restricted zone," a heavily guarded area that ran along East Germany's border with the West.

October 2009

Video In Istanbul, A Former Soviet Enclave

The Laleli market in Istanbul, Turkey is a place were historical hatreds and animosities don't seem to matter. Immigrants from all over the former Soviet Union come here to work and enjoy each other's company.

Video After The Flood

On August 17, a massive blast destroyed a turbine at the Sayano-Shushenskaya power station in Siberia, causing major flooding and killing 75 people. A government report found that years of bad decisions and neglect set the stage for the accident.

Video Interview: Gorbachev Criticizes Russia's Ruling United Russia Party

In an exclusive interview with RFE/RL's Russia Service, former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev criticized the pro-Kremlin United Russia party, which he blamed for fraud in regional elections earlier this month. Widespread allegations of serious violations prompted general outrage and calls to reform the country's authoritarian political system. Gorbachev also discussed U.S. President Barack Obama's Nobel Peace Prize and his own role in history.

Video Interview: Vaclav Havel On U.S. Relations With Central Europe

Former Czech President Vaclav Havel talks in a wide-ranging RFE/RL interview about what he expects to hear from U.S. Vice President Joe Biden when he visits the Czech Republic this week. The man many credit with leading Czechoslovakia's Velvet Revolution also talks about Russia and NATO enlargement. The interview was conducted by RFE/RL correspondents Jeremy Bransten and Kathleen Moore.

Video Havel Expects Biden To Reassure Central Europe On Ties

As U.S. Vice President Joe Biden begins his travels through central Europe, arguably the region's loudest voice for strong trans-Atlantic ties is up-front about what he expects to hear: a clear vision of American policy for the region. RFE/RL talks with Vaclav Havel, the former dissident credited with leading the revolution that toppled communism in Czechoslovakia.

Video CSTO Reaction Forces exercises (October)

RFE/RL's Kazakh Service was on hand to film military exercises this week by the CSTO Collective Operational Reaction Forces.

Video Flash Analysis -- Hillary Clinton In Kazan

RFE/RL Tatar-Bashkir Service Director Rim Gilfanov discusses reasons why U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited the city of Kazan in Tatarstan.

Video Video: Nagorno-Karabakh -- Dreams Of Youth

For an entire generation of young Armenians, Nagorno-Karabakh is the only home they've ever known. The region split from Azerbaijan in a brutal conflict following the breakup of the Soviet Union. Born in war and raised in an uneasy peace, this generation is reaching adulthood and could see their world change yet again. Momentum is building for a final settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan that could mean an end to Nagorno-Karabakh's isolation. It could also mean the return large numbers of Azerbaijanis displaced by the war. RFE/RL's Brian Whitmore traveled to the enclave and spoke to young people about their views on the conflict and their hopes for the future.

September 2009

Video Celebrating Rosh Hashana -- And Boosting The Local Economy -- In Ukraine

Every Rosh Hashana, thousands of Jewish pilgrims come to the Ukrainian town of Uman to dance for joy. Why? Because a famous Jewish rabbi asked them to. Although Rabbi Nachman died almost 200 years ago, they still come to pay their respects, and lift the economy of Uman at the same time. Produced by Iryna Tuz of RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service in Uman.

Video Behind Preparations For Eid Al-Fitr In Tajikistan

The three-day celebration of Eid al-Fitr, marking the end of Ramadan, has come to an end. Many Muslim families took part in great feasts to break the month of fasting. Gifts are given to children, and for many, it is a holiday filled with great joy. But hard economic times are making it difficult for parents afford the traditional meal and keep smiles on children's faces. In Dushanbe, Sayida Abdughaffor showed us the challenges that she faced in putting the festivities together.

Video Kazakhstan's 'Atomic Lake'

In the 1960s, the Soviet Union pursued its own version of the ill-fated U.S. "Operation Plowshare," in which scientists hoped to harness the atom for major infrastructure and other types of projects. Soviet officials used a peaceful nuclear explosion to blast out a lake in Kazakhstan. Far from being a benefit to the local residents, as RFE/RL's Kazakh Service reports, many fear that the so-called atomic lake has contaminated their environment.

Video Inside Ukraine's Security Service Archives

Volodymyr Perebyinis was sent to a Soviet labor camp more than 60 years ago on charges of anticommunist agitation. Today, his relatives have turned to the archives of the Ukrainian Security Service to shed light on their family history -- and on the repression of the Soviet era.

