TAJIKISTAN

təjĭkĭstänˈ, officially Republic of Tajikistan, republic (1995 est. pop. 6,155,000), 55,251 sq mi (143,100 sq km). It borders on China in the east, Afghanistan in the south, Kyrgyzstan in the north, and Uzbekistan in the west and northwest. Dushanbe is the capital and largest city. Administratively, the country is divided into two regions and one autonomous region (Badakhshan, the easternmost section of Tajikistan).

Land and People

Parts of the Pamir and Trans-Alai mt. systems are in the east, and the highest peaks in the country are Communism Peak, formerly Garmo Peak (24,590 ft/7,495 m), and Lenin Peak, formerly Kaufmann Peak (23,405 ft/7,134 m). The southeast is occupied by an arid plateau c.12,000 to 15,000 ft (3,660–4,570 m) high. The only extensive low districts are the Tajik section of the Fergana Valley in the north and the hot, dry Gissar and Vakhsh valleys in the southwest. The Amu Darya, Syr Darya, and Zeravshan are the chief rivers and are used for irrigation. Additional dams and irrigation projects, notably the Great Gissar Canal, have opened almost 1 million acres (400,000 hectares) of land to cultivation.

Most of Tajikistan's people are concentrated in its narrow, deep intermontane valleys. About 65% of the population is composed of Tajiks (also spelled Tadjiks or Tadzhiks), a Sunni Muslim people who speak a language virtually indistinguishable from Persian. The rest of the people are mainly Uzbeks (25%), Russians (3.5%), Tatars, Kyrgyz, and Ukrainians. In addition to the capital of Dushanbe, other important cities are Khudjand, Uroteppa, and Qŭrghonteppa.

Economy

Tajikistan's economy is dependent on agriculture and livestock raising; more that four fifths of the population is extremely poor. Mining and raw-materials processing, which were formerly important, have diminished since the economic collapse in the 1990s, after Soviet rule ended and civil war began. The lowlands specialize in the cultivation of cotton, wheat, barley, fruit (including wine grapes), and mulberry trees (for silk). Karakul sheep, dairy cattle, and yaks are raised. The republic's mountains yield coal, antimony, silver, gold, salt, uranium, mercury, tungsten, lead, and zinc, but most mining has ceased. Cotton ginning, silk spinning, food processing, winemaking, carpet weaving, metals processing, and the manufacture of textiles, chemicals, fertilizers, and cement were the leading industries, but these too have been curtailed. There is some petroleum, and Tajikistan is well provided with hydroelectric resources. The country's economic problems and political turmoil have led Tajikistan to become an important heroin smuggling transit point. Trade is primarily with other former Soviet republics.

History

The people of Tajikistan are probably descended from the inhabitants of ancient Sogdiana. By the 9th and 10th cent., the Tajiks had achieved much success in fruit growing, cattle raising, and the development of handicrafts and trade. The Tajik territory was conquered by the Mongols in the 13th cent. In the 16th cent., it became part of the khanate of Bukhara. By the mid-19th cent., the Tajiks were divided among several internally weak khanates.

Russia took control of the Tajik lands in the 1880s and 90s, but the Tajiks remained split among several administrative-political entities, and their territories were economically backward and were exploited for their raw materials. In the aftermath of the 1917 Russian Revolution, the Tajiks rebelled against Russian rule; the Red Army did not establish control over them until 1921. Tajikistan was made an autonomous republic within Uzbekistan in 1924; in 1929 it became a constituent republic of the USSR. In the 1930s canals and other irrigation projects vastly increased cultivated acreage; population also increased rapidly.

In Dec., 1990, the Tajikistan parliament passed a resolution of sovereignty. The Republic of Tajikistan declared its independence in Sept., 1991, and in December it signed the treaty establishing the Commonwealth of Independent States. When the acting president sought to suspend the country's Communist party, the Communist-led parliament replaced him, and former Communist party chief Rakhmon Nabiyev was elected president in Nov., 1991. In 1992, Nabiyev was deposed by opposition militias.

An ethnically based civil war quickly erupted. Forces allied with the former Nabiyev government retook the capital and most of the country, and the parliament elected Russian-supported Emomali Rakhmonov president. Fighting between government troops, supported by the Russian army, and pro-Islamic forces, with bases and support in Afghanistan, persisted along the Afghan border despite a number of cease-fires. In the Nov., 1994, elections, which were boycotted by the Islamic opposition, Rakhmonov defeated another former Soviet leader to retain the presidency. In early 1996 there was a brief mutiny by Uzbek commanders, who seized towns in the south and west.

A peace accord was signed between the government and opposition forces in mid-1997, but some factions continued fighting. In a 1999 referendum, voters backed constitutional changes that would extend the president's term to seven years and allow the formation of Islamic political parties. By the end of the 2000 a truce prevailed in most of Tajikistan. Some 30,000 to 50,000 were estimated to have died in the fighting, and war and neglect had devastated much of the country's infrastructure, making the nation one of the poorest in the world. Tajikistan remains dependent on help from Russia's military to preserve its tenuous stability and security. A drought in W and central Asia that began in the late 1990s has had particularly severe consequences in impoverished Tajikistan.

