Court Convicts Ukraine’s Former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko

The judge read out the guilty verdict, and Yulia Tymoshenko’s supporters shouted “Shame!”

This afternoon a court ruled that Tymoshenko, Ukraine’s former Prime Minister, had acted against the national interest when she signed a natural gas deal with Russia in 2009, leading to $190 million in damages to Ukraine’s state-run …

Burma Announces a Mass Prisoner Amnesty— Is Real Reform Next?

Squeezed between booming India and equally booming China, Burma has long felt like a time capsule of repressive rule, economic mismanagement and military dominance. But is change finally coming to this strategic crossroads? On Oct. 11, in a state T.V. announcement emblazoned with a “breaking news” banner, the country’s …

In a First for Poland, Ruling Government Gets Re-Elected


Donald Tusk, Poland’s center-right prime minister, won re-election on Sunday night, marking the first time since the fall of communism in 1989 that a ruling government has managed to keep its grip on power. With more than 99% of all votes counted, Tusk’s pro-market Civic Platform party claimed 39% of all votes, putting it nine points …

Watching Pro Cycling Through a Beijing Haze


His red leader’s jersey muted by smog, German Tony Martin won the inaugural Tour of Beijing Sunday, the first world class road cycling event in the Chinese capital since the 2008 Olympics. As a cycling fan, I stood by the road to watch both events, and yesterday it struck me how the city has changed over the past three years.

The …

Awkward Anniversary: China Marks the Centenary of the 1911 Revolution


In a country that claims five millennia of history, what’s a mere century? Oct. 10 marks the 100th anniversary of the start of China’s 1911 Xinhai Revolution, which ended 2,000 years of imperial rule. The fall of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) was precipitated by an uprising in the central Chinese city of Wuchang (now part of …

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