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Kyrgyzstan struggles with deadly shortages of medicine

Kyrgyzstan struggles with deadly shortages of medicine
A man asks for donation for medicines in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. (AFP)
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Updated 30 July 2025

Kyrgyzstan struggles with deadly shortages of medicine

Kyrgyzstan struggles with deadly shortages of medicine
  • The five Central Asian countries are highly dependent on pharmaceutical imports and patients are often left to fend for themselves
  • Shortages, high prices and the poor quality of medicine affect many of the region’s 80 million inhabitants

BISHKEK: Like many people affected by serious illness in ex-Soviet Central Asia, Almagul Ibrayeva is having trouble finding medicine in her native Kyrgyzstan.
“Women are dying because of a lack of medicine,” Ibrayeva, who is in her 50s, told AFP.
In remission from breast cancer, Ibrayeva needs a hormone treatment called exemestane after having a mastectomy and her reproductive organs were removed.
She said she “often” faces difficulties.
“I order it from Turkiye or Moscow, where my daughter lives,” she said.
“There are many medicines that are simply unavailable here. The patient has to look themselves and buy them.”

Shortages, high prices and the poor quality of medicine affect many of the region’s 80 million inhabitants.
The five Central Asian countries are highly dependent on pharmaceutical imports and patients are often left to fend for themselves.
There are often cases of expired or adulterated medicine such as the cough syrup imported from India which killed 69 children in Uzbekistan in 2023.
The costs of high-quality medicine are often prohibitive.
“Some people sell their homes, their livestock, get into debt just to survive,” said Shairbu Saguynbayeva, a uterine cancer survivor.
She created a center called “Together to Live” in the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek which hosts women who have cancer, offering accommodation and help for treatment.
“Here they can get organized. When someone is receiving chemotherapy, they fall ill, not every loved one can handle it,” Saguynbayeva said.
Women at the center sew and sell traditional Kyrgyz ornaments — funding the treatment of 37 patients since 2019.
Saguynbayeva says she is grateful to the Kyrgyz state for “finally” starting to supply more medicine but says the quantity is still “meagre.”
One patient, Barakhat Saguyndykova, told AFP that she received “free anti-cancer medicine only three times between 2018 and 2025.”
At the National Oncology and Haematology Center, doctor Ulanbek Turgunbaev said that sourcing medicine was “a very serious problem for patients” even though medicine supply has increased.
He said the best way of reducing therapy costs was “early detection” of serious illnesses.

Material deficits and a shortage of 5,000 health professionals in Kyrgyzstan mean that the most urgent needs have to be addressed first.
President Sadyr Japarov has promised to eliminate corruption in the medical sector, which cost the health minister his job last winter.
While medicine factories have finally been opened, the situation in the short term remains complicated.
The Kyrgyz Chamber of Commerce and Industry said that “around 6,000 medicines could disappear from the market by 2026” because of the need to “re-register under the norms of the Eurasian Economic Union” — a gathering of former Soviet republics including Kyrgyzstan.
The government in 2023 created a state company called Kyrgyz Pharmacy which is supposed to centralize medicine requests and bring down prices, according to its head, Talant Sultanov.
But the organization has been under pressure because of a lack of results.
Sultanov said he hoped medicine prices could be lowered “by signing more long-term agreements with suppliers through purchases grouped on a regional basis” with other Central Asian countries.
Kyrgyz Pharmacy has promised steady supplies soon but many women in Bishkek are still waiting for medicine ordered through the company months ago.
Recently a mother of three “died simply because she did not receive her medicine in time,” Saguynbayeva said.
“It is better to save a mother than to build orphanages,” she said.


