April 4, 2005: Headlines: COS - Kyrgyzstan: Safety and Security of Volunteers: Peace Corps: Updated April 4: Peace Corps Volunteers in Kyrgyz Republic Are Safe, Returning to Sites and Serving Their Communities
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April 4, 2005: Headlines: COS - Kyrgyzstan: Safety and Security of Volunteers: Peace Corps: Updated April 4: Peace Corps Volunteers in Kyrgyz Republic Are Safe, Returning to Sites and Serving Their Communities
Updated April 4: Peace Corps Volunteers in Kyrgyz Republic Are Safe, Returning to Sites and Serving Their Communities
Updated April 4: Peace Corps Volunteers in Kyrgyz Republic Are Safe, Returning to Sites and Serving Their Communities
Peace Corps Volunteers in Kyrgyz Republic Are Safe, Returning to Sites and Serving Their Communities
Caption: Dogs fight in the final of the first championship for testing wolfhounds in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, April 3, 2005. The competition was planned for March 27 but was postponed due to a opposition coup in the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek following a wave of opposition protests fuelled by flawed parliamentary elections and underpinned by widespread poverty in the ex-Soviet state of five million. PICTURE TAKEN APRIL 3, 2005 REUTERS/Shamil Zhumatov
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 28, 2005 (Updated April 4, 2005) – Peace Corps Director Gaddi H. Vasquez announced that all volunteers serving in the Kyrgyz Republic are safe and are returning to their working and living sites. The volunteers were consolidated last week following recent political events in the country.
Although volunteers are returning to their host country communities and families, they are being asked not to travel to certain areas, unless they have obtained permission to travel for program and medical reasons.
"The Peace Corps staff in the Kyrgyz Republic conducted safety assessments and determined that it was safe for volunteers to return to their communities and re-engage in their important work," stated Director Vasquez.
The Peace Corps staff in the Kyrgyz Republic remains in constant communication with Peace Corps headquarters in Washington, D.C. Each Peace Corps program has an Emergency Action Plan specific to that country and developed in cooperation with Peace Corps Washington and the local U.S. Embassy. The plans are tested frequently and information is updated constantly. Volunteers are thoroughly trained in their roles and responsibilities, and posts are prepared for all emergencies.
Snaphots of the Situation on April 4 in Kyrgyzstan
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This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Kyrgyzstan; Safety and Security of Volunteers
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