Tajikistan - History
Tajikistan
TAJIKISTAN, LITERALLY THE "LAND OF THE TAJIKS," has ancient
cultural roots. The people now known as the Tajiks are the Persian
speakers of Central Asia, some of whose ancestors inhabited Central Asia
(including present-day Afghanistan and western China) at the dawn of
history. Despite the long heritage of its indigenous peoples, Tajikistan
has existed as a state only since the Soviet Union decreed its existence
in 1924. The creation of modern Tajikistan was part of the Soviet policy
of giving the outward trappings of political representation to minority
nationalities in Central Asia while simultaneously reorganizing or
fragmenting communities and political entities.
Of the five Central Asian states that declared independence from the
Soviet Union in 1991, Tajikistan is the smallest in area and the third
largest in population. Landlocked and mountainous, the republic has some
valuable natural resources, such as waterpower and minerals, but arable
land is scarce, the industrial base is narrow, and the communications
and transportation infrastructures are poorly developed.
As was the case in other republics of the Soviet Union, nearly
seventy years of Soviet rule brought Tajikistan a combination of
modernization and repression. Although barometers of modernization such
as education, health care, and industrial development registered
substantial improvements over low starting points in this era, the
quality of the transformation in such areas was less impressive than the
quantity, with reforms benefiting Russian-speaking city dwellers more
than rural citizens who lacked fluency in Russian. For all the
modernization that occurred under Soviet rule, the central government's
policies limited Tajikistan to a role as a predominantly agricultural
producer of raw materials for industries located elsewhere. Through the
end of the Soviet era, Tajikistan had one of the lowest standards of
living of the Soviet republics.
Independence came to Tajikistan with the dissolution of the Soviet
Union in December 1991. The first few years after that were a time of
great hardship. Some of the new republic's problems--including the
breakdown of the old system of interdependent economic relationships
upon which the Soviet republics had relied, and the stress of movement
toward participation in the world market--were common among the Soviet
successor states. The pain of economic decline was compounded in
Tajikistan by a bloody and protracted civil conflict over whether the
country would perpetuate a system of monopoly rule by a narrow elite
like the one that ruled in the Soviet era, or establish a reformist,
more democratic regime. The struggle peaked as an outright war in the
second half of 1992, and smaller-scale conflict continued into the
mid-1990s. The victors preserved a repressive system of rule, and the
lingering effects of the conflict contributed to the further worsening
of living conditions.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Ethnic Background
Tajikistan
Iranian (see Glossary) peoples, including ancestors of the modern
Tajiks, have inhabited Central Asia since at least the earliest recorded
history of the region, which began some 2,500 years ago. 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. The ethnic contribution of various Turkic and
Mongol peoples, who entered Central Asia at later times, has not been
determined precisely. However, experts assume that some assimilation
must have occurred in both directions.
The origin of the name Tajik has been embroiled in
twentieth-century political disputes about whether Turkic or Iranian
peoples were the original inhabitants of Central Asia. The explanation
most favored by scholars is that the word evolved from the name of a
pre-Islamic (before the seventh century A.D.) Arab tribe.
Until the twentieth 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 nineteenth century, the
Tajik and Uzbek peoples, who had lived in proximity for centuries and
often used each other's languages, did not perceive themselves as two
distinct nationalities. Consequently, such labels were imposed
artificially when Central Asia was divided into five Soviet republics in
the 1920s.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Early History
Tajikistan
Much, if not all, of what is today Tajikistan was part of ancient
Persia's Achaemenid Empire (sixth to fourth centuries B.C.), which was
subdued by Alexander the Great in the fourth century B.C. and then
became part of the Greco-Bactrian kingdom, one of the successor states
to Alexander's empire. The northern part of what is now Tajikistan was
part of Soghdiana, a distinct region that intermittently existed as a
combination of separate oasis states and sometimes was subject to other
states. Two important cities in what is now northern Tajikistan, Khujand
(formerly Leninobod; Russian spelling Leninabad) and Panjakent, as well
as Bukhoro (Bukhara) and Samarqand (Samarkand) in contemporary
Uzbekistan, were Soghdian in antiquity. As intermediaries on the Silk
Route between China and markets to the west and south, the Soghdians
imparted religions such as Buddhism, Nestorian Christianity,
Zoroastrianism (see Glossary), and Manichaeism (see Glossary), as well
as their own alphabet and other knowledge, to peoples along the trade
routes.
Between the first and fourth centuries, the area that is now
Tajikistan and adjoining territories were part of the Kushan realm,
which had close cultural ties to India. The Kushans, whose exact
identity is uncertain, played an important role in the expansion of
Buddhism by spreading the faith to the Soghdians,who in turn brought it
to China and the Turks.
By the first century A.D., the Han dynasty of China had developed
commercial and diplomatic relations with the Soghdians and their
neighbors, the Bactrians. Military operations also extended Chinese
influence westward into the region. During the first centuries A.D.,
Chinese involvement in this region waxed and waned, decreasing sharply
after the Islamic conquest but not disappearing completely. As late as
the nineteenth century, China attempted to press its claim to the Pamir
region of what is now southeastern Tajikistan. Since the breakup of the
Soviet Union, China occasionally has revived its claim to part of this
region.
The Islamic Conquest
Islamic Arabs began the conquest of the region in earnest in the
early eighth century. Conversion to Islam occurred by means of
incentives, gradual acceptance, and force of arms. Islam spread most
rapidly in cities and along the main river valleys. By the ninth
century, it was the prevalent religion in the entire region. In the
early centuries of Islamic domination, Central Asia continued in its
role as a commercial crossroads, linking China, the steppes to the
north, and the Islamic heartland.
Persian Culture in Central Asia
The Persian influence on Central Asia, already prominent before the
Islamic conquest, grew even stronger afterward. Under Iran's last
pre-Islamic empire, the Sassanian, the Persian language and culture as
well as the Zoroastrian religion spread among the peoples of Central
Asia, including the ancestors of the modern Tajiks. In the wake of the
Islamic conquest, Persian-speakers settled in Central Asia, where they
played an active role in public affairs and furthered the spread of the
Persian language and culture, their language displacing Eastern Iranian
ones. By the twelfth century, Persian had also supplanted Arabic as the
written language for most subjects.
The Samanids
In the development of a modern Tajik national identity, the most
important state in Central Asia after the Islamic conquest was the
Persian-speaking Samanid principality (875-999), which came to rule most
of what is now Tajikistan, as well as territory to the south and west.
During their reign, the Samanids supported the revival of the written
Persian language.
Early in the Samanid period, Bukhoro became well-known as a center of
learning and culture throughout the eastern part of the Persian-speaking
world. Samanid literary patronage played an important role in preserving
the culture of pre-Islamic Iran. Late in the tenth century, the Samanid
state came under increasing pressure from Turkic powers to the north and
south. After the Qarakhanid Turks overthrew the Samanids in 999, no
major Persian state ever again existed in Central Asia.
Beginning in the ninth century, Turkish penetration of the Persian
cultural sphere increased in Central Asia. The influx of even greater
numbers of Turkic peoples began in the eleventh century. The Turkic
peoples who moved into southern Central Asia, including what later
became Tajikistan, were influenced to varying degrees by Persian
culture. Over the generations, some converted Turks changed from
pastoral nomadism to a sedentary way of life, which brought them into
closer contact with the sedentary Persian-speakers. Cultural influences
flowed in both directions as Turks and Persians intermarried.
During subsequent centuries, the lands that eventually became
Tajikistan were part of Turkic or Mongol states. The Persian language
remained in use in government, scholarship, and literature. Among the
dynasties that ruled all or part of the future Tajikistan between the
eleventh and fifteenth centuries were the Seljuk Turks, the Mongols, and
the Timurids (Timur, or Tamerlane, and his heirs and their subjects).
Repeated power struggles among claimants to these realms took their toll
on Central Asia. The Mongol conquest in particular dealt a serious blow
to sedentary life and destroyed several important cities in the region.
Although they had come in conquest, the Timurids also patronized
scholarship, the arts, and letters.
In the early sixteenth century, Uzbeks from the northwest conquered
large sections of Central Asia, but the unified Uzbek state began to
break apart soon after the conquest. By the early nineteenth century,
the lands of the future Tajikistan were divided among three states: the
Uzbek-ruled Bukhoro Khanate, the Quqon (Kokand) Khanate, centered on the
Fergana Valley, and the kingdom of Afghanistan. These three
principalities subsequently fought each other for control of key areas
of the new territory. Although some regions were under the nominal
control of Bukhoro, or Quqon, local rulers were virtually independent.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - The Russian Conquest
Tajikistan
After several unsuccessful attempts in earlier times, the Russian
conquest and settlement of Central Asia began in earnest in the second
half of the nineteenth century. Spurred by various economic and
geopolitical factors, increasing numbers of Russians moved into Central
Asia in this period. Although some armed resistance occurred, Tajik
society remained largely unchanged during this initial colonial period.
The Occupation Process
By 1860 the Central Asian principalities were ripe for conquest by
the much more powerful Russian Empire. Imperial policy makers believed
that these principalities had to be subdued because of their armed
opposition to Russian expansion into the Kazak steppe, which already was
underway to the north of Tajikistan. Some proponents of Russian
expansion saw it as a way to compensate for losses elsewhere and to
pressure Britain, Russia's perennial nemesis in the region, by playing
on British concerns about threats to its position in India. The Russian
military supported campaigns in Central Asia as a means of advancing
careers and building personal fortunes. The region assumed much greater
economic importance in the second half of the nineteenth century because
of its potential as a supplier of cotton.
An important step in the Russian conquest was the capture of Tashkent
from the Quqon Khanate, part of which was annexed in 1866. The following
year, Tashkent became the capital of the new Guberniya (Governorate
General) of Turkestan, which included the districts of Khujand and
Uroteppa (later part of Tajikistan). After a domestic uprising and
Russian military occupation, Russia annexed the remainder of the Quqon
Khanate in 1876.
The Bukhoro Khanate fought Russian invaders during the same period,
losing the Samarqand area in 1868. Russia chose not to annex the rest of
Bukhoro, fearing repercussions in the Muslim world and from Britain
because Bukhoro was a bastion of Islam and a place of strategic
significance to British India. Instead, the tsar's government made a
treaty with Bukhoro, recognizing its existence but in effect
subordinating it to Russia. Bukhoro actually gained territory by this
agreement, when the Russian administration granted the amir of Bukhoro a
district that included Dushanbe, now the capital of Tajikistan, in
compensation for the territory that had been ceded to Russia.
In the 1880s, the principality of Shughnon-Rushon in the western
Pamir Mountains became a new object of contention between Britain and
Russia when Afghanistan and Russia disputed territory there. An 1895
treaty assigned the disputed territory to Bukhoro, and at the same time
put the eastern Pamirs under Russian rule.
Tajikistan under Russian Rule
Russian rule brought important changes in Central Asia, but many
elements of the traditional way of life scarcely changed. In the part of
what is now Tajikistan that was incorporated into the Guberniya of
Turkestan, many ordinary inhabitants had limited contact with Russian
officials or settlers before 1917. Rural administration there resembled
the system that governed peasants in the European part of the Russian
Empire after the abolition of serfdom in 1861. Local administration in
villages continued to follow long-established tradition, and prior to
1917 few Russians lived in the area of present-day Tajikistan. Russian
authorities also left education in the region substantially the same
between the 1870s and 1917.
An important event of the 1870s was Russia's initial expansion of
cotton cultivation in the region, including the areas of the Fergana
Valley and the Bukhoro Khanate that later became part of Tajikistan. The
pattern of switching land from grain cultivation to cotton cultivation,
which intensified during the Soviet period, was established at this
time. The first cotton-processing plant was established in eastern
Bukhoro during World War I.
Some elements of opposition to Russian hegemony appeared in the late
nineteenth century. By 1900 a novel educational approach was being
offered by reformers known as Jadidists (jadid is the Arabic
word for "new.") The Jadidists, who received support from
Tajiks, Tatars, and Uzbeks, were modernizers and nationalists who viewed
Central Asia as a whole. Their position was that the religious and
cultural greatness of Islamic civilization had been degraded in the
Central Asia of their day. The Tatars and Central Asians who shared
these views established Jadidist schools in several cities in the
Guberniya of Turkestan. Although the Jadidists were not necessarily
anti-Russian, tsarist officials in Turkestan found their kind of
education even more threatening than traditional Islamic teaching. By
World War I, several cities in present-day Tajikistan had underground
Jadidist organizations.
Between 1869 and 1913, uprisings against the amir of Bukhoro erupted
under local rulers in the eastern part of the khanate. The uprisings of
1910 and 1913 required Russian troops to restore order. A peasant revolt
also occurred in eastern Bukhoro in 1886. The failed Russian revolution
of 1905 resonated very little among the indigenous populations of
Central Asia. In the Duma (legislature) that was established in St.
Petersburg as a consequence of the events of 1905, the indigenous
inhabitants of Turkestan were allotted only six representatives.
Subsequent to the second Duma in 1907, Central Asians were denied all
representation.