Video Migrant Express Part 7: The Journey's End

In the final part of the series, the migrants finally arrive in Moscow after four days of travel across Central Asia. Some have jobs lined up already, but for others, only uncertainty awaits.

Video Migrant Express Part 6: 'Friendship Between Peoples'

In the sixth segment, migrants on their way to Moscow debate the legacy of Tajikistan's civil war of the 1990s, and defend their right to work in Russia.

Video Migrant Express Part 5: Crossing Uzbekistan

In the fifth segment, the Dushanbe-Moscow train transits ancient Uzbek cities as Gulya, a chef and mother of four, describes the life and work waiting for her in Russia.

Video Migrant Express Part 4: Welcome To Turkmenistan

In the fourth part of the series, the train crosses into Turkmenistan, and the RFE/RL correspondents narrowly escape with their footage after Turkmen police suspect them of spying.

Video Migrant Express Part 3: Stuck At The Border

In the third part, the migrants aboard the Dushanbe-Moscow train wait through hours of drug inspections at the Uzbek border, but that doesn't stop them from enjoying a little music and dance.

Video Migrant Express Part 2: Boarding Time

In the second segment, 28-year-old farmer Umed says good-bye to his family in Tajikistan before boarding the train to Russia.

Video Migrant Express Part 1: Good-bye, Dushanbe

In the first part of the series, we meet judo instructor Muhammed Ali and schoolteacher Jamshed Nabiev, who bid farewell to their families and friends in Dushanbe before they board the train.

August 2009

Visiting The Soviet Union's Nuclear Testing Grounds

It was 60 years ago, on August 29, 1949, that the Soviet Union first tested its nuclear arsenal. In the first of many tests, an atomic bomb was detonated at the Semipalatinsk test site, which would become a main hub of the arms race over the next 40 years. On the anniversary of the first test, Yermek Boltayev and Regina Kozhikova of RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service visited the former nuclear site in East Kazakhstan.

Video Azerbaijani Interrogated Over Eurovision Vote

Rovshan Nasirli, a 25-year-old Azerbaijani, was called to the National Security Ministry on August 12 to explain why he voted for an Armenian song in the televised Eurovision Song Contest in May. The officials said Nasirli's vote for Armenia -- Azerbaijan's long-standing rival -- was a matter of national security, and asked him for a written explanation before releasing him. RFE/RL's Ulviyya Asadzade spoke to Nasirli about his experience.

Video Highlights From The Afghan Presidential Debate

On August 16, Afghan voters tuned in to watch and hear a debate between three of the four leading presidential candidates, including President Hamid Karzai. The event on Afghan state television, just days before the August 20 election, also featured former Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani and former Planning Minister Ramazan Bashardost. Former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah did not take part. Here are some of the highlights from the debate.

Video Revisiting Kadyrov's Grozny

Large, Big Brother-like pictures of Chechnya's stocky 32-year-old leader hang everywhere, along with signs of praise and thanks. But as RFE/RL correspondent Gregory Feifer discovered during an August 2009 visit to interview Ramzan Kadyrov, there are signs of a deep fear beneath the veneer of devoted optimism.

Video Chechen Leader Denies Blame For Killings, Accuses West Of Violence

Prominent Russian human rights activist Natalya Estemirova was abducted outside her home in the Chechen capital, Grozny, last month. Hours later, her body was discovered in a forest in the neighboring region of Ingushetia. Estemirova, who'd investigated abductions, torture and other rights abuses in Chechnya, had been shot in the head. Estemirova's colleagues blame Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov. They accuse him of fostering an atmosphere of impunity in which the abductions and killings of his critics take place. But in an exclusive interview with RFE/RL, Kadyrov denies the accusations. He says his only concern is the welfare of Chechnya's residents, and blames the West for spreading lies about him.

Video Chronology Of The Russia-Georgia Conflict

One year after war broke out between Russia and Georgia, many issues remain unresolved. South Ossetia and the breakaway region of Abkhazia unilaterally declared independence, tens of thousands of Georgians are still displaced, and political tensions between Tbilisi and Moscow are simmering. Here is a look back at the key events in the conflict over the past 12 months.

