Geography
Area: 143,100 sq. km.
Capital: Dushanbe.
Terrain: Pamir and Alay mountains
dominate landscape; western Ferghana
valley in north, Kofarnihon and Vakhsh
Valleys in southwest.
Climate: Mid-latitude continental, hot
summers, mild winters; semiarid to polar
in Pamir mountains.
People
Nationality: Tajikistani.
Population (Oct. 2007 est.): 7,181,400.
Population growth rate (2006 est.):
2.19%.
Ethnic groups: Tajik 74%, Uzbek 23%,
Russian and others 3%.
Religion (2003 est.): Sunni Muslim 95%,
Shi'a Muslim 3%, other 2 %.
Language: Tajik (sole official language
as of 1994); Russian widely used in
government and business; 77% of the
country, however, is rural and they
speak mostly Tajik.
Education: Literacy (according
to Tajikistan official statistics,
2003)--88%. The Tajik education system
is still struggling through a period of
decline since independence.
Health: Life
expectancy--61.68 years men; 67.59
years women. Infant
mortality rate--110.76 deaths/1,000
live births (2005 est.).
Work force (2003 est.): 3.301 million.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: September 9, 1991 (from
Soviet Union).
Constitution: November 6, 1994.
Branches: Executive--chief
of state: President Emomali RAHMON since
November 6, 1994; head of state and
Supreme Assembly chairman since November
19, 1992; head of government (appointed
by the president): Prime Minister Oqil
OQILOV since January 20, 1999; Oqilov
has reached mandatory retirement age,
and will soon be replaced. Cabinet:
Council of Ministers appointed by the
president, approved by the Supreme
Assembly. Elections: president elected
by popular vote for a 7-year term;
election last held November 6, 2006.
Election results: Emomali RAHMON 79.3%,
Olimjon BOBOYEV 6.2%, Amir QARAQULOV
5.3%, Ismoil TALBAKOV 5.1%, Abduhalim
GHAFFOROV 2.8%. Legislative--bicameral
Supreme Assembly or Majlisi Oli consists
of the Assembly of Representatives or
Majlisi Namoyanandagon (lower chamber;
63 seats; members are elected by popular
vote to serve 5-year terms) and the
National Assembly or Majlisi Milliy
(upper chamber; 33 seats; members are
indirectly elected by popular vote to
serve 5-year terms, 25 selected by local
deputies, 8 appointed by the president,
plus former presidents of
Tajikistan--currently there is one; all
serve 5-year terms). Elections: last
held February 27, 2005 for the Assembly
of Representatives. Election results:
percent of vote by party--People's
Democratic Party of Tajikistan 74.9%,
Communist Party 13.64%, Islamic Revival
8.94%, other 2.5%. Judicial--Supreme
Court; judges are appointed by the
president.
Political parties and leaders: People's
Democratic Party of Tajikistan or PDPT [Emomali
RAHMON]; Islamic Revival Party or IRPT [Muhiddin
KABIRI]; Tajik Communist Party or CPT [Shodi
SHABDOLOV]; Democratic Party or DPT [
Masud Sobirov heads
government-recognized faction; (Mahmadruzi
IZKANDAROV, currently serving 23-year
prison term, is chairman of original DPT;
Rahmatullo VALIYEV is deputy)]; Social
Democratic Party or SDPT [Rahmatullo
ZOYIROV]; Socialist Party of Tajikistan
or SPT [Abdukhalim GAFFOROV; (Murhuseyn
NARZIEV heads the original SPT party
that is currently unrecognized by the
government)]; Agrarian Party or APT
[Amir Birievich QARAQULOV]; Party of
Economic Reform or PERT [Olimjon BOBOYEV].
Suffrage: 18 years of age, universal.
Defense (2003 est.): Military
manpower (availability)--1,273,700.
Economy
GDP nominal (2008 projected): $4.3
billion.
GDP nominal per capita (2007): U.S.
$561. Purchasing power parity is about
$1,500.
GDP real growth rate (2008 projected):
5%.
Inflation rate (consumer prices, 2007
est.): 20%.
Natural resources: Hydropower, some
petroleum, uranium, gold, mercury, brown
coal, lead, zinc, antimony, tungsten.