By 1916 discontent with the effects of Russian rule had grown
substantially. Central Asians complained especially of discriminatory
taxation and price gouging by Russian merchants. A flashpoint was
Russia's revocation that year of Central Asians' traditional exemption
from military service. In July 1916, the first violent reaction to the
impending draft occurred when demonstrators attacked Russian soldiers in
Khujand, in what would later be northern Tajikistan. Although clashes
continued in various parts of Central Asia through the end of the year,
Russian troops quickly brought the Khujand region back under control.
The following year, the Russian Revolution ended tsarist rule in Central
Asia.
In the early 1920s, the establishment of Soviet rule in Central Asia
led to the creation of a new entity called Tajikistan as a republic
within the Soviet Union. In contrast to the tsarist period, when most
inhabitants of the future Tajikistan felt only limited Russian
influence, the Soviet era saw a central authority exert itself in a way
that was ideologically and culturally alien to the republic's
inhabitants. The Tajik way of life experienced much change, even though
social homogenization was never achieved.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - The Revolutionary Era
Tajikistan
The indigenous inhabitants of the former Guberniya of Turkestan
played no role in the overthrow of the Russian monarchy in March 1917 or
in the seizure of power by the Russian Communist Party (Bolshevik) in
November of that year. But the impact of those upheavals soon was felt
in all parts of Central Asia. After the fall of the monarchy, Russia's
Provisional Government abolished the office of governor-general of
Turkestan and established in its place a nine-member Turkestan
Committee, in which Russians had the majority and provided the
leadership. The Provisional Government, which ruled Russia between March
and November 1917, was unwilling to address the specific concerns of
Central Asian reformers, including regional autonomy. Central Asians
received no seats in Russia's short-lived Constituent Assembly. The
events of 1917 finally alienated both conservatives and radicals from
the revolution.
In 1917 the soviets (local revolutionary assemblies including
soldiers and workers) that sprang up in Russian areas of Turkestan and
Bukhoro were composed overwhelmingly of Russians. In November 1917, a
regional congress of soviets in Tashkent declared a revolutionary regime
and voted by a wide margin to continue the policies of the Provisional
Government. Thus, Central Asians again were denied political
representation. Eventually, local communists established a figurehead
soviet for Central Asians.
Having been denied access to the revolutionary organs of power,
Central Asian reformers and conservatives formed their own
organizations, as well as an umbrella group, the National Center.
Although the groups cooperated on some issues of common interest,
considerable animosity and occasional violence marked their relations.
One group of Central Asian Muslims declared an autonomous state in
southern Central Asia centered in the city of Quqon. At the beginning of
1919, the Tashkent Soviet declared the Quqon group counterrevolutionary
and seized the city, killing at least 5,000 civilians.
Meanwhile, in 1918 the Tashkent Soviet had been defeated soundly in
its effort to overthrow the amir of Bukhoro, who was seen by the
communists and the Central Asian reformers alike as an obstacle to their
respective programs. The attempted coup provoked a campaign of
repression by the amir, and the defeat forced the Russian authorities in
Tashkent to recognize a sovereign Bukhoran state in place of a Russian
protectorate.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Impact of the Civil War
Tajikistan
An acute food shortage struck Turkestan in 1918-19, the result of the
civil war, scarcities of grain caused by communist cotton-cultivation
and price-setting policies, and the Tashkent Soviet's disinclination to
provide famine relief to indigenous Central Asians. No authoritative
estimate of famine deaths is available, but Central Asian nationalists
put the number above 1 million.
In the fall of 1919, the collapse of the anti-Bolshevik White Army in
western Siberia enabled General Mikhail Frunze to lead Red Army forces
into Central Asia and gradually occupy the entire region. In 1920 the
Red Army occupied Bukhoro and drove out the amir, declaring an
independent people's republic but remaining as an occupation force.
Turkestan, including the northern part of present-day Tajikistan, was
officially incorporated into the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist
Republic in 1921.
By 1921 the Russian communists had won the Russian Civil War and
established the first Soviet republics in Azerbaijan, Armenia,
Belorussia (present-day Belarus), Georgia, and Ukraine. At this point,
the communists reduced the party's token Central Asian leadership to
figurehead positions and expelled a large number of the Central Asian
rank and file. In 1922 the Communist Party of Bukhoro was incorporated
into the Russian Communist Party, which soon became the Communist Party
of the Soviet Union (CPSU). Thereafter, most major government offices in
Bukhoro were filled by appointees sent from Moscow, many of them Tatars,
and many Central Asians were purged from the party and the government.
In 1924 Bukhoro was converted from a people's republic to a Soviet
socialist republic.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - The Basmachi
Tajikistan
An indigenous resistance movement proved the last barrier to
assimilation of Central Asia into the Soviet Union. In the 1920s, more
than 20,000 people fought Soviet rule in Central Asia. The Russians
applied a derogatory term, Basmachi (which originally meant
brigand), to the groups. Although the resistance did not apply that term
to itself, it nonetheless entered common usage. The several Basmachi
groups had conflicting agendas and seldom coordinated their actions.
After arising in the Fergana Valley, the movement became a rallying
ground for opponents of Russian or Bolshevik rule from all parts of the
region. Peasant unrest already existed in the area because of wartime
hardships and the demands of the amir and the soviets. The Red Army's
harsh treatment of local inhabitants in 1921 drove more people into the
resistance camp. However, the Basmachi movement became more divided and
more conservative as it gained numerically. It achieved some unity under
the leadership of Enver Pasha, a Turkish adventurer with ambitions to
lead the new secular government of Turkey, but Enver was killed in
battle in early 1922.
Except for remote pockets of resistance, guerrilla fighting in
Tajikistan ended by 1925. The defeat of the Basmachis caused as many as
200,000 people, including noncombatants, to flee eastern Bukhoro in the
first half of the 1920s. A few thousand subsequently returned over the
next several years.
The communists used a combination of military force and conciliation
to defeat the Basmachis. The military approach ultimately favored the
communist side, which was much better armed. The Red Army forces
included Tatars and Central Asians, who enabled the invading force to
appear at least partly indigenous. Conciliatory measures (grants of
food, tax relief, the promise of land reform, the reversal of
anti-Islamic policies launched during the Civil War, and the promise of
an end to agricultural controls) prompted some Basmachis to reconcile
themselves to the new order.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Creation of Tajikistan
Tajikistan
After establishing communist rule throughout formerly tsarist Central
Asia in 1924, the Soviet government redrew internal political borders,
eliminating the major units into which the region had been divided. The
Soviet rationale was that this reorganization fulfilled local
inhabitants' nationalist aspirations and would undercut support for the
Basmachis. However, the new boundaries still left national groups
fragmented, and nationalist aspirations in Central Asia did not prove as
threatening as depicted in communist propaganda.
One of the new states created in Central Asia in 1924 was Uzbekistan,
which had the status of a Soviet socialist republic. Tajikistan was
created as an autonomous Soviet socialist republic within Uzbekistan.
The new autonomous republic included what had been eastern Bukhoro and
had a population of about 740,000, out of a total population of nearly 5
million in Uzbekistan as a whole. Its capital was established in
Dushanbe, which had been a village of 3,000 in 1920. In 1929 Tajikistan
was detached from Uzbekistan and given full status as a Soviet socialist
republic. At that time, the territory that is now northern Tajikistan
was added to the new republic. Even with the additional territory,
Tajikistan remained the smallest Central Asian republic.
With the creation of a republic defined in national terms came the
creation of institutions that, at least in form, were likewise national.
The first Tajik-language newspaper in Soviet Tajikistan began
publication in 1926. New educational institutions also began operation
about the same time. The first state schools, available to both children
and adults and designed to provide a basic education, opened in 1926.
The central government also trained a small number of Tajiks for public
office, either by putting them through courses offered by government
departments or by sending them to schools in Uzbekistan.
From 1921 to 1927, during the New Economic Policy (NEP--see Glossary)
Soviet agricultural policy promoted the expansion of cotton cultivation
in Central Asia. By the end of the NEP, the extent of cotton cultivation
had increased dramatically, but yield did not match prerevolutionary
levels. At the same time, the cultivation of rice, a staple food of the
region, declined considerably.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Collectivization
Tajikistan
The collectivization of agriculture was implemented on a limited
scale in Tajikistan between 1927 and 1929, and much more aggressively
between 1930 and 1934. The objective of Soviet agricultural policy was
to expand the extent of cotton cultivation in Tajikistan as a whole,
with particular emphasis on the southern part of the republic. The
process included violence against peasants, substantial expansion of the
irrigation network, and forcible resettlement of mountain people and
people from Uzbekistan in the lowlands. Many peasants in Tajikistan
fought forced collectivization, reviving the Basmachi movement in upland
enclaves between 1930 and 1936. The interwar years also saw small-scale
industrial development in the republic.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - The Purges
Tajikistan
Like the CPSU branches elsewhere in the Soviet Union, the Communist
Party of Tajikistan suffered waves of purges directed by the central
government in Moscow between 1927 and 1934. Conditions particular to
Tajikistan were used to provide additional justification for the
crackdown. Many Tajik communists were highly critical of the ferocity
with which the collectivization of agriculture was implemented, and
central party authorities were dissatisfied with the local communists'
advocacy of the republic's interests, including attempts to gain more
autonomy and shield local intellectuals. About 70 percent of the party
membership in Tajikistan--nearly 10,000 people at all levels of the
organization--was expelled between 1933 and 1935. Between 1932 and 1937,
the proportion of Tajiks in the republic's party membership dropped from
53 to 45 percent as the purges escalated. Many of those expelled from
party and state offices were replaced by Russians sent in by the central
government. Another round of purges took place in 1937 and 1938, during
the Great Terror orchestrated by Joseph V. Stalin. Subsequently Russians
dominated party positions at all levels, including the top position of
first secretary. Whatever their nationality, party officials
representing Tajikistan, unlike those from some other Soviet republics,
had little influence in nationwide politics throughout the existence of
the Soviet Union.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - The Postwar Period
Tajikistan
The post-World War II era saw the expansion of irrigated agriculture,
the further development of industry, and a rise in the level of
education in Tajikistan. Like the rest of the Soviet Union, Tajikistan
felt the effects of the party and government reorganization projects of
Soviet leader Nikita S. Khrushchev (in office 1953-64). Especially in
1957 and 1958, Tajikistan's population and economy were manipulated as
part of Khrushchev's overly ambitious Virgin Lands project, a campaign
to forcibly increase the extent of arable land in the Soviet Union.
Under Khrushchev and his successor, Leonid I. Brezhnev (in office
1964-82), Tajikistan's borders were periodically redrawn as districts
and provinces were recombined, abolished, and restored, while small
amounts of territory were acquired from or ceded to neighboring
republics.
During the Soviet period, the only Tajikistani politician to become
important outside his region was Bobojon Ghafurov (1908-77), a Tajik who
became prominent as the Stalinist first secretary of the Communist Party
of Tajikistan in the late 1940s. After Stalin's death in 1953, Ghafurov,
a historian by training, established himself as a prominent Asia scholar
and magazine editor, injecting notes of Tajik nationalism into some of
his historical writings.
The fate of Ghafurov's successors illustrates important trends in the
politics of Soviet Central Asia in the second half of the twentieth
century. The next first secretary, Tursunbai Uljabayev (in office
1956-61), was ousted amid accusations that he had falsified reports to
exaggerate the success of cotton production in the republic (charges
also leveled in the 1980s against Uzbekistan's leadership); apparently
the central government also objected to Uljabayev's preferential
appointments of his cronies from Leninobod Province to party positions
(see Russification and Resistance, ch. 5). Uljabaev's replacement as
first secretary, Jabbor Rasulov, was a veteran of the prestigious
agricultural bureaucracy of the republic. Like first secretaries in the
other Central Asian republics, Rasulov benefited from Brezhnev's policy
of "stability of cadres" and remained in office until
Brezhnev's death in 1982.
Rasulov's successor, Rahmon Nabiyev, was a man of the Brezhnevite
political school, who, like his predecessor, had spent much of his
career in the agricultural bureaucracy. Nabiyev held office until ousted
in 1985 as Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev (in office 1985-91) swept
out the republic's old-guard party leaders. Nabiyev's 1991 installation
as president of independent Tajikistan, by means of an old-guard coup
and a rigged election, exacerbated the political tensions in the
republic and was an important step toward the civil war that broke out
in 1992.
All the post-Stalin party first secretaries came from Leninobod, in
keeping with a broader phenomenon of Tajikistani politics from the
postwar period to the collapse of the Soviet Union--the linkage between
regional cliques, especially from Leninobod Province, and political
power. Although certain cliques from Leninobod were dominant, they
allowed allies from other provinces a lesser share of power. As the
conflict in the early1990s showed, supporters of opposing camps could be
found in all the country's provinces.
The forces of fragmentation in the Soviet Union eventually affected
Tajikistan, whose government strongly supported continued unity. Bowing
to Tajik nationalism, Tajikistan's Supreme Soviet adopted a declaration
of sovereignty in August 1990, but in March 1991, the people of
Tajikistan voted overwhelmingly for preservation of the union in a
national referendum. That August the Moscow coup against the Gorbachev
government brought mass demonstrations by opposition groups in Dushanbe,
forcing the resignation of President Kahar Mahkamov. Nabiyev assumed the
position of acting president. The following month, the Supreme Soviet
proclaimed Tajikistan an independent state, following the examples of
Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. In November, Nabiyev was elected president of
the new republic, and in December, representatives of Tajikistan signed
the agreement forming the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS--see
Glossary) to succeed the Soviet Union.