Video Covering The Russia-Georgia War

RFE/RL Georgian Service correspondent Koba Liklikadze was on the front lines at the start of the Russia-Georgia conflict, reporting from the breakaway region of South Ossetia. One year after the conflict, Liklikadze recalls the challenges of reporting from the battlefield.

July 2009

Video RFE/RL Flash Analysis: Is Bakiev A Democrat?

RFE/RL correspondent Bruce Pannier explains why critics say Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiev has failed to live up to his democratic promises.

Video Zoom In: Pedaling To Economic Recovery

Begijon Pirov, a retired driver in Tajikistan, has found an innovative way to supplement his pension during lean times.

Video Ready For Peace In Nagorno-Karabakh?

The presidents of Armenian and Azerbaijani again failed to make a breakthrough on the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh when they met in Moscow on July 17, and a peace deal seems as elusive as ever. Ahead of the meeting, RFE/RL correspondents asked Azerbaijanis and Armenians whether they are ready for a possible peace agreement.

Video A Kyrgyz Circus Troupe's Life On The Road

Life on the road isn't easy for the Eshimbekovs, a family of Kyrgyz circus performers. Work is scarce, their performances are physically demanding, and traveling means being apart from loved ones back home. But they take great pride in their craft, and in being part of the long tradition of Kyrgyz horsemanship.

June 2009

Video Hard-Scrabble Life In A Kazakh Village

Villagers in Koshkarata, Kazakhstan, live without telephones, running water, or a local hospital. Many would like to see more assistance from local authorities, but have little hope that help will come.

Video Lenin Stands Firm In Kyiv

At least a dozen statues of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin remain standing in the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv. Some residents see them as simple historical monuments; others have tried to take down the statues with their own hands. But as disputes continue at the municipal and national levels, Lenin isn't likely to disappear from the city any time soon.

Video In Serbia, Racism Rises To The Surface

Serbia’s Roma minority has been the target of violent attacks and other hate crimes in recent years. But some Roma leaders say that hidden, institutionalized racism presents an even greater danger.

Video Lilac Season In Ukraine

The lilacs at the Gryshko Botanical Garden in Kyiv are a hallmark of the Ukrainian capital. In mid-May, at the peak of lilac season, hundreds of thousands of people flock to see the flowers in full bloom.

Video Aliyev Personality Cult Is Carpet-Maker’s Boon

Fatima Sadigova’s carpet business specializes in portraits of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and his family – and the expensive carpets are selling fast. Their popularity confirms that many Azeris remain devoted to the dynasty founded by former President Heidar Aliyev, the current president’s father.

Video RFE/RL's Briefing: Challenging Ahmadinejad

With Iran's presidential election approaching, incumbent Mahmud Ahmadinejad is under fire. RFE/RL's Radio Farda correspondent Mehrdad Mirdamadi says all three of his main opponents have more authority in the Islamic republic and will be able to stand up to the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in changing policy in Iran.

May 2009

Video Young And Homeless In Almaty

In Almaty, as in many cities, there are homeless children who have fled abusive families or other domestic problems to fend for themselves on the streets. On the eve of International Children's Day, Yermek Boltayev of RFE/RL's Kazakh Service got to know one such teenager, 16-year-old Sava.

Video RFE/RL Briefing: Iran's Presidential Options

With a little more than two weeks to go before Iranians go to the polls to pick a president, RFE/RL correspondent Golnaz Esfandiari sketches the candidates and outlines the political landscape. She says the vote represents a marked change from four years ago, when reformists organized a boycott and a little-known former Tehran mayor rode populist pledges to victory. And just as was the case ahead of the 2005 balloting, the outcome is difficult to predict.

Video RFE/RL Talks With U.S. General David Petraeus

In an exclusive and wide-ranging interview with RFE/RL, the head of U.S. Central Command talks about Guantanamo and "enhanced interrogation techniques," a looming deadline in Iraq, and cutting off and combating militant Islamist extremists. He also looks at successes and setbacks in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the region, and highlights the need for international forces to keep Afghan civilian casualties "to an absolute minimum."

Video Eurovision: From Pop To Politics

The finals of the Eurovision Song Contest take place on May 16, with pop singers from across Europe competing for votes from international viewers. The contest is one of the longest-running television shows and draws millions of viewers around the world. It also provokes controversy and accusations of political maneuvering.