Bibliography

See S. Akinev, Islamic Peoples of the Soviet Union (1986).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Tajikistan  - 1255 results

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...for the CIA World Factbook entry on Tajikistan includes statistics and facts about...com/sd/tajikistanupdate/#nw The Tajikistan Update provides information on culture...reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/vCD/Tajikistan?OpenDocum ent StartKey=Tajikistan...
...were included in Uzbekistan rather than Tajikistan, Both cities had traditionally played...During the Soviet period, real power in Tajikistan was exercised bv the Communist Part...to join the Communist P<iii>. of Tajikistan and promoted some to leadership rol...
Tajikistan National Association of Political Scientists of Tajikistan The mission of the National Association of Political Scientists of Tajikistan (NAPST) is to facilitate the development of political science, to enhance the political culture...
Tajikistan: History and Description Physical Description Borders Tajikistan, known for its rugged and beautiful mountainous...Afghanistan and a disputed eastern boundary with China. Tajikistan has an extremely unusual northern border, in which...
...populations in the other republics, particularly Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. The rise of the diaspora Uzbeks...significant is the large number of Uzbeks located in Tajikistan. In Tajikistan, the Tajiks account for 62% of the population...
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journal articles on: Tajikistan  - 624 results

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Tajikistan: the Rise of a Narco-state by Letizia...collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Tajikistan has experienced an extraordinary and...concern. But, in less than a decade, Tajikistan has become a key transit country for...
Geopolitics versus Democracy in Tajikistan by Shahram Akbarzadeh In December 2002...tale to explain U.S. behavior in Tajikistan. This was a tale of neighborly relations...readers that this would not be the fate of Tajikistan. The United States had no need to overstay...
...Identity: the Course to Democracy in Tajikistan by Jill E. Hickson I. introduction...hundred years later, the Republic of Tajikistan is in the early stages of its transition...to establish this new rule of law, Tajikistan is reforming its legal and political...
...in the Gorno-Badakhshan Region of Tajikistan. by Sarah Robinson Abstract This report...pastoralists in the Pamir mountains of Tajikistan. Field observations and household income...seasonal movements, stocking rates, Tajikistan Introduction Tajikistan was the poorest...
...Migration and Fertility in Post-soviet Tajikistan by David Clifford (ProQuest...international labour migration from Tajikistan and their spouses fertility. There...regions post-Soviet demography. In Tajikistan, this has been particularly significant...
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magazine articles on: Tajikistan  - 658 results

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The elusive peace in Tajikistan by Dilip Hiro Dilip Hiro reports on the continuing struggles in Tajikistan and comments on the prospects for change...season for the inhabitants of mountainous Tajikistan. Its arrival inaugurates a revival of...
The Collapse of Tajikistan by Michael Collins Dunn The Collapse of Tajikistan The tragedies of Bosnia and Somalia have led some...As part of the Soviet Union until last year, Tajikistan is one of the former Soviet states that are not...
Tajikistan after the Elections: Post-soviet Dictatorship by Walter White Tajikistan After the Elections: Post-Soviet Dictatorship...White Late in 1994 and again in early 1995, Tajikistan held its first ever elections since becoming...
Tajikistan: a Fundamental Concern by Lauryn Oates Most Canadians would be hard-pressed to find Tajikistan on a map. One of the most mountainous countries in the world, Tajikistan can be found in Central Asia, northeast of...
Tajikistan. by S.K. Belal Hassan Tajikistan is a land rich in culture and in mineral resources. Home...long civil war and laid the foundations for peace. As Tajikistan learns to live with the destructive legacies of its recent...
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newspaper articles on: Tajikistan  - 556 results

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...threat of anti-American terror in Tajikistan by Bill Gertz The danger of terrorist...Americans in the former Soviet republic of Tajikistan has increased sharply based on recent...information on the U.S. presence in Tajikistan," the DIA said in a classified report...
Air Force gets use of airfield in Tajikistan by Rowan Scarborough Byline: Rowan...The Air Force will use an airfield in Tajikistan to conduct its first sustained tactical...Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld visited Tajikistan last week to discuss military cooperation...
...Merone from Southport Reports from Tajikistan, Where She Is Working with Christian Aid. ARRIVING in Tajikistan was like arriving into the unknown...violence and poor governance makes Tajikistan one of the poorest countries in the...
...Merone from Southport Reports from Tajikistan, Where She Is Working with Christian Aid. ARRIVING in Tajikistan was like arriving into the unknown...violence and poor governance makes Tajikistan one of the poorest countries in the...
...for oil and gas with military base in Tajikistan Byline: Shaikh Azizur Rahman, THE...military facility outside its territory in Tajikistan, signaling cooperation between the...military sources said the base in Farkhor, Tajikistan, close to the Afghanistan border...
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encyclopedia articles on: Tajikistan  - 45 results

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TAJIKISTAN t jikistan , officially Republic of Tajikistan, republic (2005 est. pop. 7,164,000), 55...are important industries. There is some petroleum. Tajikistan is well provided with hydroelectric resources, but due...
BADAKHSHAN , region, Tajikistan , autonomous region (1991 est. pop. 167,100), c.24,600 sq mi (63,710 sq km), E Tajikistan, in the Pamir . It is bordered by China on the east and by Afghanistan on the south and west and is separated...
...west and north, and on Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan in the east. Tashkent , the capital...areas were united in the Uzbek SSR. Tajikistan was part of the Uzbek SSR until 1929...crossed into Uzbekistan from bases in Tajikistan. The following year, Uzbekistan allowed...
...Kazakhstan , Kyrgyzstan , Moldova , Tajikistan , Turkmenistan , and Uzbekistan . When...movements in Abkhazia and South Ossetia), Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan (vulnerable because...integration without customs restrictions. Tajikistan later joined the customs union, which...
...on Uzbekistan in the west, and on Tajikistan in the southwest. Bishkek , the capital...seized several towns near the border with Tajikistan (where a civil war began in 1992...forces fought Uzbek guerrillas based in Tajikistan that had infiltrated into the Fergana...
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