Estonia says 3 Russian fighter jets entered its airspace in ‘brazen’ incursion

Estonia says 3 Russian fighter jets entered its airspace in ‘brazen’ incursion
Updated 11 sec ago

Estonia says 3 Russian fighter jets entered its airspace in ‘brazen’ incursion

Estonia says 3 Russian fighter jets entered its airspace in ‘brazen’ incursion

Estonia summoned a Russian diplomat to protest after three Russian fighter aircraft entered its airspace without permission Friday and stayed there for 12 minutes, the Foreign Ministry said. It happened just over a week after NATO planes downed Russian drones over Poland and heightened fears that the war in Ukraine could spill over.
Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said Russia violated Estonian airspace four times this year “but today’s incursion, involving three fighter aircraft entering our airspace, is unprecedentedly brazen.”
Estonian Defense Minister Hanno Pevkur also said the government had decided “to start consultations among the allies” under NATO’s article 4, he wrote on X, after Russian jets “violated our airspace yet again.”
The North Atlantic Council, NATO’s principal political decision-making body, is due to convene early next week to discuss the incident in more detail, NATO spokesperson Allison Hart said Friday.
Article 4, the shortest of the NATO treaty’s 14 articles, states that: “The Parties will consult together whenever, in the opinion of any of them, the territorial integrity, political independence or security of any of the Parties is threatened.”
US President Donald Trump told reporters he will soon be briefed by aides on the reported incursion. “I don’t love it,” he said, adding, “I don’t like when that happens. It could be big trouble, but I’ll let you know later.”
Russian officials did not immediately comment.
European governments rattled
Russia’s violation of Poland’s airspace was the most serious cross-border incident into a NATO member country since the war in Ukraine began with Russia’s all-out invasion in February 2022. Other alliance countries have reported similar incursions and drone crashes on their territory.
The developments have increasingly rattled European governments as US-led efforts to stop the war in Ukraine have come to nothing.
The European Union’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas called Friday’s incursion “an extremely dangerous provocation” that “further escalates tensions in the region.”
“On our side, we see that we must show no weakness because weakness is something that invites Russia to do more,” she said. “They are increasingly more dangerous — not only to Ukraine, but also to all the countries around Russia.”
Estonia, along with fellow Baltic states Lithuania and Latvia and neighboring Poland, are staunch supporters of Ukraine.
Italian F-35 fighter jets respond to Russian incursion
The Russian MIG-31 fighters entered Estonian airspace in the area of Vaindloo Island, a small island located in the Gulf of Finland in the Baltic Sea, the Estonian military said in a separate statement.
The aircraft did not have flight plans and their transponders were turned off, the statement said, nor were the aircraft in two-way radio communication with Estonian air traffic services.
Italian Air Force F-35 fighter jets, currently deployed as part of the NATO Baltic Air Policing Mission, responded to the incident, according to the statement.
In a post on social media, Hart described the incident as “another example of reckless Russian behavior and NATO’s ability to respond.”
NATO fighter jets scramble hundreds of times most years to intercept aircraft, many of them Russian warplanes in northwest Europe flying too close to the airspace of its member countries, but it’s rarer for planes to cross the boundary.
Dozens of NATO jets are on round-the-clock alert across Europe to respond to incidents such as unannounced military flights or civilian planes losing communication with air traffic controllers.
Separately, Maj. Taavi Karotamm, spokesperson for the Estonian Defense Forces, told The Associated Press the Russian planes flew parallel to the Estonian border from east to west and did not head toward the capital, Tallinn.
Karotamm said the reason for the border violation is unknown, but added that it may have been to “shift the focus of NATO and its members on to defending itself, rather than bolstering Ukrainian defense.”
“Russia’s increasingly extensive testing of boundaries and growing aggressiveness must be met with a swift increase in political and economic pressure,” Tsakhna, the foreign minister, said.
The Russian charge d’affaires was summoned and given a protest note, a ministry statement said.
British spy chief says ‘no evidence’ Putin wants peace
Earlier Friday, the head of Britain’s foreign intelligence agency said there is “absolutely no evidence” that Russia’s President Vladimir Putin wants to negotiate peace in Ukraine.
Richard Moore, chief of the Secret Intelligence Service, or MI6 as it is more commonly known, said Putin was “stringing us along.”
“He seeks to impose his imperial will by all means at his disposal. But he cannot succeed,” Moore said. “Bluntly, Putin has bitten off more than he can chew. He thought he was going to win an easy victory. But he — and many others — underestimated the Ukrainians.”
The war has continued unabated in the three years since Russia invaded its neighbor. Ukraine has accepted proposals for a ceasefire and a summit meeting, but Moscow has demurred.
Trump said Thursday during a state visit to the United Kingdom that Putin ” has really let me down ” in peace efforts.
Putin is ‘mortgaging the future’ of Russia
Moore was speaking at the British consulate in Istanbul after five years as head of MI6. He leaves the post at the end of September. The agency will then get its first female chief.
Moore said the invasion had strengthened Ukrainian national identity and accelerated its westward trajectory, as well as pushing Sweden and Finland to join NATO.
“Putin has sought to convince the world that Russian victory is inevitable. But he lies. He lies to the world. He lies to his people. Perhaps he even lies to himself,” Moore told a news conference.
He said that Putin was “mortgaging his country’s future for his own personal legacy and a distorted version of history” and the war was “accelerating this decline.”
Analysts say Putin believes he can outlast the political commitment of Ukraine’s Western partners and win a protracted war of attrition by wearing down Ukraine’s smaller army with sheer weight of numbers.
Ukraine, meanwhile, is racing to expand its defense cooperation with other countries and secure billions of dollars of investment in its domestic weapons industry.
MI6 unveils dark web portal
The spy chief was speaking as MI6 unveiled a dark web portal to allow potential intelligence providers to contact the service. Dubbed ” Silent Courier,” the secure messaging platform aims to recruit new spies for the UK, including in Russia.
“To those men and women in Russia who have truths to share and the courage to share them, I invite you to contact MI6,” Moore said.
Not just Russians but “anyone, anywhere in the world” would be able to use the portal to offer sensitive information on terrorism or “hostile intelligence activity,” he said.