Official unemployment rate (2008
projected): 2.3%. The official rate is
estimated based on the number of
registered unemployment benefit
recipients; underemployment also is very
high, approximately 40% of the
workforce; 53% live below the poverty
line (2008).
Agriculture: Products--cotton,
grain, fruits, grapes, vegetables;
cattle, sheep, goats.
Industry: Types--aluminum,
zinc, lead, chemicals and fertilizers,
cement, vegetable oil, textiles,
metal-cutting machine tools,
refrigerators and freezers.
Trade: Exports (Jan.-April
2008)--$470.1 million f.o.b.: aluminum,
electricity, cotton, gold, fruits,
vegetable oil, textiles. Partners
include--Netherlands, Turkey, China. Imports (Jan.-April
2008)--$1.27 billion f.o.b.:
electricity, petroleum products,
aluminum oxide, machinery and equipment,
foodstuffs. Partners
include--Russia, Kazakhstan,
Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan, China, Ukraine,
Italy, Turkmenistan.
Total external debt (April 2008): $1.222
billion; total bilateral external debt
(2006)--$185.3 million, of which
Uzbekistan $73.1 million, U.S. $16.3
million, Turkey $10.3 million,
Kazakhstan $10.9 million, Russia $30
million; total multilateral debt (April
2008)--$650.5 million, of which World
Bank $349.8 million, IMF $44.4 million,
ADB $139.9 million.
Debt/GDP ratio (2007 est.): 30.5%.
GEOGRAPHY
At 36'40' northern latitude and 41'14'
eastern longitude, Tajikistan is nestled
between Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan to the
north and west, China to the east, and
Afghanistan to the south. Tajikistan is
home to some of the highest mountains in
the world, including the Pamir and Alay
ranges. Ninety-three percent of
Tajikistan is mountainous with altitudes
ranging from 1,000 feet to 27,000 feet,
with nearly 50% of Tajikistan's
territory above 10,000 feet. Earthquakes
are of varying degrees and are frequent.
The massive mountain ranges are cut by
hundreds of canyons and gorges; at the
bottom of these run streams which flow
into larger river valleys where the
majority of the country's population
lives and works. The principal rivers of
Central Asia, the Amu Darya and the Syr
Darya, both flow through Tajikistan, fed
by melting snow from mountains of
Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. Flooding and
landslides sometimes occur during the
annual spring thaw.
PEOPLE
Contemporary Tajiks are the descendants
of ancient Eastern Iranian inhabitants
of Central Asia, in particular the
Soghdians and the Bactrians, and
possibly other groups, with an admixture
of western Iranian Persians and
non-Iranian peoples, Mongols, and Turkic
peoples. Until the 20th century, people
in the region used two types of
distinction to identify themselves: way
of life--either nomadic or
sedentary--and place of residence. By
the late 19th century, the Tajik and
Uzbek peoples had lived in proximity for
centuries and often used--and continue
to use--each other's languages. The
division of Central Asia into five
Soviet Republics in the 1920s imposed
artificial divisions on a region in
which many different peoples lived
intermixed.
HISTORY
The current Tajik Republic hearkens back
to the Samanid Empire (A.D. 875-999),
which ruled what is now Tajikistan as
well as territory to the south and west,
as their role model and name for their
currency. During their reign, the
Samanids supported the revival of the
written Persian language in the wake of
the Arab Islamic conquest in the early
8th century and played an important role
in preserving the culture of the
pre-Islamic Persian-speaking world. They
were the last Persian-speaking empire to
rule Central Asia.
The expanding Russian Empire encompassed
the territory that is now Tajikistan,
along with most of the rest of Central
Asia during the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. Russian rule collapsed
briefly after the Russian Revolution of
1917, as the Bolsheviks consolidated
their power and were embroiled in a
civil war in other regions of the former
Russian Empire. As the Bolsheviks
attempted to regain Central Asia in the
1920s, an indigenous Central Asian
resistance movement based in the
Ferghana Valley, the "Basmachi
movement," resisted but was eliminated
by 1925. Tajikistan became fully
established under Soviet control with
the creation of Tajikistan as an
autonomous Soviet socialist republic
within Uzbekistan in 1924, and as an
independent Soviet socialist republic in
1929.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The Republic of Tajikistan gained its
independence during the breakup of the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
(U.S.S.R.) on September 9, 1991 and soon
fell into a civil war. From 1992 to 1997
internal fighting ensued between
old-guard regionally based ruling elites
and disenfranchised regions, democratic
liberal reformists, and Islamists
loosely organized in a United Tajik
Opposition (UTO). Other combatants and
armed bands that flourished in this
civil chaos simply reflected the
breakdown of central authority rather
than loyalty to a political faction. The
height of hostilities occurred between
1992 and 1993. By 1997, the
predominantly Kulyabi-led Tajik
Government and the UTO had negotiated a
power-sharing peace accord and
implemented it by 2000.