Antigovernment demonstrations began in Dushanbe in March 1992. In
April 1992, tensions mounted as progovernment groups opposing reform
staged counterdemonstrations. By May, small armed clashes had occurred,
causing Nabiyev to break off negotiations with the reformist
demonstrators and go into hiding. After eight antigovernment
demonstrators were killed in Dushanbe, the commander of the Russian
garrison brokered a compromise agreement creating a coalition government
in which one-third of the cabinet positions would go to members of the
opposition. The collapse of that government heralded the outbreak of a
civil war that plagued Tajikistan for the next four years (see
Transition to Post-Soviet Government, this ch.).
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Geography
Tajikistan
Mountains cover 93 percent of Tajikistan's surface area. The two
principal ranges, the Pamir and the Alay, give rise to many glacier-fed
streams and rivers, which have been used to irrigate farmlands since
ancient times. Central Asia's other major mountain range, the Tian Shan,
skirts northern Tajikistan. Mountainous terrain separates Tajikistan's
two population centers, which are in the lowlands of the southern and
northern sections of the country. Especially in areas of intensive
agricultural and industrial activity, the Soviet Union's natural
resource utilization policies left independent Tajikistan with a legacy
of environmental problems.
<"13.htm">Dimensions and Borders
<"14.htm">Topography and Drainage
<"15.htm">Climate
<"16.htm">Environmental Problems
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Dimensions and Borders
Tajikistan
With an area of 143,100 square kilometers, Tajikistan is about the
same size as the state of Wisconsin. Its maximum east-to-west extent is
700 kilometers, and its maximum north-to-south extent is 350 kilometers.
The country's highly irregular border is about 3,000 kilometers long,
including 430 kilometers along the Chinese border to the east and 1,030
kilometers along the frontier with Afghanistan to the south. Most of the
southern border with Afghanistan is set by the Amu Darya (darya
is the Persian word for river) and its tributary the Panj River
(Darya-ye Panj), which has headwaters in Afghanistan and Tajikistan. The
other neighbors are the former Soviet republics of Uzbekistan (to the
west and the north) and Kyrgyzstan (to the north).
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Topography and Drainage
Tajikistan
The lower elevations of Tajikistan are divided into northern and
southern regions by a complex of three mountain chains that constitute
the westernmost extension of the massive Tian Shan system. Running
essentially parallel from east to west, the chains are the Turkestan,
Zarafshon, and Hisor (Gisar) mountains (see fig. 11). The last of these
lies just north of the capital, Dushanbe, which is situated in
west-central Tajikistan.
More than half of Tajikistan lies above an elevation of 3,000 meters.
Even the lowlands, which are located in the Fergana Valley in the far
north and in the southwest, are well above sea level. In the Turkestan
range, highest of the western chains, the maximum elevation is 5,510
meters. The highest elevations of this range are in the southeast, near
the border with Kyrgyzstan. That region is dominated by the peaks of the
Pamir-Alay mountain system, including two of the three highest
elevations in the former Soviet Union: Mount Lenin (7,134 meters) and
Mount Communism (7,495 meters). Several other peaks in the region also
exceed 7,000 meters. The mountains contain numerous glaciers, the
largest of which, the Fedchenko, covers more than 700 square kilometers
and is the largest glacier in the world outside the polar regions.
Because Tajikistan lies in an active seismic belt, severe earthquakes
are common.
The Fergana Valley, the most densely populated region in Central
Asia, spreads across northern Tajikistan from Uzbekistan on the west to
Kyrgyzstan on the east (see fig. 1). This long valley, which lies
between two mountain ranges, reaches its lowest elevation of 320 meters
at Khujand on the Syrdariya. Rivers bring rich soil deposits into the
Fergana Valley from the surrounding mountains, creating a series of
fertile oases that have long been prized for agriculture (see
Agriculture, this ch.).
In Tajikistan's dense river network, the largest rivers are the
Syrdariya and the Amu Darya; the largest tributaries are the Vakhsh and
the Kofarnihon, which form valleys from northeast to southwest across
western Tajikistan. The Amu Darya carries more water than any other
river in Central Asia. The upper course of the Amu Darya, called the
Panj River, is 921 kilometers long. The river's name changes at the
confluence of the Panj, the Vakhsh, and the Kofarnihon rivers in far
southwestern Tajikistan. The Vakhsh, called the Kyzyl-Suu upstream in
Kyrgyzstan and the Surkhob in its middle course in north-central
Tajikistan, is the second largest river in southern Tajikistan after the
Amu-Panj system. In the Soviet era, the Vakhsh was dammed at several
points for irrigation and electric power generation, most notably at
Norak (Nurek), east of Dushanbe, where one of the world's highest dams
forms the Norak Reservoir. Numerous factories also were built along the
Vakhsh to draw upon its waters and potential for electric power
generation.
The two most important rivers in northern Tajikistan are the
Syrdariya and the Zarafshon. The former, the second longest river in
Central Asia, stretches 195 kilometers (of its total length of 2,400
kilometers) across the Fergana Valley in far-northern Tajikistan. The
Zarafshon River runs 316 kilometers (of a total length of 781
kilometers) through the center of Tajikistan. Tajikistan's rivers reach
high-water levels twice a year: in the spring, fed by the rainy season
and melting mountain snow, and in the summer, fed by melting glaciers.
The summer freshets are the more useful for irrigation, especially in
the Fergana Valley and the valleys of southeastern Tajikistan. Most of
Tajikistan's lakes are of glacial origin and are located in the Pamir
region. The largest, the Qarokul (Kara-Kul), is a salt lake devoid of
life, lying at an elevation of 4,200 meters.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Climate
Tajikistan
In general, Tajikistan's climate is continental, subtropical, and
semiarid, with some desert areas. The climate changes drastically
according to elevation, however. The Fergana Valley and other lowlands
are shielded by mountains from Arctic air masses, but temperatures in
that region still drop below freezing for more than 100 days a year. In
the subtropical southwestern lowlands, which have the highest average
temperatures, the climate is arid, although some sections now are
irrigated for farming. At Tajikistan's lower elevations, the average
temperature range is 23� to 30� C in July and -1� to 3�C in January.
In the eastern Pamirs, the average July temperature is 5� to 10�C, and
the average January temperature is -15� to -20�C. The average annual
precipitation for most of the republic ranges between 700 and 1,600
millimeters. The heaviest precipitation falls are at the Fedchenko
Glacier, which averages 2,236 millimeters per year, and the lightest in
the eastern Pamirs, which average less than 100 millimeters per year.
Most precipitation occurs in the winter and spring.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Environmental Problems
Tajikistan
Most of Tajikistan's environmental problems are related to the
agricultural policies imposed on the country during the Soviet period.
By 1991 heavy use of mineral fertilizers and agricultural chemicals was
a major cause of pollution in the republic. Among those chemicals were
DDT, banned by international convention, and several defoliants and
herbicides. In addition to the damage they have done to the air, land,
and water, the chemicals have contaminated the cottonseeds whose oil is
used widely for cooking. Cotton farmers and their families are at
particular risk from the overuse of agricultural chemicals, both from
direct physical contact in the field and from the use of the branches of
cotton plants at home for fuel. All of these toxic sources are believed
to contribute to a high incidence of maternal and child mortality and
birth defects. In 1994 the infant mortality rate was 43.2 per 1,000
births, the second highest rate among former Soviet republics. The rate
in 1990 had been 40.0 infant deaths per 1,000 births (see table 5,
Appendix; Health Conditions, this ch.).
Cotton requires particularly intense irrigation (see Agriculture,
this ch.). In Tajikistan's cotton-growing regions, farms were
established in large, semiarid tracts and in tracts reclaimed from the
desert, but cotton's growing season is summer, when the region receives
virtually no rainfall. The 50 percent increase in cotton cultivation
mandated by Soviet and post-Soviet agricultural planners between 1964
and 1994 consequently overtaxed the regional water supply. Poorly
designed irrigation networks led to massive runoff, which increased soil
salinity and carried toxic agricultural chemicals downstream to other
fields, the Aral Sea, and populated areas of the region.
By the 1980s, nearly 90 percent of water use in Central Asia was for
agriculture. Of that quantity, nearly 75 percent came from the Amu Darya
and the Syrdariya, the chief tributaries of the Aral Sea on the
Kazakstan-Uzbekistan border to the northwest of Tajikistan. As the
desiccation of the Aral Sea came to international attention in the
1980s, water-use policy became a contentious issue between Soviet
republics such as Tajikistan, where the main rivers rise, and those
farther downstream, including Uzbekistan. By the end of the Soviet era,
the central government had relinquished central control of water-use
policy for Central Asia, but the republics had not agreed on an
allocation policy.
Industry also causes pollution problems. A major offender is the
production of nonferrous metals. One of Tajikistan's leading industrial
sites, the aluminum plant at Regar (also known as Tursunzoda), west of
Dushanbe near the border with Uzbekistan, generates large amounts of
toxic waste gases that have been blamed for a sharp increase in the
number of birth defects among people who live within range of its
emissions.
In 1992 the Supreme Soviet of Tajikistan established a Ministry of
Environmental Protection. However, the enforcement activity of the
ministry was limited severely by the political upheavals that plagued
Tajikistan in its first years of independence (see Transition to
Post-Soviet Government, this ch.). The only registered private
environmental group in Tajikistan in the early 1990s was a chapter of
the Social-Ecological Alliance, the largest informal environmental
association in the former Soviet Union. The Tajikistani branch's main
functions have been to conduct environmental research and to organize
protests against the Roghun Hydroelectric Plant project (see Energy,
this ch.).
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Society
Tajikistan
Population
Tajikistan's population has been characterized as primarily rural,
with a relatively high birth rate and substantial ethnic tensions.
Substantial forced relocation has occurred, first as a result of various
Soviet programs and then because of the civil war.
By the time Tajikistan became independent, its social structure
reflected some of the changes that Soviet policy had consciously
promoted, including urbanization, nearly universal adult literacy, and
the increased employment of women outside the home. However, the changes
were not as far-reaching as the central government had intended, nor did
they take the exact form the government wanted. Tajikistan's cities
grew, but the republic remained predominantly rural. More women had
wage-paying jobs, but society still held traditional women's roles in
higher regard. Tajikistan had an especially high birth rate and the
highest rate of population increase of all the former Soviet republics.
<"18.htm">Population Characteristics
<"19.htm">Urbanization
<"20.htm">The Rural Majority
<"21.htm">Gender and Family Structure
<"22.htm">Emigration
<"23.htm">Ethnic Groups
<"24.htm">Forces of Nationalism
<"25.htm">Religion
<"26.htm">Culture and the Arts
<"27.htm">Education
<"28.htm">Health
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Population Characteristics
Tajikistan
The 1970 census showed a population of 2,899,602. Overall, the rate
of growth, which averaged 3.1 percent per year in the 1970s, rose to an
annual average of 3.4 percent in the 1980s. According to the last Soviet
census, taken in 1989, Tajikistan's population was 5,092,603. Since that
time, no reliable estimate has been available; however, in the 1990s
conditions in the country seem likely to preclude continuation of the
rapid population increases of the 1970s and 1980s. The main factor in
that change is the civil war and its repercussions: an estimated 50,000
dead, extensive shifting of populations within Tajikistan, heavy
emigration, and a decreased birth rate caused by political turmoil and a
plummeting standard of living. The birth rate was estimated at 3.0
percent in 1992.
Tajikistan's population is concentrated at the lower elevations; 90
percent of its inhabitants live in valleys, often in densely
concentrated urban centers. In mid-1991, the overall population density
for the republic was 38.2 persons per square kilometer, but density
varied greatly among the provinces. In the northern Khujand Province,
the density was 61.2; in the two southern provinces of Qurghonteppa and
Kulob (which, at the time of the census and again after the civil war,
merged into a single province, Khatlon), 71.5; in those districts not
part of any province, including Dushanbe, 38.9; and in the easternmost
jurisdictions, the mountainous Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Province,
whose borders encompass more than 40 percent of Tajikistan's territory,
only 2.6.
The mountain areas, which never have been densely populated, lost
many of their inhabitants beginning in the 1930s through a combination
of voluntary migration in pursuit of better opportunities, forced
relocations to the lowlands, and the destruction of villages for
construction of Soviet-sponsored hydroelectric dams. This pattern
reversed partially after 1992, as people fled to the mountains to escape
the civil war.
According to the 1989 census, Tajikistan's population was
overwhelmingly young and 50.3 percent female. People under age thirty
made up 75 percent of the population; people under age fifteen were 47
percent of the total.
In the last two decades of the Soviet era, Tajikistan had the highest
birth rate of any Soviet republic. Average
family size in the republic, according to the 1989 census, was 6.1
people, the largest in the Soviet Union. The average Tajik woman gave
birth to between seven and nine children. The average annual population
growth rate for rural Tajikistan in the 1970s and 1980s was higher than
the rate for urban areas.
The two main causes of Tajikistan's growth pattern were the high
value placed by society on large families and the virtual absence of
birth control, especially in rural areas, where the majority of the
population lived. Women under the age of twenty gave birth to 5.1
percent of the babies born in Tajikistan in 1989, and a relatively high
proportion of women continued to have children late into their
child-bearing years. According to the 1989 census, 2 percent of all the
babies born in Tajikistan were born to women between the ages of forty
and forty-four; 81 percent of those babies had been preceded by at least
six other children.