Trump sees progress on TikTok, says will visit China

Trump sees progress on TikTok, says will visit China
Updated 27 min ago

Trump sees progress on TikTok, says will visit China

Trump sees progress on TikTok, says will visit China

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump hailed Friday what he called progress with Chinese President Xi Jinping including on selling blockbuster app TikTok, and said he would visit the Asian power, which offered a more cautious assessment of their talks.
The leaders of the world’s two largest economies spoke by telephone for the second time since the return to the White House of Trump, who has tried to keep a lid on tensions despite his once virulent criticism of China.
The United States has forcefully sought to take out of Chinese hands TikTok, the social media platform hugely popular with young Americans that the Republican mogul has turned to himself to garner support.
Trump said that Xi “approved” the deal during the phone call but then said, “We have to get it signed.” China did not confirm any agreement.
“We’re going to have a very, very tight control,” Trump said. “There’s tremendous value with TikTok, and I’m a little prejudiced because I frankly did so well on it.”
He also said that Xi promised to work with the United States on ending the war in Ukraine, where China has offered crucial indirect support to Russia.
Trump earlier in a post on Truth Social said that he and Xi “made progress on many very important issues” including TikTok.
He said he would meet Xi on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum summit in South Korea starting at the end of next month and that he would travel to China next year.
Trump said Xi would also visit the United States at an unspecified time and that the two leaders would speak again by telephone.

China offered a sterner take on the talks.
“On the TikTok issue, Xi noted that China’s position is clear: the Chinese government respects the will of enterprises and welcomes them to conduct business negotiations based on market rules, to reach solutions that balance interests and comply with Chinese laws and regulations,” a statement said.
“China hopes the US side will provide an open, fair, and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese companies investing in the United States.”
It described the call as “frank and in-depth.”
The US Congress last year during Joe Biden’s presidency passed a law to force TikTok’s parent company ByteDance to sell its US operations for national security reasons or face the ban of the app.
US policymakers, including in Trump’s first term, have warned that China could use TikTok to mine data from Americans or exert influence on what they see on social media.
But Trump, an avid social media user, on Tuesday once again put off a ban of the app.
Investors reportedly being eyed to take over the app include Oracle, the tech firm owned by Larry Ellison, one of the world’s richest people.
Ellison is a supporter of Trump, meaning TikTok would be the latest media or social media app to come under the control or influence of the president.