The last Russian border guards
protecting Tajikistan's 1,400 km border
with Afghanistan completed their
withdrawal in July 2005. Russia
maintains its military presence in
Tajikistan with the basing of the
Russian 201st Motorized Rifle Division
that never left Tajikistan when it
became independent. Most of these
Russian-led forces, however, are local
Tajik noncommissioned officers and
soldiers.
Tajikistan's most recent presidential
election in 2006 and its 2005
parliamentary elections were considered
to be flawed and unfair but peaceful.
While the government and the
now-incorporated former opposition
continue to distrust each other, they
have often found a way to work with each
other and are committed to peacefully
resolving their differences. In June
2003, Tajikistan held a flawed
referendum to enact a package of
constitutional changes, including a
provision to allow President Rahmon the
possibility of re-election to up to two
additional 7-year terms after his term
expired in 2006. The February 2005
parliamentary elections, in which the
ruling party secured 49 of the 63 seats,
failed to meet many key Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
standards on democratic elections, but
there were some improvements over
previous elections.
After the November 6, 2006 presidential
election in which President Rahmon
secured a new 7-year term in office, the
OSCE determined that democratic
practices were not fully tested "due to
the absence of genuine competition,
which provided voters with only nominal
choice." There were four other
candidates on the ballot but no strong
opposition candidate. The strongest
opposition party, the IRPT, decided not
to field a candidate and two other
parties (the DPT and SDPT) boycotted the
election.
Lack of transparency in the legislative
process and significant concerns
regarding due process demonstrate the
weakness of civil society in the
country. Corruption is pervasive, and
numerous observers have noted that power
has been consolidated into the hands of
a relatively small number of
individuals.
Afghanistan continues to represent the
primary security concern in Tajikistan's
immediate neighborhood, although much
less so than in earlier years. With the
ouster of the former Taliban government
from Afghanistan, Tajikistan now has
much friendlier relations with its
neighbor to the south. The
Taliban-allied Islamic Movement of
Uzbekistan (IMU), a U.S.
Government-declared terrorist
organization formerly active in
Afghanistan and Tajikistan, has also
been greatly diminished as a threat to
Tajikistan's domestic stability. Rampant
illicit trafficking of Afghan opium and
heroin through Tajikistan remains a
serious long-term threat to Tajikistan's
stability and development, fostering
corruption, violent crime, HIV/AIDS, and
economic distortions.
Principal Government Officials
President--Emomali Rahmon
Prime Minister--Oqil Oqilov
Foreign Minister--Khamrokhon Zarifi
Ambassador to the United States--Abdujabbor
Shirinov
Permanent Representative to the United
Nations--Sirojiddin Aslov
Tajikistan established an embassy in
Washington, DC in temporary offices in
February 2003, and formally opened its
first permanent chancery building in
March 2004. Tajikistan's embassy in
the United States is at 1005 New
Hampshire Ave NW, Washington, DC 20037
(tel.: 202-233-6090; fax: 202-223-6091).
ECONOMY
Tajikistan is the poorest Commonwealth
of Independent States (CIS) country and
one of the poorest countries in the
world. Foreign revenue is precariously
dependent upon exports of cotton and
aluminum, and on foreign remittance
flows from Tajik migrant workers abroad,
mainly in Russia. The economy is highly
vulnerable to external shocks.
Tajikistan has great hydropower
potential, and has focused on attracting
investment for projects for internal use
and electricity exports. Meanwhile, the
country faces severe electricity
shortages, particularly during the
winter, when many citizens receive two
to four hours of electricity each day.
Tajikistan has followed a relatively
strict fiscal and monetary policy, which
has resulted in macroeconomic stability.
