Recent
India-Kazakhstan Relations: Venturing Towards Greater Cooperation
By
Dr.
Lopamudra Bandyopadhyay
The recent
visit of Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh to the Central
Asian state of Kazakhstan in April 2011, took place against
the backdrop of a volatile regional setting. It was a trial
of the skill of Indian statecraft that New Delhi could embark
upon a sequestered bilateral relation with Astana impervious
of the regional turbulence prevalent in the area. Even if
the recent BRIC summit achieved materially little, apart from
the usual discourses on cooperation among BRICS countries,
the visit of Dr. Singh to Kazakhstan definitely did cement
a more meaningful relationship with that particular Central
Asian country. Seven agreements in various fields of economic
cooperation, from oil and gas to nuclear energy and allied
fields, not to mention agriculture-related activities, are
indeed a commendable record.
Detailed Paper
.........................................................................................................................................................................................................
The
Taliban’s Overtures into Central Asia: A Study
By
Dr.
Lopamudra Bandyopadhyay
Prominent concerns
regarding the revival of the Islamist doctrines within the
heart of Central Asia have existed since the independence
of the five Central Asian countries of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan, from Soviet authority
in the 1990s. The reasons for these concerns have been manifold.
The region borders the two crucial countries of the global
radical Islamic movement: Iran and Afghanistan. Although of
different and often antagonistic persuasions, these two countries
became the centre of Islamic radicalism in the 1990s. Further,
shortly after gaining independence from the Soviet Union,
Tajikistan was embroiled in a civil war that was between the
former communist elite and an opposition force containing
strong Islamic groups. This conflict led the four other regional
states to outlaw most opposition parties and movements in
their countries, halting the development of political opposition.
Detailed
Paper
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
Central
Asia: Of Ceremony and Substance
By
Ms. Sayantani Sen
The
Silk Road – an anonym of the nineteenth century was
apprehended as a link between two continents of civilizations
– the ‘Orient’ and the ‘Occident’.
The ancient trading route – the Silk Road has for long
fascinated the West. It has for more than a thousand years
conjured the mysterious and the exotic East. It has been the
conduit through which not only merchandise, but also ideas,
pilgrims, armies, people and religions moved, casting an influence
that went beyond the geographical compass of the region.
Detailed
Paper