Wendy Cutler, a former US trade official who is now senior vice president of the Asia Society Policy Institute, said that many details remained unclear including who would control the algorithm powering TikTok, and that many other irritants remained.
“Beijing is displaying a willingness to play hardball, and a need to get paid by Washington for any concessions it makes,” she said.
Trump while on the campaign trail bashed China relentlessly as an enemy but since returning to office has spoken of his strong relationship with Xi.
Both sides dramatically hiked tariffs against each other during a months-long dispute earlier this year, disrupting global supply chains.
Washington and Beijing reached a deal to reduce levies, which expires in November, with the United States imposing 30 percent duties on imports of Chinese goods and China hitting US products with a 10 percent tariff.
The phone talks come after Trump accused Xi of conspiring against the United States with a major military parade to mark the end of World War II that brought the leaders of Russia and North Korea.
The Chinese statement said Xi voiced appreciation to Trump for the US role in World War II.
 


Legislators questioning German emergency funding for PA salaries

Legislators questioning German emergency funding for PA salaries
Updated 19 September 2025

Legislators questioning German emergency funding for PA salaries

Legislators questioning German emergency funding for PA salaries
  • “The Authority is in an acute financial emergency,” a development ministry spokesperson told a regular government news conference on Friday, adding that the start of the school year had already been delayed for this reason

BERLIN: A €30 million ($35.24 million) one-time payment to the Palestinian Authority, which Germany had hoped to announce next week to coincide with European allies’ formal recognition of a Palestinian state, has been held up by skeptical legislators, Bild newspaper reported.
The payment is designed to ensure that salaries of teachers and healthcare workers can be paid at a time when Israel, which collects customs and import taxes on behalf of the Palestinian Authority that exercises limited self-rule in parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, is withholding funds. The PA says Israel has withheld around $3 billion.
The German emergency payment was agreed by Development Minister Reem Alabali Radovan during a Middle East trip earlier this month and is supported by both conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz and his Social Democrat deputy, Lars Klingbeil.
But Alexander Hoffmann, a conservative legislator, told Bild that members of his powerful parliamentary budget committee had concerns about the payment, which they must approve.
“We need more clarity,” he told Bild. “Humanitarian aid is important, but it has to be clear what projects are being funded ... Projects that endanger Israel’s security have to be clearly excluded.”
Officials said the money was likely still to be paid once legislators’ concerns had been addressed.
The German government says the funds are needed for salaries because of the dire economic situation in the Palestinian Authority area since the start of the Gaza war.
“The Authority is in an acute financial emergency,” a development ministry spokesperson told a regular government news conference on Friday, adding that the start of the school year had already been delayed for this reason.
“We must make sure the money doesn’t end up in the wrong hands,” said Juergen Hardt, a senior conservative and Foreign Affairs Committee Member. 
“But once that’s done, there are very good reasons for this aid.”
European countries, including Britain and France, are expected to announce at the UN General Assembly that they are recognizing a state of Palestine.
Germany is not expected to do so, and is a strong supporter of Israel out of a sense of historic obligation.
But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s announcement of plans to militarily occupy Gaza, almost two years after the deadly Hamas incursion that sparked the conflict, has brought about a hardening of Berlin’s tone.
Merz said during a visit to Madrid on Thursday that Israel’s actions in Gaza were not proportionate to its stated goals and indicated German openness to backing EU sanctions against Israel.

 


Trump administration proposes selling nearly $6 billion in weapons to Israel

Trump administration proposes selling nearly $6 billion in weapons to Israel
Updated 19 September 2025

Trump administration proposes selling nearly $6 billion in weapons to Israel

Trump administration proposes selling nearly $6 billion in weapons to Israel
  • It includes one $3.8 billion sale for 30 AH-64 Apache helicopters
  • The packages would not be delivered for two to three years or longer