In the late 1980s, the Soviet government reacted to the high birth
rate by encouraging family planning. The plan failed because of poor
promotion of the pronatalist policy in the European republics of the
union, inadequate birth control methods, and the Tajiks' traditional
admiration for large families and opposition to birth control. In rural
areas, the inadequacies of health care and the reluctance of women to
undergo gynecological examinations contributed to the failure of family
planning prior to independence.
Updated population figures for Tajikistan.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Urbanization
Tajikistan
Statistically, Tajikistan is the least urban of all the former Soviet
republics (see table 3, Appendix). By the 1980s, the republic had
nineteen cities and forty-nine "urban-type settlements" (the
term used for populated places developed as part of Soviet planning). At
the time of the first Soviet census, in 1926, when Tajikistan still was
an autonomous republic of Uzbekistan, only 10 percent of its inhabitants
lived in cities. By the 1959 census, urbanization had risen to 33
percent. This growth reflected not only the development of Tajikistan in
its own right but the resettlement of people from other parts of the
Soviet Union to occupy government, party, and military positions. It
also reflected an influx of political deportees. Most of the immigrants
went to Tajikistan's two largest cities, Dushanbe and Leninobod. During
the period before 1960, some populated places also were reclassified as
urban or incorporated into an existing city's boundaries, thus creating
an impression of even greater urbanization.
The growth of the urban population continued for most of the postwar
era. Between the 1959 and 1979 censuses, Tajikistan's urban population
more than doubled, while the rural population increased almost as
rapidly. However, by the 1970s the rate of rural population growth had
begun to outstrip that of urban areas. After reaching a peak of 35
percent in the 1979 census, the proportion of the urban population
declined.
According to the 1989 census, although Tajikistan's urban population
increased by 26 percent in the 1980s, the proportion of urban
inhabitants in the total population declined to 32.5 percent during that
period. By the start of 1991, the republic's five largest cities,
Dushanbe, Khujand, Kulob, Qurghonteppa, and Uroteppa, accounted for 17
percent of the total population of the republic. Beginning with the 1979
census, emigration from cities exceeded immigration into them. In the
1980s, urban immigration also came predominantly from within Tajikistan
rather than from other Soviet republics, as had been the case in earlier
decades. As other ethnic groups emigrated from Tajikistan more rapidly
beginning in the late Soviet period, the percentage of Tajiks in the
cities rose. Nevertheless, Tajiks in Tajikistan were one of the Soviet
nationalities least likely to move from villages to cities. Those who
did so were usually single men reacting to the scarcity of employment in
rural areas.
Tajikistan's largest city, Dushanbe (which was called Stalinabad from
1929 to 1961), was a Soviet-era development. Badly battered in the
Russian Civil War of 1918-21, the village experienced a population drop
from more than 3,000 in 1920 to 283 by 1924, and few buildings remained
intact. Nevertheless, in 1924 Dushanbe was chosen as the capital of the
new Tajikistan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Centrally planned
development projects inaugurated in 1926, 1938, 1965, and 1983
established housing, government office buildings, cultural facilities,
and sports and recreational facilities, as well as the municipal
infrastructure. With the addition of about 100 factories, Dushanbe also
became Tajikistan's industrial center. It is the headquarters of the
republic's radio and television broadcasting facilities and film studio.
Several institutions of higher education and scholarship are located
there.
Soviet-era industrial development projects played a major role in the
growth of cities on the sites of former villages. For example, Regar,
which was established in 1952, is the center of Tajikistan's vital
aluminum industry, as well as several factories dedicated to other
activities. Norak and Yovon (Russian spelling Yavan--site of a large
chemical plant), were developed as industrial centers near Dushanbe to
play specific economic roles in the Soviet system.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - The Rural Majority
Tajikistan
In the last decade of the Soviet era, the rural population of
Tajikistan grew in both absolute and relative terms. By 1989 the rural
population had risen to 3,437,498, or 68 percent of the total
population, an increase of nearly 1 million people over the 1979 figure.
By the 1980s, the republic had more than 3,000 inhabited villages, of
which about one-quarter had 200 inhabitants or fewer. Observers have
estimated that 75 to 89 percent of all Tajikistantis were villagers in
1990.
The rural standard of living is considerably below that of urban
areas. Sanitation often is poor, and in many cases no safe source of
drinking water is available. By the late 1980s, fewer than half of rural
inhabitants and only 14 percent of collective farm residents had a
piped-in water supply. In the same period, hundreds of villages lacked
electricity, and some had no access to telephones or radio or television
broadcasts (see Transportation and Telecommunications, this ch.). Many
rural areas experienced shortages of doctors and teachers. The ratio of
hospital beds to inhabitants is much lower in rural Tajikistan than in
urban areas and far worse than the average for the former Soviet Union
as a whole (see Health Care System, this ch.). Even large villages are
unlikely to have libraries or other cultural facilities.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Gender and Family Structure
Tajikistan
The Soviet era saw the implementation of policies designed to
transform the status of women. During the 1930s, the Soviet authorities
launched a campaign for women's equality in Tajikistan, as they did
elsewhere in Central Asia. Eventually major changes resulted from such
programs, but initially they provoked intense public opposition. For
example, women who appeared in public without the traditional
all-enveloping veil were ostracized by society or even killed by
relatives for supposedly shaming their families by what was considered
unchaste behavior.
World War II brought an upsurge in women's employment outside the
home. With the majority of men removed from their civilian jobs by the
demands of war, women compensated for the labor shortage. Although the
employment of indigenous women in industry continued to grow even after
the war, they remained a small fraction of the industrial labor force
after independence. In the early 1980s, women made up 51 percent of
Tajikistan's population and 52 percent of the work force on collective
farms, but only 38 percent of the industrial labor force, 16 percent of
transportation workers, 14 percent of communications workers, and 28
percent of civil servants. (These statistics include women of Russian
and other non-Central Asian nationalities.) In some rural parts of the
republic, about half the women were not employed at all outside the home
in the mid-1980s. In the late Soviet era, female underemployment was an
important political issue in Tajikistan because it was linked to the
Soviet propaganda campaign portraying Islam as a regressive influence on
society.
The issue of female employment was more complicated than was
indicated by Soviet propaganda, however. Many women remained in the home
not only because of traditional attitudes about women's roles but also
because many lacked vocational training and few child care facilities
were available. By the end of the 1980s, Tajikistan's preschools could
accommodate only 16.5 percent of the children of appropriate age overall
and only 2.4 percent of the rural children. Despite all this, women
provided the core of the work force in certain areas of agriculture,
especially the production of cotton and some fruits and vegetables.
Women were underrepresented in government and management positions
relative to their proportion of the republic's population. The Communist
Party of Tajikistan, the government (especially the higher offices), and
economic management organizations were largely directed by men.
In the last decades of the twentieth century, Tajik social norms and
even de facto government policy still often favored a traditionalist,
restrictive attitude toward women that tolerated wife beating and the
arbitrary dismissal of women from responsible positions. In the late
Soviet period, Tajik girls still commonly married while under age
despite official condemnation of this practice as a remnant of the
"feudal" Central Asian mentality.
Tajik society never has been organized by tribal affiliation. The
core of the traditional social structure of Tajiks and other sedentary
peoples of Central Asia is usually the extended family, which is
composed of an adult couple, their unmarried daughters, and their
married sons and their wives and children. Such a group normally has
joint ownership of the family homestead, land, crops, and livestock. The
more prosperous a family, the more members it is likely to have. In the
1930s, some particularly wealthy Tajik families had fifty members or
more. Although Islam permits polygamy, that practice has been illegal in
Tajikistan for about seventy years; monogamy is the more typical form of
spousal relationship because of the high bride-price traditionally
required of suitors.
Traditional family ties remain strong. Tajikistan had one of the
highest percentages of people living in families rather than singly in
the Soviet Union. According to the 1989 census, 69 percent of the men
aged sixteen or older and 67 percent of the women in that age group were
married, 2 percent of the men and 10 percent of the women were widowers
or widows, and 1.7 percent of the men and 4 percent of the women were
divorced or separated. Only 7.5 percent of men over age forty and 0.4
percent of women over forty never had been married.
The strength of the family is sometimes misinterpreted as simply a
consequence of Islam's influence on Tajik society. However, rural
societies in general often emphasize the family as a social unit, and
Islam does not forbid divorce. Grounds for divorce in Tajikistan include
childlessness, emotional estrangement (in some cases the result of
arranged marriages), a shortage of housing, drunkenness, and economic
dissatisfaction. The highest rate of divorce is in Dushanbe, which has
not only an acute housing shortage but a large number of inhabitants
belonging to non-Central Asian nationalities. Marriage across
nationality lines is relatively uncommon. Ethnically mixed marriages are
almost twice as likely to occur in urban as in rural areas.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Emigration
Tajikistan
After the Soviet census of 1989, a wave of emigration occurred. In
the absence of a more recent census, the scale of that movement has not
been determined reliably. It is known that non-Central Asians,
especially Russians, were a large component of the �migr� group.
According to one estimate, about 200,000 Tajikistani citizens had left
by early 1992. Among the causes of emigration in the late Soviet and
early independence eras were opposition to the 1989 law that made Tajik
the official language of the republic, resentment of the growing
national assertiveness of Tajiks, dissatisfaction with the standard of
living in the republic, fear of violence directed against non-Central
Asians (a fear based partly on the Dushanbe riots of 1990 but
intensified by rumor and the propaganda of communist hard-liners looking
for support against a rising opposition), and, in 1992, the escalation
of political violence into outright civil war. Some of the people who
left Tajikistan were Germans and Jews who emigrated not just from the
republic but from the Soviet Union altogether.
According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees,
50,000 to 70,000 Tajiks fled from southern Tajikistan to northern
Afghanistan to escape the carnage of the civil war that began in 1992.
The total number of people who fled their homes during the troubles of
1992 and 1993, either for other parts of Tajikistan or for other
countries, is estimated to be at least 500,000. Most of these people
probably returned to their home districts in 1993 or 1994, with help
from foreign governments and international aid organizations. The return
entailed hardships for many. Some were harmed or threatened by armed
bands from the victorious side in the civil war. For others the
difficulty lay in the devastation of homes and the collapse of the
economy in districts battered by the war.
Regardless of motive, the increased emigration in the late 1980s and
early 1990s deprived the republic of needed skilled workers and
professionals. The number of doctors and teachers declined, and
industries lost trained workers who could not be replaced.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Ethnic Groups
Tajikistan
In creating the new Central Asian republics in the 1920s, the central
political leadership arbitrarily defined national identities, which
until that time had had little political importance. In the case of the
Tajiks, this meant not only differentiating them from the Uzbeks, with
whom they had much in common despite their different native languages,
but also from fellow Persian-speakers outside the Soviet Union. Although
the labels "Tajik" and "Uzbek" were not Soviet
inventions, they had little meaning to many of the people to whom they
were suddenly applied. This circumstance led to much confusion when
people were required to identify themselves by one of these two national
designations.
The Tajiks' language, which they traditionally had called Persian
(Farsi), was relabeled Tajik. Major Persian-language writers were called
Tajiks, even if they had not used that term to describe themselves and
had not lived in Central Asia. Tajik, like the other Central Asian
languages, underwent a two-stage alphabet reform by order of the Soviet
regime. First, the Arabic alphabet was abandoned in 1929 in favor of the
Latin. Then, in 1940 Moscow declared Cyrillic the official alphabet of
the Tajik language.
Meanwhile, during the 1930s and 1940s Tajik culture was redefined and
Sovietized to suit the political requirements of the central government
of Soviet leader Joseph V. Stalin. In this period, the accusation of
"bourgeois nationalism" could destroy a member of the
intelligentsia or a political figure. In the renewed wave of Stalinist
repression after World War II, Tajik intellectuals were purged for being
nationalists, a loosely defined offense that could be applied to any
form of opposition to central government policies.
By the time Tajikistan became an independent republic in 1991, its
multiethnic population included an ethnic majority of Tajiks and an even
larger religious majority of Muslims (see table 4, Appendix). Despite
Soviet claims that ethnic and religious loyalties had diminished sharply
and were bound for extinction, there were strong indications in the late
1980s and early 1990s that ethnic and religious identities remained
essentially intact. Indeed, those factors began to exert greater
influence as Soviet controls weakened and people sought alternative
ideologies.
According to the latest census, taken in 1989, Tajikistan had a
population of 5,092,603, of whom Tajiks constituted about 3.17 million,
or 62.3 percent. The accuracy of subsequent population estimates suffers
from the region's large-scale population movement. In 1989 about
three-quarters of all Tajiks in the Soviet Union lived in Tajikistan. Of
the remaining 1 million Tajiks, about 933,000 lived in neighboring
Uzbekistan. Much smaller Tajik populations lived in Afghanistan and
China. The other major nationalities living in Tajikistan were Uzbeks,
23.5 percent (1,197,841); Russians, 7.6 percent (388,481); Volga Tatars,
1.4 percent (72,228); and Kyrgyz, 1.3 percent (63,832). In order of
size, the remaining 3.9 percent included populations of Ukrainians,
Germans, Turkmen, Koreans, Jews (including those of European ancestry
and "Bukhoran Jews," whose ancestors had lived in Central Asia
for centuries), Belorussians, Crimean Tatars, and Armenians.
