Бишкек, столица Кыргызстана, весной 2019 года. Снято с воздуха на квадрокоптер.
Кадры на видео, по порядку: 1. Площадь Ала-Тоо 2. Аллея Молодежи, Мэрия 3. Центральная мечеть им. Имама Сарахси 4. Микрорайон Джал 5. Микрорайон Асанбай 6. Проспект Чуй в районе ЦУМа и ГУМа 7. Храм святого равноапостольного Великого Князя Владимира на улице Токомбаева 8. Перекресток ул. Токомбаева и Жукеева-Пудовкина 9. Перекресток ул. Московская и Раззакова 10. ЖК Монблан на ул. Токомбаева 11. Кольцо на пересечении ул. Ахунбаева и Шабдан Баатыра 12. Бизнес центр Авангард-Стиль по ул. Токтогула 13. Башня с курантами на перекрестке проспекта Чуй и ул. Ю. Абдрахмана 14. Перекресток ул. Исанова и Токтогула 15. Торговый центр Плаза-2 (Чуй-Гоголя) 16. Гипермаркет Глобус на ул. Токомбаева 17. Бульвар Эркиндик в районе пересечения с проспектом Чуй
Музыка: Steffen Daum - New World
Автор всех фрагментов видео Михаил Дудин.
мой Инстаграм:
Security checkpoints on roads leading from capital to Osh
(15 Jun 2010) SHOTLIST
++DUSK SHOTS++
1. Wide of soldiers on top of APC (Armoured Personnel Carrier), children gathered around
2. Soldiers on top of APC silhouetted against sunset
3. Tilt up of soldier from gun to face
4. Soldier standing by the side of busy road
5. Various of soldiers at sunset
6. Truck driver looking at armed soldiers and police
7. Police stopping cars to be searched
8. Pan from gun to police in fatigues checking car
9. Close of face of woman looking at soldiers
10. Various of soldiers stopping people at barriers, checking documents
11. Wide of truck passing by
12. More of soldiers on APC at sunset
13. Various of village mosque at sunset
STORYLINE
Authorities set up checkpoints around the capital of Kyrgyzstan on Tuesday, as fears grew that the ethnic tension of the past week would spread to Bishkek.
Police stopped cars in the village of Sosnovka - 120 kilometres (75 miles) from the centre of Bishkek and the last village before the road to Osh, the country's second-largest city.
The southern part of Kyrgyzstan has been convulsed by days of rioting targeting minority Uzbeks.
Osh has been left in smouldering ruins and the tension has sent over 100-thousand Uzbeks fleeing for their lives to neighbouring Uzbekistan.
Overwhelmed by the deluge, Uzbekistan closed the border on Tuesday, leaving thousands of frightened refugees camped out on the Kyrgyz side or stranded behind barbed-wire fences in a no-man's land.
United Nations officials charged on Tuesday that organised gangs of masked fighters launched a series of coordinated attacks last week that sparked the wave of ethnic fighting in Kyrgyzstan.
According to the Red Cross, the rampages, arsons and murders have killed several hundred people.
Kyrgyzstan's interim President Roza Otunbayeva acknowledged on Tuesday the real death toll likely was several times higher than official count
of 179 people killed, because many victims were buried by their relatives the same day in keeping with the Muslim tradition.
Nearly 1,900 have been injured, the Health Ministry said.
Otunbayeva's government, which took over when former President Kurmanbek Bakiyev was ousted in an April uprising, has accused Bakiyev's family of instigating the violence to halt a June 27 referendum on a new constitution.
Ethnic Uzbeks have mostly backed the interim government, while many Kyrgyz in the south have supported Bakiyev.
Bakiyev's regime faced widespread allegations of corruption and his family members grew wealthy and power while he was president from 2005 to April this year.
The region around Osh is also known as a key hub for drugs flowing out of Afghanistan, and thus a hotbed for gangs and guns.
Deadly rampages in the country's south began late Thursday, as mobs of ethnic Kyrgyz torched homes and businesses of ethnic Uzbeks.
Many sections of Osh, a city of 250-thousand, were burned to the ground and the rampages spread into surrounding towns and villages.
Clashes continued in and around Osh on Tuesday.
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