WASHINGTON: The Trump administration has told Congress it plans to sell nearly $6 billion in weapons to Israel, a fresh surge of support for the US ally as it faces increasing isolation over its war in Gaza.
It includes one $3.8 billion sale for 30 AH-64 Apache helicopters, nearly doubling Israel’s current stocks, and a second $1.9 billion sale for 3,200 infantry assault vehicles for Israeli army, according to a US official and another person familiar with the proposal who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss plans that have not been made public.
The packages would not be delivered for two to three years or longer.
The huge sales come as US plans to broker an end to the nearly two-year war between Israel and Hamas have stalled and after Israel’s strike on Hamas leaders in Doha, Qatar, drew widespread condemnation among US allies in the Middle East.
The US has kept up its support despite growing international pressure on Israel and attempts from a growing number of US Senate Democrats to block the sale of offensive weapons to Israel.
The State Department declined to comment on the sales, which were first reported by The Wall Street Journal.
Israel has launched a new offensive, pressing forward with plans to take over Gaza City, as a professional organization of scholars studying genocide has said Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.
The U.K, which last year said it was suspending exports of some weapons to Israel out of concerns they could be used to violate international humanitarian laws, recently barred Israeli government officials from attending the country’s biggest arms fair.
Turkiye also said it was closing its airspace to Israeli government planes and any cargo of arms for the Israeli military, and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni in a speech condemned Israeli attacks on Gaza as disproportionate.
Trump said Friday that he plans to meet Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Washington next week, with plans to discuss the purchases of Boeing aircraft and a deal for F-16 fighter jets.
The Biden administration paused a shipment of 2,000-pound bombs to Israel over concerns about civilian casualties, but Trump lifted that hold when he took office in January.
The Trump administration has already approved about $12 billion in major military assistance to Israel this year. Most recently, the US in June approved a half-billion-dollar arms sale to Israel to resupply its military with bomb guidance kits for precision.


Family reunion joy for elderly British couple released in Afghanistan

Family reunion joy for elderly British couple released in Afghanistan
Updated 19 September 2025

Family reunion joy for elderly British couple released in Afghanistan

Family reunion joy for elderly British couple released in Afghanistan
  • The Qatari Embassy provided them with “critical support, including access to their doctor, delivery of medication and regular communication with their family,” the official said

DOHA: Barbie Reynolds, 76, and her husband Peter, 80, arrived in Qatar from Afghanistan into the arms of their daughter on Friday, after the British couple were freed from eight months in Taliban captivity.
Family members said they had been concerned for the health of the couple, who ran a charity in Afghanistan where they had lived for 18 years.
They were detained in February and freed after what an official with knowledge of the matter described as months of negotiations.

Sarah Entwistle, the daughter of British couple Peter and Barbie Reynolds, speaks to the press at the airport in Doha on September 19, 2025, ahead of the arrival of her parents after they were freed after several months of detention in Afghanistan. (AFP)

As they stepped off the plane in Doha, the couple waved to waiting relatives. 
Their daughter, Sarah Entwistle, ran toward her mother in tears, embracing her tightly.

This experience has reminded us of the power of diplomacy, empathy, and international cooperation.

Sarah Entwistle, The couple’s daughter

Before boarding the plane at Kabul airport, Barbie Reynolds said she and her husband would return “if we can,” adding that they were Afghan citizens.
Speaking to reporters before being reunited with her parents, Entwistle said the family was “forever grateful to the Qatari and British governments for standing with us during this difficult time.”
“Thank you for giving us our family back.”

Their son, Jonathan Reynolds, who is in the US, said the urgency of their release was critical: “Any longer would have been very detrimental to their health.”
The official with knowledge of the matter said the two were held separately throughout their detention. 
The Qatari Embassy provided them with “critical support, including access to their doctor, delivery of medication and regular communication with their family,” the official said.
Qatar has worked for the release of foreigners detained in Afghanistan, including helping to free at least three Americans this year.
Afghanistan’s Foreign Ministry posted on X that the couple had violated Afghan laws. 
It said Afghanistan “does not view issues related to citizens from a political or transactional perspective.”
Richard Lindsay, Britain’s special envoy to Afghanistan, said it was “obviously up to the authorities here to determine why they were detained, but we are very grateful that at least, today is a very great humanitarian day, that they will be reunited with their family.”
British media have reported that the couple ran projects in schools, staying on with the permission of Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers after the group returned to power in 2021.
An American, Faye Hall, who was arrested with them, was released in March.