Although ethnically classified with the Tajiks in the Soviet era,
several Eastern Iranian peoples who had not been assimilated over the
centuries by their Persian- or Turkic-speaking neighbors preserved
distinct identities. These groups were the Yaghnobs and seven Pamiri
peoples. At the end of the Soviet era, the Dushanbe government allowed
some leeway for education, broadcasting, and publication in the Pamiri
languages. However, these limited reforms were more than outweighed by
the repression that the victors in the civil war directed against the
Pamiris in 1992 on the grounds that they tended to support political
reform.
In the last decade of Soviet power, Tajiks became a larger proportion
of the republic's total population. The 62.3 percent they constituted in
the 1989 census was an increase from their 58.8 percent proportion in
the 1979 census. This trend seemed likely to continue into the late
1990s, barring such countervailing factors as civil war and emigration,
because Tajiks accounted for 70 percent of the republic's natural
population increase in 1989.
For much of the Soviet era, the central government used inducements
such as scholarships and cash bonuses, as well as outright reassignment,
to increase the settlement of Russian workers in Tajikistan. In the
1920s and 1930s, the small number of Tajikistanis with industrial and
professional skills prompted the central authorities to relocate
individuals with special expertise to Tajikistan, and Moscow sent many
other people as political prisoners. By 1940 roughly half of the
republic's industrial work force belonged to nonindigenous
nationalities; most of these people were Russian. The engineering
profession had a particularly large proportion of Russians and other
non-Central Asians. Non-Central Asians settled in Tajikistan during
World War II as industries and their workers were shifted east of the
Ural Mountains to prevent their capture by the German army. Additional
Russians and other Europeans went to Tajikistan in this period as war
refugees or political deportees. As a result, between 1926 and 1959 the
proportion of Russians among Tajikistan's population grew from less than
1 percent to 13 percent. During the same period, the proportion of
Tajiks dropped from 80 percent to about 50 percent. This figure fell
especially fast during the agricultural collectivization of the 1930s.
Because of the prominence of Russians and other non-Tajiks in such
urban activities as government and industry, Dushanbe, the capital,
became a predominantly non-Tajik city. According to the 1989 census,
Tajiks constituted 39.1 percent, Russians 32.4 percent, Uzbeks 10
percent, Tatars 4.1 percent, and Ukrainians 3.5 percent of Dushanbe's
population of about 602,000. Although educated, urban Tajiks were likely
to speak Russian well, few Russians living in Dushanbe spoke Tajik or
felt a need to do so. This situation caused increasing resentment among
Tajiks in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
By the end of the Soviet era, many educated Tajiks were criticizing
what they perceived as the continued privileged position of Russians in
society. Even after decades of improved education and indoctrination of
younger generations of Tajiks, Russians and other nonindigenous peoples
still occupied a disproportionate number of top positions in the
republic's communist party (see Political Parties, this ch.). Tajiks
also saw Russians perpetuating their dominance by hiring practices
biased against Tajiks. By the end of the Soviet era, Tajiks often were a
small minority in the administration of the republic's main industrial
enterprises, including the chemical plants, the cotton textile industry,
and large construction projects (see Labor, this ch.).
The preindependence government of Tajikistan made some provision for
the distinctive needs of minority nationalities living within the
republic's borders. It provided education, mass media, and cultural
offerings in Russian (see Education; The Media, this ch.). In 1988 state
radio began broadcasting in German, Kyrgyz, and Crimean Tatar. There
were several Uzbek-language bookstores in the republic. Late in the
Soviet era, Dushanbe had cultural centers for Uzbeks, Ukrainians, and
members of other nationalities as well as restaurants that provided
ethnic foods for Uzbeks, Tatars, Koreans, and Germans.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Forces of Nationalism
Tajikistan
Ethnic tensions increased in Tajikistan, as they did elsewhere in
Central Asia, under the troubled conditions of the late Soviet era.
Already in the late 1970s, some ethnic disturbances and anti-Soviet
riots had occurred. One consequence of heightened resentment of Soviet
power was violence directed at members of other nationalities, who were
made scapegoats for their attackers' economic grievances (see Economic
Conditions in the Early 1990s, this ch.). An example of this conflict
was a clash between Tajiks and Kyrgyz over land and water claims in
1989. Antagonism between Uzbeks and Tajiks reached a new level during
Tajikistan's civil war of 1992, when Uzbeks living in Tajikistan joined
the faction attempting to restore a neo-Soviet regime to power (see
Transition to Post-Soviet Government, this ch.).
In 1989 attacks on Meskhetians (one of the Muslim groups deported
from Central Asia by Stalin) spilled over from Uzbekistan to Tajikistan
when about 2,000 Meskhetians were evacuated from eastern Uzbekistan to a
remote settlement in northern Tajikistan. A violent conflict between
inhabitants of the area and the Meskhetians resulted in the intervention
of security forces and removal of the Meskhetians entirely from Central
Asia.
The late 1980s and early 1990s also saw open criticism by Tajiks of
their treatment as a people by the central Soviet authorities and by
their Turkic neighbors, especially the Uzbeks. A key issue was
disparagement of the Tajik heritage in statements of Soviet
nationalities policy, which labeled the Tajiks a "formerly
backward" people that only began to progress under Russian and
Soviet tutelage. Tajiks, who claimed a heritage of more than 2,000 years
of Persian and Eastern Iranian civilization, also were indignant at the
emphasis on Russian and Western civilization, at the expense of the
Tajik heritage, in the history and literature curricula of Soviet-era
schools in their republic. Soviet policy toward publication of
literature and the two Soviet-mandated alphabet changes served to
isolate Tajiks from their cultural heritage.
One of the important consequences of the growth of Tajik nationalism
in the late Soviet era was the enactment in 1989 of a law declaring
Tajik the state language (although the use of Russian, Uzbek, or other
languages was still recognized under some circumstances). The law
officially equated Tajik with Persian and called for a gradual
reintroduction of the Arabic alphabet. By the early 1990s, however, the
law's main impact was to alarm the republic's Russian speakers; although
some Russian loanwords were dropped in favor of contemporary Iranian
Persian terms, the use of the Arabic alphabet remained sharply limited.
Like the Russians, the Uzbeks were criticized for denying the Tajiks'
distinctive ethnic identity and ancient roots in Central Asia. Tajik
nationalists accused the authorities in Soviet Uzbekistan of practicing
overt discrimination against the Tajik population by forcing Tajiks to
register their nationality as Uzbek, undercounting the size of the Tajik
minority in Uzbekistan, and failing to provide Tajiks there with
adequate access to educational and cultural resources in Tajik. Tajik
nationalists also complained that the central government and their
Central Asian neighbors had exploited Tajikistan's raw materials and
damaged its environment.
Although nationalism had an increased appeal in Tajikistan in the
late Soviet and early independence periods, it was not a dominant
political force there. No popular movement advocated secession from the
Soviet Union before its dissolution at the end of 1991, although there
was support for renegotiating the union treaty to obtain more favorable
conditions for Tajikistan. In the late 1980s, supporters of the
communist old guard played on nationalist feelings to enhance their own
position, but after Tajikistan became independent, those individuals
became increasingly antinationalist; identification with local
patron-client networks continued to rival nationalism as a political
force.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Religion
Tajikistan
Islam, the predominant religion of all of Central Asia, was brought
to the region by the Arabs in the seventh century. Since that time,
Islam has become an integral part of Tajik culture. Although Soviet
efforts to secularize society were largely unsuccessful, the post-Soviet
era has seen a marked increase in religious practice. The majority of
Tajikistan's Muslims adhere to the Sunni (see Glossary) branch of Islam,
and a smaller group belongs to the Shia (see Glossary) branch of that
faith. Among other religions, the Russian Orthodox faith is the most
widely practiced, although the Russian community shrank significantly in
the early 1990s. Some other small Christian groups now enjoy relative
freedom of worship. There also is a small Jewish community.
Islam
The Sunni branch of Islam has a 1,200-year-old tradition among the
sedentary population of Central Asia, including the Tajiks. A small
minority group, the Pamiris, are members of a much smaller denomination
of Shia Islam, Ismailism, which first won adherents in Central Asia in
the early tenth century. Despite persecution, Ismailism has survived in
the remote Pamir Mountains.
During the course of seven decades of political control, Soviet
policy makers were unable to eradicate the Islamic tradition, despite
repeated attempts to do so. The harshest of the Soviet anti-Islamic
campaigns occurred from the late 1920s to the late 1930s as part of a
unionwide drive against religion in general. In this period, many Muslim
functionaries were killed, and religious instruction and observance were
curtailed sharply. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in
1941, official policy toward Islam moderated. One of the changes that
ensued was the establishment in 1943 of an officially sanctioned Islamic
hierarchy for Central Asia, the Muslim Board of Central Asia. Together
with three similar organizations for other regions of the Soviet Union
having large Muslim populations, this administration was controlled by
the Kremlin, which required loyalty from religious officials. Although
its administrative personnel and structure were inadequate to serve the
needs of the Muslim inhabitants of the region, the administration made
possible the legal existence of some Islamic institutions, as well as
the activities of religious functionaries, a small number of mosques,
and religious instruction at two seminaries in Uzbekistan.
In the early 1960s, the Khrushchev regime escalated anti-Islamic
propaganda. Then, on several occasions in the 1970s and 1980s, the
Kremlin leadership called for renewed efforts to combat religion,
including Islam. Typically, such campaigns included conversion of
mosques to secular use; attempts to reidentify traditional
Islamic-linked customs with nationalism rather than religion; and
propaganda linking Islam to backwardness, superstition, and bigotry.
Official hostility toward Islam grew in 1979 with Soviet military
involvement in nearby Afghanistan and the increasing assertiveness of
Islamic revivalists in several countries. From that time through the
early post-Soviet era, some officials in Moscow and in Tajikistan warned
of an extremist Islamic menace, often on the basis of limited or
distorted evidence. Despite all these efforts, Islam remained an
important part of the identity of the Tajiks and other Muslim peoples of
Tajikistan through the end of the Soviet era and the first years of
independence.
Identification with Islam as an integral part of life is shared by
urban and rural, old and young, and educated and uneducated Tajiks. The
role that the faith plays in the lives of individuals varies
considerably, however. For some Tajiks, Islam is more important as an
intrinsic part of their cultural heritage than as a religion in the
usual sense, and some Tajiks are not religious at all.
In any case, Tajiks have disproved the standard Soviet assertion that
the urbanized industrial labor force and the educated population had
little to do with a "remnant of a bygone era" such as Islam. A
noteworthy development in the late Soviet and early independence eras
was increased interest, especially among young people, in the substance
of Islamic doctrine. In the post-Soviet era, Islam became an important
element in the nationalist arguments of certain Tajik intellectuals.
Islam survived in Tajikistan in widely varied forms because of the
strength of an indigenous folk Islam quite apart from the
Soviet-sanctioned Islamic administration. Long before the Soviet era,
rural Central Asians, including inhabitants of what became Tajikistan,
had access to their own holy places. There were also small, local
religious schools and individuals within their communities who were
venerated for religious knowledge and piety. These elements sustained
religion in the countryside, independent of outside events. Under Soviet
regimes, Tajiks used the substantial remainder of this rural, popular
Islam to continue at least some aspects of the teaching and practice of
their faith after the activities of urban-based Islamic institutions
were curtailed. Folk Islam also played an important role in the survival
of Islam among the urban population. One form of this popular Islam is
Sufism--often described as Islamic mysticism and practiced by
individuals in a variety of ways. The most important form of Sufism in
Tajikistan is the Naqshbandiyya, a Sufi order with followers as far away
as India and Malaysia. Besides Sufism, other forms of popular Islam are
associated with local cults and holy places or with individuals whose
knowledge or personal qualities have made them influential.
By late 1989, the Gorbachev regime's increased tolerance of religion
began to affect the practices of Islam and Russian Orthodoxy. Religious
instruction increased. New mosques opened. Religious observance became
more open, and participation increased. New Islamic spokesmen emerged in
Tajikistan and elsewhere in Central Asia. The authority of the official,
Tashkent-based Muslim Board of Central Asia crumbled in Tajikistan.
Tajikistan acquired its own seminary in Dushanbe, ending its reliance on
the administration's two seminaries in Uzbekistan.
By 1990 the Muslim Board's chief official in Dushanbe, the senior qadi
, Hajji Akbar Turajonzoda (in office 1988-92), had become an independent
public figure with a broad following. In the factional political battle
that followed independence, Turajonzoda criticized the communist
hard-liners and supported political reform and official recognition of
the importance of Islam in Tajikistani society. At the same time, he
repeatedly denied hard-liners' accusations that he sought the
establishment of an Islamic government in Tajikistan. After the
hard-liners' victory in the civil war at the end of 1992, Turajonzoda
fled Dushanbe and was charged with treason.
Muslims in Tajikistan also organized politically in the early 1990s.