However, government interference in the
economy and massive corruption stifle
economic growth and private investment.
The government has attracted state-led
investment for major infrastructure
projects rather than implementing the
necessary economic reforms to attract
private investors. Two-thirds of the
workforce of Tajikistan is in
agriculture, most of them pressured to
grow cotton. Tajikistan struggles to
implement agricultural reforms that
would allow this two-thirds of the
population to farm the crop of their
choice. Income from narcotics
trafficking, while difficult to
quantify, has an increasingly visible
impact on the Tajik economy.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
With the ouster of the former Taliban
government from Afghanistan, Tajikistan
now has much friendlier relations with
its neighbor to the south. Though a
pull-out of Russian border guards was
completed in July 2005, Tajikistan
continues to permit basing of the
Russian 201st Motorized Rifle Division
that never left Tajikistan when it
became independent.
Tajikistan has a difficult relationship
with Uzbekistan. Uzbekistan is concerned
about Tajikistan's plan to develop
hydropower, which Uzbekistan views as a
threat to downstream irrigation. Border
disagreements arise sporadically between
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan and the Kyrgyz
Republic. For the most part these are
harmless disagreements concerning people
moving across mostly unmarked borders,
but occasionally disputes develop into
situations where gunfire is exchanged.
U.S.-TAJIK RELATIONS
The United States remains committed to
assisting Tajikistan in its economic and
political development, as Tajikistan
continues to recover from its civil war
legacy. U.S. assistance efforts are
evolving away from humanitarian aid and
political reconciliation, as those needs
increasingly have been met. Instead, our
efforts are targeted toward broader
goals of democratic and economic
reforms.
U.S.-Tajik relations have developed
considerably since September 11, 2001.
The two countries now have a broad-based
relationship, cooperating in such areas
as counter-narcotics, counter-terrorism,
non-proliferation, and regional growth
and stability. In light of the Russian
border forces' withdrawal from the
Tajik-Afghan border, the U.S. Government
leads an international donor effort to
enhance Tajikistan's territorial
integrity, prevent the transit of
narcotics and material or technology
related to weapons of mass destruction (WMD),
and support a stable, peaceful
Tajikistan in order to prevent the
spread of influence and activities of
radical groups and terrorists.
We continue to assist Tajikistan on
economic reforms and integration into
the broader global marketplace, for
example in pursuing World Trade
Organization (WTO) accession. U.S.
assistance also supports health and
education, as well as democracy, media,
and local governance. Tajikistan has
been a strong supporter of U.S. efforts
in the war on terrorism and in promoting
peace and stability in Afghanistan.
A U.S. Government-funded $36 million
bridge over the Pyanzh River connecting
Sher Khan, Afghanistan with Nizhniy
Pyanzh, Tajikistan opened for commercial
traffic in October 2007 and about 200
trucks cross daily. Since the opening,
trade volume has tripled. The bridge
will continue to enhance economic and
commercial opportunities on both sides
of the river, allowing goods and people
to move across more easily. On the
Afghan side, the bridge road will
connect to the Afghan Ring Road.
The United States recognized Tajikistan
on December 25, 1991, the day the
U.S.S.R. dissolved, and opened a
temporary Embassy in a hotel in the
capital, Dushanbe, in March 1992. After
the bombings of U.S. Embassies in Africa
in 1998, Embassy Dushanbe American
personnel were temporarily relocated to
Almaty, Kazakhstan, due to heightened
Embassy security standards. American
Embassy Dushanbe has since returned to
full operations and in July 2006 moved
into a purpose-built Embassy compound.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Tracey
Ann Jacobson
Deputy Chief of Mission--Necia Quast
Management Officer--David Schafer
Political/Economic Section Chief--D.
Matthew Purl
Public Affairs Officer--Jacqueline
McKennan
Consular Officer--Gregory Pfleger
Defense Attaché--LTC Dan Green
USAID Country Representative--Carolyn
Bryan
The U.S.
Embassy is
located at 109-A Ismoili Somoni Avenue,
Dushanbe, Tajikistan 734019. Embassy
phone: [992] (37) 229-20-00, Consular
section phone: [992] (37) 229-23-00,
Embassy Fax: [992] (37) 229-20-50.
Website: dushanbe.usembassy.gov