Video Iran's Child Offenders On Death Row

On May 1, Iran executed a 23-year-old woman, Delara Darabi, for a crime committed when she was a minor. Darabi is one of scores of juvenile offenders facing execution in the Islamic Republic. RFE/RL's Radio Farda has been provided with a video that documents the suffering of Iran’s child offenders, co-produced by one of Iran’s leading advocates against child execution, Mohammad Mostafaei. In this edited version of the video, the filmmakers talk to juvenile offenders on death row, as their parents and advocates frantically beg the victims' family for forgiveness, the only way their lives can be spared.

April 2009

Video A New Breed Of Russian Cadet

At the Moscow State Girls Boarding School, young women learn hand-to-hand combat, target shooting, and military discipline – and all in time to change into ball gowns for an evening dance with the male cadets across the street. RFE/RL’s Moscow bureau visited the school to learn what goes into training a new generation of Russian officers.

Video Barred From The Border

Residents of the Armenian village of Margara can't trade with their neighbors across the border in Turkey, and can't even get to their farmland in the restricted border zone. But as speculation grows about the possibility of the border reopening, the villagers are expressing hope for new opportunities.

Video Obama In Prague - Protesters And Supporters

As Barack Obama spoke in Prague, opponents of plans for a U.S. radar base in the Czech Republic turned out to voice their dissent. But the overall reaction to the new U.S. president was overwhelmingly positive.

Video Hillary Clinton Speaks To Radio Free Afghanistan

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, during a visit to Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s Prague headquarters, sat down for an exclusive interview with Radio Free Afghanistan’s Director Akbar Ayazi, during which she answered questions from listeners in Afghanistan.

Video NATO: Sixty Years In Eight Minutes

Sixty years ago in Washington, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization was born. After World War II, fears of Soviet attack in Europe convinced Western leaders of the pressing need for a defensive military alliance. The world has changed dramatically since 1949, and NATO had to adapt constantly to deal with new and unanticipated global threats. RFE/RL looks at the dramatic and difficult moments in NATO history with rarely seen NATO archive films and exclusive interviews with former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and U.S. Ambassador to NATO Kurt Volker.

March 2009

Video From Azerbaijan To India, Spring Festival Norouz Begins

Across much of the non-Arab Muslim world, people are celebrating Norouz, the pre-Islamic festival that marks arrival of spring and the beginning of the new year.

Video Armenia’s 'Black Tuesday' Causing Economic Havoc

On March 3, a day Armenians are calling "Black Tuesday," the U.S. dollar rose against the Armenian dram by more than 20 percent. The effects of the currency crisis have hit ordinary Armenians hard, and are likely to be felt for a long time to come.

February 2009

Video Flash Analysis -- Verdict In Politkovskaya Murder Case

A Russian court has found three defendants not guilty of charges of assisting in the murder of Anna Politkovskaya, an investigative journalist known for her criticism of the Kremlin. As Rinat Valiulin, the executive editor of RFE/RL's Moscow bureau, explains, the verdict is unlikely to provoke a strong reaction in Russia, and the investigation is not expected to continue.

Video Flash Analysis -- Obama Approves Afghanistan Troop Surge

In the first major military decision of his presidency, U.S. President Barack Obama is significantly strengthening the combat presence of U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

Video The Divided City Of Mitrovica

Kosovo is celebrating one year since its declaration of independence, but the change in status did little to heal the ethnic divisions in the northern town of Mitrovica. RFE/RL's associate director for visual media, Ricki Green, visited Mitrovica soon after Kosovo's declaration of sovereignty on February 17, 2008, to see how the town's ethnic Albanian and Serb communities were responding.

January 2009

Video Afghan Expectations For The New U.S. President

Afghan students and workers told RFE/RL about their hopes and expectations for the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama and his policy toward Afghanistan.

Vox Pop From National Mall

As a record crowd converged on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., to see Barack Obama sworn in as the 44th U.S. president on January 20, RFE/RL Associate Director for Visual Media Ricki Green talked to some of them about what made the occasion momentous in American history.

Video The Briefing: Russia-Ukraine Gas Dispute

RFE/RL energy correspondent Bruce Pannier discusses the ongoing gas dispute between Russia and Ukraine, which has also affected energy supplies to many countries in Western and Southeastern Europe.

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