In 1990, as citizens in many parts of the Soviet Union were forming
their own civic organizations, Muslims from various parts of the union
organized the Islamic Rebirth Party (IRP; see Political Parties, this
ch.). By the early 1990s, the growth of mass political involvement among
Central Asian Muslims led all political parties--including the Communist
Party of Tajikistan--to take into account the Muslim heritage of the
vast majority of Tajikistan's inhabitants.
Islam also played a key political role for the regime in power in the
early 1990s. The communist old guard evoked domestic and international
fears that fundamentalist Muslims would destabilize the Tajikistani
government when that message was expedient in fortifying the
hard-liners' position against opposition forces in the civil war.
However, the Nabiyev regime also was willing to represent itself as an
ally of Iran's Islamic republic while depicting the Tajik opposition as
unfaithful Muslims.
Other Religions
The vast majority of the non-Tajik population of Tajikistan is
composed of peoples who were also historically Sunni Muslims (Uzbeks,
Kyrgyz, Tatars, and Turkmen). The next largest religious community is
presumably Russian Orthodox, the historical faith of many Ukrainians as
well as Russians. A cathedral in Dushanbe, St. Nicholas, serves the
Orthodox community. By the end of the Soviet era, Tajikistan also was
home to small numbers of people belonging to other Christian
denominations, including Roman Catholics (most of whom were German),
Seventh-Day Adventists, and Baptists. There also was a small Armenian
minority, most of whose members belonged historically to the Armenian
Apostolic (Gregorian) Church. Other religious groups included small
numbers of Jews and Bahais. The number of adherents to these minority
religions probably decreased sharply in the 1990s because of the wave of
emigration from Tajikistan in the early independence period.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Culture and the Arts
Tajikistan
As they did during the Soviet era, educated Tajiks define their
cultural heritage broadly, laying claim to the rich legacy of the
supraethnic culture of Central Asia and other parts of the Islamic world
from the eastern Mediterranean to India. Soviet rule institutionalized
Western art forms, publishing, and mass media, some elements of which
subsequently attracted spontaneous support in the republic. However,
since the beginning of Soviet rule in the 1920s, the media and the arts
always have been subject to political constraints.
Literature
Despite long-standing Soviet efforts to differentiate between the
Persian speakers of Central Asia and those elsewhere, Tajiks in
Tajikistan describe all of the major literary works written in Persian
until the twentieth century as Tajik, regardless of the ethnicity and
native region of the author. In Soviet times, such claims were not
merely a matter of chauvinism but a strategy to permit Tajiks some
contact with a culture that was artificially divided by state borders.
Nevertheless, very little Persian literature was published in Cyrillic
transcription in the Soviet era.
Three writers dominated the first generation of Soviet Tajik
literature. Sadriddin Aini (1878-1954), a Jadidist writer and educator
who turned communist, began as a poet but wrote primarily prose in the
Soviet era. His works include three major novels dealing with social
issues in the region and memoirs that depict life in the Bukhoro
Khanate. Aini became the first president of Tajikistan's Academy of
Sciences.
Abu'l-Qasem Lahuti (1887-1957; in Tajik, Abdulqosim Lohuti) was an
Iranian poet who emigrated to the Soviet Union for political reasons and
eventually settled in Tajikistan. He wrote both lyric poetry and
"socialist realist" verse. Another poet, Mirzo Tursunzoda
(1911-77), collected Tajik oral literature, wrote poetry of his own
about social change in Tajikistan, and turned out various works on
popular political themes of the moment. Since the generation that
included those three writers, Tajikistan has produced numerous poets,
novelists, short story writers, and playwrights.
Cultural Institutions
By the mid-1980s, more than 1,600 libraries were operating in
Tajikistan. Of particular importance is the Firdavsi State Library,
which houses a significant collection of Oriental manuscripts. In 1990
Tajikistan had twenty-seven museums, the fewest of any Soviet republic.
Among the most notable are the Behzed Museum of History, Regional
Studies, and Art, and the Ethnographic Museum of the Academy of
Sciences, both in Dushanbe. There are also significant museums of
history and regional studies in several of the republic's other cities.
The republic had fourteen theaters in 1990. Only the three Baltic
republics, Kyrgyzstan, and Turkmenistan--all with smaller
populations--had fewer. The republic's film studio, since 1958 called
Tadzhikfil'm, opened in Dushanbe in 1930. By the mid-1980s, it was
producing seven or eight feature films and thirty documentaries per year
for cinemas and television.
The Soviet era saw the introduction of opera and ballet to
Tajikistan, as well as the organization of Tajik-style song and dance
troupes. Dushanbe's opera and ballet theater was the first large public
building in the city; its construction began in 1939. Dushanbe also has
theaters devoted to Tajik and Russian drama, as well as a drama school.
There are theaters for music, musical comedy, and drama in several other
Tajik cities as well.
Films are shown in theaters in Tajikistan's cities and in villages on
an irregular basis. In the last decade of Soviet rule and in the early
1990s, video and audio cassettes became increasingly popular sources of
entertainment, as well as a means of disseminating information outside
government control. The political turmoil and economic problems of
Tajikistan in the 1990s took a severe toll on the country's cultural
life and on the elite that fostered it.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Education
Tajikistan
Soviet social policy created a modern education system in Tajikistan
where nothing comparable had existed before. However, by the time the
republic became independent the quality and availability of education
had not reached the Soviet Union-wide average, still less the standards
for Western industrial societies. After independence, the education
system remained under the control of the national Ministry of Education
with full state funding.
Historical Development
By the 1920s, few Tajiks had received a formal education. According
to the first Soviet census, in 1926 the literacy rate was 4 percent for
Tajik men and 0.1 percent for Tajik women in the territory of
present-day Tajikistan and in the Republic of Uzbekistan. During the
late 1930s, the Soviet government began to expand the network of
state-run schools. There was strong public opposition to this change,
especially from Islamic leaders. As a result, some new state schools
were burned and some teachers were killed.
Over the ensuing decades, however, the Soviet education system
prevailed, although a uniform set of standards was not established in
every instance. For the average Tajikistani citizen in the 1980s, the
duration, if not necessarily the quality, of the education process was
neither the greatest nor the least among Soviet republics. As elsewhere
in the Soviet Union, the system was divided into schools for primary,
middle (or secondary), and higher education. Middle schools were
differentiated as either general or specialized. For the period between
1985 and 1990, an annual average of 86,800 students attended
general-education middle schools and an average of 41,500 students
attended specialized middle schools. In the academic year 1990-91,
Tajikistan reported 68,800 students in institutions of higher education.
Education in the 1980s and 1990s
Prior to 1991, the level of educational attainment in the adult
Tajikistani population was below the average for Soviet republics. Of
the population over age twenty-five in 1989, some 16 percent had only
primary schooling, 21 percent had incomplete secondary schooling, and 55
percent had completed a secondary education. Those statistics placed
Tajikistan ninth among the fifteen Soviet republics. Some 7.5 percent of
inhabitants had graduated from an institution of higher education,
placing Tajikistan last among Soviet republics in that category, and
another 1.4 percent had acquired some higher education but not a degree.
In secondary education, 427 out of 1,000 Tajikistanis graduated from
a nonspecialized middle school and another 211 out of 1,000 went through
several grades of such schools without graduating. An additional 110 out
of 1,000 had attended a specialized middle school. Despite the nominal
emphasis placed by the Soviet system on science and mathematics, the
quality of education in those subjects was rated as poor in the last
decades of the Soviet period.
The languages of instruction in the state system were Tajik, Uzbek,
Kyrgyz, and Russian. When Tajik became the state language in 1989,
schools using Russian as the primary language of instruction began
teaching Tajik as a second language from the first through the eleventh
grades. After independence, school curricula included more Tajik
language and literature study, including classical Persian literature.
However, few textbooks were available in Tajik; by the end of the 1980s,
only 10 to 25 percent of students attending Tajik-language schools had
textbooks or other teaching materials in their own language.
By the late Soviet era, education in Tajikistan also suffered from
infrastructure problems. School buildings were in poor repair. The
construction industry, an area of particular weakness in the republic's
economy, produced only a small fraction of the new school and preschool
facilities it was assigned to complete each year. As a result, schools
sometimes ran on triple shifts.
Vocational Education
In the late Soviet era, the quality of technical training available
in Tajikistan fell far below the standard for the Soviet Union as a
whole. Graduates often were far less prepared for technical jobs than
their counterparts elsewhere in the union. Many vocational schools were
poorly equipped and lacked basic supplies. The general shortage of
textbooks in Tajik also affected vocational courses. Although
instruction was available in about 150 trades in 1990, that range fell
far short of supplying the various types of expertise needed by the
republic's economy. A large proportion of students in vocational
secondary schools had poor skills in basic arithmetic and Russian.
Although Tajikistan's population was nearly two-thirds rural, in 1990
only thirty-eight of eighty-five technical schools were located in the
countryside, and fifteen of those were in serious disrepair. Many
factories failed to provide students vocational training despite
agreements to do so.
Higher Education and Research
By the late 1980s, Tajikistan had twenty institutions of higher
education. Despite the ample number of such institutions, the proportion
of students receiving a higher education (115 per 10,000 inhabitants)
was slightly below the average for the Soviet republics in the late
1980s. In scientific and technical fields, Tajikistan ranked near the
bottom among Soviet republics in the proportion of residents receiving
advanced degrees. During the Soviet era, Russian, rather than Tajik, was
the preferred medium of instruction in several fields of higher
education.
The first institution of higher education in Tajikistan was the State
Pedagogical Institute in Dushanbe, which opened in 1931. Tajikistan
State University opened in 1948. By the mid-1980s, about 14,000 students
were enrolled in the university's thirteen departments. At that time,
admission was highly competitive only for applicants seeking to study
history, Oriental studies, Tajik philology, and economic planning. In
1994 the university had 864 faculty in fourteen departments and 6,196
full-time students.
The Tajikistan Polytechnic Institute opened in Dushanbe in 1956, then
was reclassified as a university after independence. In 1994 it offered
training in energy, construction, mechanical engineering, automobile
repair, road building, and architecture. In 1996 preparations began to
open a new university for the Pamiri peoples; it was to be located in
Khorugh, the capital of Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Province.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Health
Tajikistan
Considering the virtual absence of modern health care in Tajikistan
at the start of the Soviet era, the quality of medical services had
improved markedly by the close of that era. Statistically, Tajikistan
rated at or below the average for Soviet republics for most indicators
of health conditions and health care delivery (see table 5, Appendix).
Health Care System
After nearly seventy years of inclusion in the Soviet state, with its
avowed aim of modernization, Tajikistan had a level of health care that
was low both in absolute terms and by Soviet standards. State spending
for health care and medical equipment in Tajikistan was a fraction of
the average for the Soviet Union. Tajikistani regimes had long regarded
social needs such as medical care as less important than economic
development. Admission standards for the republic's best medical school,
the Abu Ali ibn Sino Institute of Medicine in Dushanbe, were notoriously
lax. In 1986, according to government statistics, Tajikistan had 325
hospitals with a total of 50,115 beds, 697 outpatient clinics, 1,313
paramedic and midwife facilities, and 567 maternity and pediatric
clinics and hospitals. In 1994 the Ministry of Health reported 59,000
hospital beds. As in other parts of Central Asia, a large proportion of
health care professionals in Tajikistan were members of nonindigenous
nationalities, especially Russians, Ukrainians, and Jews, many of whom
emigrated after 1989. Within months of the February 1990 disturbances in
Dushanbe, about 1,300 doctors and nurses emigrated from the republic.
In 1994 the republic had 13,000 doctors, one for every 447
inhabitants, by far the worst proportion among the Central Asian
republics. The number of other health care workers, 80.3 per 1,000
inhabitants, was also far below the level for other republics. Rural
Tajikistan suffered a particular deficiency of health care
professionals. Dushanbe felt this scarcity less than the rest of the
country.
In the late 1980s, the average number of hospital beds per 10,000
inhabitants in the Soviet Union was 130, but Tajikistan's proportion was
104.3 per 10,000. The figure was half that in rural areas. Dushanbe was
estimated to have a 5,000-bed shortage, according to Soviet standards,
in 1990. In the mid-1990s, there was a great backlog in the construction
of new medical facilities. More than 80 percent of Tajikistan's health
care facilities were evaluated as substandard, and most lacked running
water and central heating. Only one drug treatment center existed in
Dushanbe, with twenty to thirty beds, and there was no rehabilitation
program (see Internal Security, this ch.).
Acquiring medicines is difficult or impossible for ordinary citizens.
In some areas, one drug dispensary serves as many as 20,000 inhabitants,
compared with the Soviet standard of one dispensary for every 8,000
people. According to one health organization, when the Soviet
distribution system disappeared in 1992, Tajikistan, which had no modern
pharmaceutical plants, lost access to 258 different kinds of drugs,
including streptomycin and analgesics.
Since independence, steady reductions in the state health budget have
further eroded the salaries of medical professionals and the
availability of care. (In 1992 the Ministry of Health already had the
smallest budget of the state ministries.) For that reason, health
planners have considered privatization of the national health system an
urgent priority. In the mid-1990s, however, little progress had been
made toward that goal.
