Презентация выступления Максима Кузьмина, руководителя отдела дистанционного обучения и Алексея Бондаренко, специалиста по дистанционному обучению в компании Росгосстрах на выставке и конференции eLearnExpo Moscow 2009
Презентация выступления Максима Кузьмина, руководителя отдела дистанционного обучения и Алексея Бондаренко, специалиста по дистанционному обучению в компании Росгосстрах на выставке и конференции eLearnExpo Moscow 2009
The document summarizes IOM activities to enhance counter-trafficking cooperation in Central Asia through regional dialogues and national programs. Specifically:
1) IOM and Kazakhstan's General Prosecutor's Office hosted a regional counter-trafficking dialogue in Astana to strengthen cooperation among Central Asian law enforcement and NGOs working to combat trafficking and protect victims.
2) IOM Kazakhstan provided trainings to labor inspectors and migration police in three regions to increase awareness of trafficking and identification of foreign victims of labor trafficking.
3) A counter-trafficking hotline was launched in a village in Kyrgyzstan's Naryn Oblast to provide direct assistance to victims and identify 8 victims
SunHouse Team - DMC в замечательную высокогорную Киргизию! Welcome to Kyrgyzstan! We are SunHouse Team - Destination Management Company in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan
Презентация о деятельности Международной Организации по Миграции в Кыргызской Республике. Особое внимание в презентации уделено проблеме торговли людьми.
The document presents global press freedom rankings for 2013 published by Freedom House. It ranks 197 countries and territories based on their level of press freedom, categorizing them as Free, Partly Free, or Not Free. The Nordic countries had the most press freedom, while Turkmenistan, North Korea and Eritrea had the least. By region, Western Europe had the highest percentage of Free countries while the Middle East/North Africa had the highest percentage of Not Free.
The document discusses human rights practices in Kyrgyzstan and Central Asia. It covers Kyrgyzstan's 1993 constitution that prioritized individual interests, power usurpations from 1994 to 2003, civil society development, changes of government in 2005 and 2010 that did not improve human rights, issues of ochlocracy and nationalism, the need for judicial reform due to unfair courts, and the roles of freedom and social networks in discussing reforms. The author concludes by thanking the audience and providing contact information.