International Headteacher
Menu
Population: 7 million (UN, 2010)
Capital: Dushanbe
Area: 143,100 sq km (55,251 sq miles)
Major languages: Tajik, Uzbek, Russian
Major religion: Islam
Life expectancy: 65 years (men), 71 years (women) (UN)
Monetary unit: 1 Tajik somoni = 100 dirams
Main exports: Aluminium, electricity, cotton, fruit, textiles
GNI per capita: US $800 (World Bank, 2010)
Internet domain: .tj
International dialling code: +992
Capital: Dushanbe
Area: 143,100 sq km (55,251 sq miles)
Major languages: Tajik, Uzbek, Russian
Major religion: Islam
Life expectancy: 65 years (men), 71 years (women) (UN)
Monetary unit: 1 Tajik somoni = 100 dirams
Main exports: Aluminium, electricity, cotton, fruit, textiles
GNI per capita: US $800 (World Bank, 2010)
Internet domain: .tj
International dialling code: +992
A former Soviet republic, Tajikistan plunged into civil war almost as soon as it became independent from the Soviet Union in 1991.
A rugged, mountainous country, with lush valleys to the south and north, it is Central Asia's poorest nation. Tajiks are the country's largest ethnic group, with Uzbeks making up a quarter of the population, over half of which is employed in agriculture and just one-fifth in industry. Nearly half of Tajikistan's population is under 14 years of age. The Tajik language is very close to Persian, spoken in Iran, and to Dari, spoken in Afghanistan. The five-year civil war between the Moscow-backed government and the Islamist-led opposition, in which up to 50,000 people were killed and over one-tenth of the population fled the country, ended in 1997 with a United Nations-brokered peace agreement. The country's economy has never really recovered from the civil war, and poverty is widespread. Almost half of Tajikistan's GDP is earned by migrants working abroad, especially in Russia, but the recession in 2009 threatened that income. The country is also dependent on oil and gas imports. Economic hardship is seen as a contributing to a renewed interest in Islam - including more radical forms - among young Tajiks. Tajikistan has been accused by its neighbours of tolerating the presence of training camps for Islamist rebels on its territory, an accusation which it has strongly denied. Tajikistan has relied heavily on Russian assistance to counter continuing security problems and cope with the dire economic situation. Russian forces guarded sections of the border with Afghanistan until mid-2005 when their withdrawal was completed and the task handed over to Tajik border guards. Skirmishes with drug smugglers crossing illegally from Afghanistan occur regularly, as Tajikistan is the first stop on the drugs route from there to Russia and the West. In October 2004 Russia formally opened a military base in Dushanbe where several thousand troops will be stationed. It also took back control over a former Soviet space monitoring centre at Nurek. These developments were widely seen as a sign of Russia's wish to counter increased US influence in Central Asia. |
information provided by www.bbcnews.co.uk