Health Conditions
The life expectancy of a male born in Tajikistan in 1989 was 66.8
years, and of a female, 71.7 years. In 1989 this was the longest life
span projection among the five Central Asian republics, but it was
shorter than those of all the other Soviet republics except Moldavia. In
Tajikistan, urban women had the longest life expectancy (72.9 years),
and urban men had the shortest (65.2 years). According to the 1989
census, the most frequent causes of death in Tajikistan were infections
and parasitic diseases, circulatory disorders, respiratory disorders,
tumors, and accidents. Those causes accounted for 78 percent of the
33,395 deaths in that year. In the 1970s and the 1980s, Tajikistan's
mortality rate rose from 8.5 to 9.8 per 100 male inhabitants and from
6.7 to 7.3 per 100 female inhabitants.
In the mid-1990s, the health of Tajikistan's citizens was threatened
increasingly by the condition of the country's water supply, which
conveyed disease-causing organisms as well as toxic chemicals from
agricultural and industrial origins to the population. By the late
Soviet era, cases of typhoid occurred thirteen times more frequently in
Tajikistan than in the Soviet Union as a whole. The health of rural
inhabitants was jeopardized by inadequate sanitation and improper
storage of toxic substances, and by environmental pollution (see
Environmental Problems, this ch.).
Maternal and infant mortality remained serious problems in Tajikistan
in the 1990s. In 1988 Tajikistani women were 1.6 times more likely to
die in childbirth than were women in the Soviet Union as a whole. By
1989, according to official statistics, forty of every 1,000 babies born
in Tajikistan did not survive to the age of one year. In many parts of
southern Tajikistan, the rate was more than sixty per thousand. (The
rate of infant mortality was higher than indicated by official Soviet
statistics, which were underreported in rural areas and often were
adjusted downward.) Factors contributing to infant mortality include
family poverty; inadequate nutrition for nursing mothers, babies, and
schoolchildren (who receive inadequate meals in school); and a lack of
safe drinking water. Experts believe that environmental pollution,
especially that caused by the agricultural chemicals used in cotton
production, plays a major role in the rising rates of maternal and child
mortality, as well as in the relatively high incidence of birth defects.
Employment in heavy industry also poses health risks for women and
their children. By the late 1980s, some 80 percent of low birth-weight
babies were born to women employed in heavy industry at jobs posing the
risk of physical injury. Most important of all was the poor quality of
health care that mothers and infants received and the inadequacy of the
maternal and child care facilities where care was delivered. By Soviet
national standards, Tajikistan in the late 1980s lacked 8,000 beds in
maternity facilities and 13,000 bed for infants. Problems related to
infant and maternal health were more serious in rural areas than in the
cities. Soviet studies linked infant death to poor preventive health
care, a lack of proper medication, and a lack of professional medical
care.
Narcotics use in Tajikistan is rated as a minor health problem; in
1995 there were an estimated 40,000 drug users in the country (see
Internal Security, this ch.). Authorities discovered heroin traffic into
the country in 1995. As of the end of 1995, Tajikistan had reported no
cases of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) to the World Health
Organization, although the Ministry of Health reported that twenty-four
AIDS diagnostic laboratories were in operation in 1993.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - The Economy
Tajikistan
Tajikistan possesses many elements that will be needed to diversify
its national economy after decades of specialization within the Soviet
system. Significant deposits of gold, iron, lead, mercury, and tin
exist, and some coal is present. Some regions have ample water for
irrigation, and the country's rivers are a largely untapped source of
hydroelectric power generation. The labor supply is sufficient, provided
Tajikistan can retain qualified workers in critical fields. The civil
war of 1992-93, the collapse of the integrated Soviet economic system,
and the lack of significant economic reform by the post-civil war
government all have severely impeded economic performance, however.
Economic problems that had developed in Tajikistan during the Soviet
era persisted into the first decade of independence. These included
overreliance on production of cotton and raw materials in general, a
high level of unemployment, and a low standard of living. Although the
old Soviet economic system ceased to exist officially, several aspects
of it survived after 1991. The transition to a market economy progressed
slowly, and Russia and other former Soviet republics continued to play
an important role in Tajikistan's economy. Yet Tajikistan also took the
first steps toward developing economic relations with a wide assortment
of other countries. Quite apart from the deliberate changes implemented
by policy makers, the economy of Tajikistan was profoundly affected in
the early stages of its independence by the political turmoil that
accompanied the transition.
<"30.htm">Agriculture
<"31.htm">Industry
<"32.htm">Energy
<"33.htm">Labor
<"34.htm">Economic Conditions in the Early 1990s
<"35.htm">Transition to a Market Economy
<"36.htm">Foreign Economic Relations
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Agriculture
Tajikistan
In the early 1990s, Tajikistan remained primarily an agricultural
state. In 1990 agriculture contributed 38 percent of the country's net
material product (NMP--see Glossary). Despite development of an
extensive irrigation network in the Soviet era, water supply problems
combined with Tajikistan's mountainous topography to limit agriculture
to 8 percent of the republic's land in 1990. Some 800,000 hectares were
under cultivation in 1990, of which about 560,000 hectares were
irrigated. The irrigated land was used mostly to grow cotton; potatoes,
vegetables, and grains also were cultivated (see table 16, Appendix). In
1994 the republic produced about 490,000 tons of vegetables and about
254,000 tons of cereals. The dominance of cotton combined with the
rapidly growing population to render Tajikistan unable to meet domestic
consumption requirements for some basic foodstuffs, especially meat and
dairy products, in the last years of the Soviet era, even though the
republic produced a surplus of fruits, vegetables, and eggs. In the
early 1990s, about 98 percent of agricultural labor remained almost
entirely unmechanized.
Through the mid-1990s, agricultural output continued to decline
precipitously as a consequence of the civil war and the awkward
transition to a post-Soviet economy. By 1995 overall production was
estimated at about half the 1990 level, and shortages continued in urban
areas. Besides the civil war, low prices for agricultural products and a
shortage of animal feed contributed to the decline. Hardly any
privatization of collective farms had occurred by the mid-1990s.
Cotton is by far the most important crop in Tajikistan's agrarian
economy. In parts of the republic, 85 percent of the land was planted to
cotton by the late 1980s, a figure that even republic officials
described as excessive. At the same time, the average cotton yield per
hectare was about half that achieved in the United States. Cotton
production declined in the early 1990s. In 1993 Tajikistan produced
about 754,000 tons, a drop of 30 percent from the 1991 figure.
Although cotton is fundamental to Tajikistan's economy, the
republic's rewards for cotton production in the Soviet system were
disappointing. About 90 percent of the harvest was shipped elsewhere for
processing. Tajikistani factories produced thread from some of the
cotton harvest, but, by the end of the Soviet era, more than 90 percent
of the cotton thread that was spun went elsewhere to be turned into
finished goods. In 1990 the two southern provinces of Qurghonteppa and
Kulob produced roughly two-thirds of the republic's cotton, but they
processed only 1 percent of the crop locally.
Despite widespread concern about overemphasis on cotton cultivation,
the post-civil war government attempted to expand the production of the
country's most important cash crop. For example, in 1995 it mandated an
increase over the preceding year of 10,000 hectares in land assigned to
cotton. However, the cotton output remained far below both the
government quota and the production levels of the late Soviet era.
Independent Tajikistan continued to send most of its cotton crop
elsewhere--mainly to CIS countries--for processing.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Industry
Tajikistan
Industrial development in Tajikistan has proceeded slowly and
inefficiently, both in the Soviet era and afterward. The civil war and
ensuing political turmoil kept production levels low in the mid-1990s.
Historical Background
Tajikistan's industrial development began in earnest in the late
1930s. The early emphasis was on processing cotton and manufacturing
construction materials. World War II was a major stimulus to industrial
expansion. The output of existing factories was increased to meet
wartime demands, and some factories were moved to the republic from the
European part of the Soviet Union to safeguard them from the advancing
German army.
Skilled workers who relocated to Tajikistan from points west received
preferential treatment, including substantially higher wages than those
paid to Tajiks; this practice continued long after the war. Such
migrants provided the bulk of the labor force in many of the republic's
industries through the end of the Soviet era. Cotton textile mills and
metallurgy, machine construction, the aluminum smelting plant, and the
chemical industry all had disproportionately small percentages of Tajik
workers, or none at all.
The Vakhsh River valley in southern Tajikistan became a center of
extensive industrial development (see Topography and Drainage, this
ch.). The river was dammed at several points to provide water for
agriculture and cheap hydroelectric power, which stimulated construction
of factories in the area. Many of the plants in the valley process
agricultural products or provide agricultural materials such as
fertilizer. A large chemical plant also uses power from the Vakhsh.
Industry in the 1990s
In the early 1990s, the configuration of industry continued to
reflect the specialized roles assigned to Tajikistan within the Soviet
system, hindering advancement of enterprises that utilized the
republic's natural resources most effectively. The civil war also made
industrial reorganization problematic.
In 1991 industry and construction contributed 43.5 percent of the
country's NMP, of which industry's share was 30.6 percent--but those
sectors employed only 20.4 percent of the work force. Tajikistan's only
heavy manufacturing industries are aluminum and chemical production and
a very small machinery and metalworking industry. The most important
light industries are food processing and fabric and carpet weaving.
After declining an estimated 40 percent between 1990 and 1993,
industrial production dropped another 31 percent in 1994. Declines in
the Dushanbe and Khujand regions exceeded that figure. The output of
only five industrial products increased in 1994: high-voltage electrical
equipment, textile equipment, winding machines, processed cereals, and
salt. The most serious declines were in chemicals, engineering, metal
processing, building materials, light industry, and food processing.
According to government reports, production declines generally were
greater in privately owned industries than in state enterprises.
Tajikistan's overall industrial production capacity was underutilized
in the first half of the 1990s. The steadily rising cost of raw
materials, fuel, and energy combined with the obsolescence of production
equipment and the lack of qualified industrial workers to place
Tajikistani industrial products, which never had been of especially high
quality, at a great disadvantage in foreign markets.
Aluminum
Tajikistan's major industrial enterprise is the aluminum processing
plant at Regar in the western part of the republic. When the plant
opened in 1975, it included the world's largest aluminum smelter, with a
capacity of 500,000 tons per year. But difficulties arose in the early
1990s because of the civil war and unreliable raw material supply.
Aluminum production and quality began to decline in 1992 because
Azerbaijan and Russia cut the supply of semiprocessed alumina upon which
the plant depended. By 1995 the plant's management was predicting a
yearly output of 240,000 tons, still less than half the maximum
capacity. The prolonged decline was caused by outmoded equipment, low
world prices for aluminum, the emigration of much of the plant's skilled
labor force, difficulties in obtaining raw materials, and continued
disruption resulting from the civil war.
Mining
In the Soviet period, several minerals, including antimony, mercury,
molybdenum, and tungsten, were mined in Tajikistan; the Soviet system
assigned Tajikistan to supply specific raw or partially processed goods
to other parts of the Soviet Union. For example, nearly all of
Tajikistan's gold went to Uzbekistan for processing. However, in the
1990s the presence in Tajikistan of a hitherto-secret uranium-mining and
preliminary-processing operation became public for the first time. The
operation, whose labor force included political prisoners and members of
nationalities deported by Stalin from certain autonomous republics of
the Russian Republic, may have accounted for almost one-third of total
mining in the Soviet Union. According to official Tajikistani reports,
the mines were exhausted by 1990.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Energy
Tajikistan
Tajikistan's domestic energy supply situation is dominated by
hydroelectric power. The nation is an importer of petroleum-based fuels,
of which only small domestic deposits are being exploited. Insufficient
access to imported oil and natural gas, a persistent problem under the
Soviet system, became more acute after 1991.
The Soviet central government, which determined energy policy for
Tajikistan, saw the republic's rivers as prime locations for
hydroelectric dams. However, Tajikistanis raised serious objections to
the resettlement of villages, the potential for flooding if an
earthquake damaged a dam, and the prospect of pollution from the
factories that would be attracted by cheap electrical power. Although
damming the rivers would increase the supply of water for irrigation,
the central government targeted much of the water for neighboring
Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan rather than for domestic use. Resistance was
especially strong in the case of the Roghun Dam on the Vakhsh River,
initiated in 1976 as the largest dam of its kind in Central Asia. By
1992 some 75 percent of the country's electricity came from
hydroelectric plants, and in the mid-1990s Russia provided aid for the
construction of a new Roghun hydroelectric station.
Deposits of coal, petroleum, and natural gas are known to exist but
by the mid-1990s had yet to be developed. In the Soviet era, the
unreliability of fuel sources in other republics resulted in frequent
power shortages. Fuel supply problems mounted during the transition to a
post-Soviet economy, as oil-exporting former Soviet republics often
chose not to abide by the delivery agreements upon which Tajikistan had
depended. Furthermore, beginning in 1993, independent Tajikistan's
mounting economic problems left it unable to pay more than a small
fraction of the cost of importing energy. Energy providers, especially
Uzbekistan, responded with periodic interruptions of deliveries.
Irregular delivery disrupted industrial production, crop harvests, and
the flow of electricity to residential consumers.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Labor
Tajikistan
In 1991 some 1.95 million people were regularly employed outside the
home in Tajikistan. However, about 2.4 million Tajikistanis were
classified as being of working age. Of those who worked outside the
home, 22 percent were employed in industry; 43 percent in agriculture;
18 percent in health care and social services; 6 percent in commerce,
food services, state procurement, and "material-technical supply
and sales"; 5 percent in transportation; 2 percent in the
government bureaucracy; and 4 percent in miscellaneous services.
