23rd April 2013
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
Yesterday, 22 April, was Earth Day – since 1970 a day of events around the world to “acknowledge the amazing planet we call home and take action to protect it”. I spoke in the morning to students at the National University of Uzbekistan about the British government’s response, domestically and internationally, to the challenges of […]
Read more on Earth Day | Reply
5th April 2013
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
I was very pleased to see that the Arms Trade Treaty was approved by the UN General Assembly on Tuesday. This is the culmination of getting on for ten years of work by nations committed to better control of the international arms trade, and by NGOs and religious groups who have campaigned relentlessly to push […]
Read more on Arms Trade Treaty was approved by the UN General Assembly on Tuesday | Reply
28th March 2013
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
Last week was mid-term break at my daughter’s school, so I took some time off to go with my family to Khiva and Nukus. The big attraction in Nukus was the museum containing works from the collection of Igor Savitsky. It’s no longer unknown, since the 2010 film “Desert of Forbidden Art”. Apparently large numbers […]
Read more on Two Museums in Karakalpakstan | Reply (4)
7th March 2013
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
This Friday, 8 March, is International Women’s Day. The Embassy will be closed for the holiday, so we are celebrating today, on Thursday 7 March. The men in the Embassy are bringing flowers and cake for the women. I’ve been out negotiating the purchase of eighteen bouquets (as with St Valentine’s Day, it seems the […]
Read more on International Women’s Day | Reply
25th February 2013
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
One of the things all foreigners in Uzbekistan learn about is the local bread – non, or lipyoshka in Russian. There are regional variations, but all on the same theme of a circle of bread with a crisp, flattened centre and a thick rim. Bread, we are told, is an inescapable part of every meal: […]
Read more on Bread | Reply (5)
11th February 2013
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
On Friday I met two officials of Uzbekistan’s parliament who were about to set off to London to spend a week there learning about Britain’s parliament and how it is run. They will meet the clerks who keep the work of Parliament running smoothly and support the work of its committees as they examine legislation […]
Read more on Parliament | Reply
16th January 2013
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
I spent last Thursday and Friday as a tourist in Samarkand with my daughter, who has been staying with us for the holidays. This is my second visit since arriving as Ambassador in Tashkent. The first was short and official, taking in British businesses and the city Hokimiat and Chamber of Commerce: useful and important, […]
Read more on Samarkand | Reply (4)
31st December 2012
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
On the day of the first heavy snow in Tashkent, I went out to the former Abdul Kassim Medressah, which now houses artisans’ workshops and shops selling craft work from around Uzbekistan. The city looks very different under a fresh coating of snow. The Medressah is an attractively simple building from the early nineteenth century. […]
Read more on Amid the Winter’s Snow | Reply (2)
13th December 2012
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
On Monday evening I attended a concert at the Tashkent Conservatoire by the Conservatoire Students’ Symphony Orchestra and Chorus. It was an excellent concert, with a series of show-pieces to show off the students’ skills. I always enjoy hearing young orchestras and choirs performing at this sort of level. They tend to have a special […]
Read more on A European concert | Reply
3rd December 2012
Tashkent, Uzbekistan
This week is English Week in Tashkent, with a series of events organised by the British Council with the Ministries of Public and Higher Education and other partners. I attended the opening of an annual conference organised by the Uzbek Teachers of English Association (UzTEA) that brought together English teachers from across Uzbekistan. They were […]
Read more on Through the Language Glass | Reply