In the 1980s, light industry continued to employ the largest
proportion of industrial workers, 38.6 percent. The processing of food
and livestock feed employed an additional 11.7 percent. Machine building
and metal-working employed 19.7 percent. Three of Tajikistan's main
areas of heavy industrial development employed rather small proportions
of the industrial work force: chemicals and petrochemicals, 7.4 percent;
nonferrous metallurgy, 5.4 percent; and electric power, 2.4 percent.
One of the most serious economic problems in the late 1980s and early
1990s was unemployment. Unemployment and underemployment remained
extensive after the civil war, and the republic's high birth rate led
observers to predict that the number of unemployed people would continue
to grow through 2000. Tajikistan's designation in the Soviet economy as
primarily a producer of raw materials meant that until 1992 agriculture
was expected to provide the bulk of employment opportunities for the
population. However, the limited amount of arable land and the fast
growth of the rural population made further absorption of labor
impossible by the 1990s (see Agriculture, this ch.). Although Tajikistan
had the resources to increase its production of consumer goods, Soviet
economic planning did not develop as much light industry in the republic
as the human and material resources could have supported. Two of
Tajikistan's largest industrial complexes, which produced chemicals and
aluminum, were capital-intensive and provided relatively few jobs.
Unemployment is a particular problem for the republic's young people.
Roughly three-quarters of the graduates of general education middle
schools (which most students attend) do not go on to further education
(see Education, this ch.). Upon entering the job market with such basic
qualifications, many cannot find employment. A disproportionate number
of young Tajikistanis enter low-paying manual jobs; in 1989 about 40
percent of the agricultural labor force was below age thirty. By the end
of the Soviet era, however, a growing number of Tajikistan's young
people could not find employment even in agriculture. The paucity and
low quality of schools at the vocational level and higher schools
prevented those institutions from improving the employment prospects of
large numbers of potential workers. In the 1980s, a Soviet campaign to
shift labor into "labor deficit" regions in the European
republics or in Siberia met with vocal opposition.
With skilled workers leaving the country in the mid-1990s, industrial
and professional jobs, most notably in engineering, often go unfilled.
Shortages have been especially acute in light industry, construction,
health care, transportation, engineering, and education. The exodus of
qualified workers intensified in the early 1990s. In 1992 and 1993, an
estimated 123,000 specialists with higher education, mostly Russians,
left Tajikistan.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Economic Conditions in the Early 1990s
Tajikistan
At the close of the Soviet phase of Tajikistan's history, the economy
deteriorated rapidly, and the level of economic activity declined
sharply in the early 1990s. In 1992 the gross domestic product (GDP--see
Glossary) was approximately half of what it had been in 1990. In the
first half of 1991, agricultural and industrial output dropped
substantially, and construction, a chronic weak point of the economy,
was especially sluggish. The state's revenues for the same period were
half as large as its expenses. According to Soviet statistics, the
generation of national income in Tajikistan had already declined 7.8
percent from 1988 to 1989 and 8.9 percent from 1989 to 1990. In 1990,
the per capita generation of national income was the lowest by far among
Soviet republics, and 17 percent below the 1985 level. These figures
reflect not only Tajikistan's poverty but also the low prices that were
assigned to agricultural products and raw materials, Tajikistan's main
products, in the state-run economy. Although Tajikistan was primarily an
agricultural republic, in 1989 it imported more agricultural products,
including foodstuffs, than it exported.
Political turmoil and the civil war of 1992-93 did enormous damage to
Tajikistan's economy. According to an official estimate, that damage
extended to 80 percent of the republic's industries. The conflict
spurred the departure of large numbers of Russians and Germans who had
been key technical personnel in Tajikistan's industries (see Population,
this ch.). After independence, the government was very slow to develop
an institutional framework to promote movement toward a market economy.
Through the mid-1990s, virtually no privatization of industry or
agriculture occurred.
The scarcity of reliable statistics makes quantification of
Tajikistan's economic situation difficult. In 1994 the total economic
loss from the civil war was estimated at 15 trillion rubles (see
Glossary for value of ruble)--about US$12 billion at the January 1,
1994, exchange rate. According to Western estimates, by 1994 production
in industry had dropped 60 percent, in agriculture 33 percent, and in
the transportation enterprises several hundred percent--all in
comparison with 1990 levels. The GDP fell an estimated 28 percent in
1993, 12 percent in 1994, and 14 percent in 1995. Inflation soared at a
rate of 1,157 percent in 1992; 2,195 percent in 1993; 341 percent in
1994; and 120 percent in 1995. The relatively lower rate in 1995
reflected the government's new anti-inflationary policies launched in
the second half of the year.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Transition to a Market Economy
Tajikistan
In the last years of the Soviet system, Tajikistan followed the rest
of the union in beginning a transition from the conventional Soviet
centralized command system to a market economy. Early in 1991, the
Dushanbe government legalized the leasing and privatization of state
enterprises (excluding industries deemed critical for national
security). However, the transition met firm resistance from individuals
who still held positions that gave them access to economic power and
technological know-how; political figures with ideological objections to
market reforms also voiced opposition. Such influential people insisted
that the previous system could be made efficient if Tajikistanis were
urged to work harder. This view was made popular by the sharp price
increases that followed price decontrol in the initial reform stage.
Citizens' hardships, fear, and anger resulting from the initial economic
shock greatly slowed the transition to a market economy. For instance,
in the first year of independence, only four private farms were
established.
The regime of Imomali Rahmonov, who came to power in December 1992,
showed little interest in continuing the limited market reforms of 1991
and 1992. At the same time, the new regime declared its support for
private enterprise on a small or moderate scale, expressing the hope
that foreign investment would help revive the country's shattered
economy. By the mid-1990s, about half of all small businesses,
especially those in the service sector, were privately owned. In
November 1995, the legislature approved a reform plan for the period
1995-2000, but the plan included no specific steps toward the general
goals of privatization and the fostering of foreign and domestic
investment.
In 1992 Tajikistan acquired its first commercial bank, the
Tajikbankbusiness. Established primarily to invest in the republic's
economy, the state-owned bank assumed the functions of the former Soviet
State Bank (Gosbank); it also sought to develop links with the United
States, Iran, China, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Britain, among other
countries. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Tajikistan
continued to use the old Soviet ruble until Russia replaced that
currency with the Russian ruble in 1994. At that time, Tajikistan joined
the Russian ruble zone (see Glossary), a move that worked against
Tajikistani interests. Russia did not send as many rubles as promised,
and many of the new rubles that were sent quickly left Tajikistan as
inhabitants bought commodities from other Soviet successor states,
especially Uzbekistan and Russia. Thus handicapped, the cash economy
often gave way to barter and promissory notes. As a result, the Dushanbe
government decided to leave the ruble zone by introducing the
Tajikistani ruble in 1995. At the time of its introduction, the new
currency had an exchange rate of fifty per US$1, but its value slipped
drastically through 1995, reaching 284 per US$1 in January 1996.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Foreign Economic Relations
Tajikistan
As the economic reforms of the Gorbachev regime relaxed restrictions
on foreign business activity in the Soviet Union in the last years of
the 1980s, Tajikistan began to make economic arrangements with foreign
businesses. Despite some interest on the part of the Nabiyev regime in
arranging joint ventures with foreign firms, only four such agreements
were reached in 1991, and just six more were concluded by 1992. One of
the joint-venture agreements of that period brought United States
investment in the manufacture of fur and leather products in Tajikistan.
Israeli businesses began irrigation projects in Tajikistan in 1992. A
deal with two Austrian companies called for construction of a factory to
produce prefabricated housing and other buildings to be financed by
US$3.5 million raised from cotton export funds. A similar construction
agreement was signed in 1992 with Czechoslovakia. In 1995 an Italian
company began construction of a textile factory in Tajikistan. One of
the most important foreign undertakings in the country was a joint
venture with a Canadian firm, the Zarafshon Mining Project, to mine and
process gold at three known sites in the Panjakent area of northwestern
Tajikistan and to prospect in an area of 3,000 square kilometers for
additional deposits. The agreement was concluded in 1994; production
began in January 1996.
The post-civil war government has emphasized cultivation of economic
relations with a variety of Western and Middle Eastern countries, China,
and the other former Soviet republics (see table 17, Appendix). In 1991
an Afghan company opened shops in Dushanbe and the northern city of
Uroteppa to sell clothing, textiles, fruits, and nuts that the company
shipped into Tajikistan from Afghanistan and other countries. The
company also planned to export textiles woven in Tajikistan. In 1992
fourteen people were sent from Tajikistan to Turkey to study banking
procedures.
Iran and Pakistan
In the early 1990s, Iran pursued economic cooperation as a means of
expanding its regional influence by assuming part of the Soviet Union's
role as the major customer for Tajikistani exports. The first foreign
firm registered in Tajikistan was Iranian. In 1992 pacts were signed for
cooperation in the spheres of banking and commerce, transportation, and
tourism; a joint company, Tajiran, was established to handle bilateral
trade. In October 1992, Iran declared its intention to buy 1 million
tons of cotton and 400,000 tons of aluminum (a figure that exceeded
Tajikistan's entire aluminum production for 1992).
The two countries continued to make economic cooperation agreements
into the mid-1990s. Iran loaned Tajikistan US$10 million to be used to
stimulate exports and imports while offering assistance in dealing with
the costs of imported energy. In 1994, the two countries established a
commission to promote bilateral economic and technical relations. In
1995 Iran agreed to pay for Tajikistan's importation of natural gas from
Turkmenistan; Tajikistan then was to reimburse Iran in cotton rather
than currency.
Pakistan extended US$20 million in credits to Tajikistan in 1994 for
the purchase of Pakistani goods. However, the most ambitious parts of
the cooperation plans between the two countries, the completion of the
Roghun hydroelectric dam and the highway between the two countries, fell
through; the reasons included Pakistan's own economic problems,
political opposition in Tajikistan to allocating state funds on such a
large scale to a foreign country, and the continued turmoil in
Afghanistan and Tajikistan.
The United States
In 1992 newly independent Tajikistan and the United States expressed
an interest in developing trade relations. President Nabiyev made an
urgent plea to a delegation from the United States Congress for
development assistance, especially in the area of natural resource use.
At about the same time, Tajikistan made a barter trade agreement with a
United States company to exchange dried fruits from Tajikistan for
bricks, greenhouse equipment, and consumer goods from the United States.
In 1992 the United States offered Tajikistan credits to use for the
purchase of food, and the United States Overseas Private Investment
Corporation made an agreement to provide Tajikistan loans and other
assistance to promote United States investment. In 1994 the United
States established the Central Asian-American Enterprise Fund to provide
loans and technical expertise that would promote the growth of the
private sector in all the Central Asian states. Generally, however, the
level of United States involvement in Tajikistan has remained very low.
The first significant undertaking in Tajikistan by a United States firm
was a US$40 million textile mill established in 1995.
Russia and the CIS
After Tajikistan achieved independence, it maintained extensive
economic relations with other former Soviet republics individually and
with the CIS. Relations with the CIS and the Russian Federation
preserved some characteristics of Tajikistan's relationship with the
Soviet central authorities. Until 1995 Tajikistan remained in the ruble
zone rather than establishing its own national currency, as the other
four Central Asian republics had done.
In the meantime, Russia retained the dominant position in the CIS
and, hence, in commerce with Tajikistan that the Moscow government had
enjoyed in the Soviet period. Russia and Tajikistan undertook to
maintain their bilateral exchange of goods at existing levels as the
republics made the transition to a market economy. In 1992 some 36
percent of Tajikistan's imports came from Russia, and 21 percent of its
exports went to Russia; about 60 percent of total external trade was
with CIS countries, and 45 percent of exports went to those countries.
In 1992 a bilateral agreement called for Tajikistan to send Russia
fruits and vegetables, vegetable oil, silk fabrics, and paint in return
for automobiles, televisions, and other consumer and industrial goods.
Post-civil war Tajikistan was heavily dependent on Russia for fuel
and other necessities. In 1993 Russia made another barter agreement, by
which Tajikistan would send Russia agricultural products, machinery, and
other goods in return for Russian oil. Despite the agreements, trade
between the two countries encountered serious difficulties. In the
1990s, a sharp drop in independent Tajikistan's cotton production caused
it to fall far short of the deliveries promised to Russia. This
development impeded Tajikistan's ability to pay for vital fuel imports
and disrupted Russia's textile industry. Nevertheless, private bilateral
commercial activity expanded to some extent. By 1995 more than twenty
Tajikistani businesses had made joint-venture agreements with Russian
enterprises.
Membership in the ruble zone required Tajikistan to cede control over
its money supply and interest rates to Russia and to comply with the
regulations of Russia's central bank. After the civil war, Russia
provided a majority of the funds for Tajikistan's budget and had
considerable influence over budgetary policy. Russia also sent periodic
infusions of cash to the Dushanbe government.
As the old interrepublic delivery system decayed at the end of the
Soviet era, Tajikistan, like other republics, reduced sales of some
commodities and consumer goods to other republics. At the same time,
direct agreements were made with several republics to place commercial
relations on a new footing. These pacts included statements of principle
on economic cooperation and general promises to deliver products from
one republic to the other and to set up joint ventures. In 1992 such
agreements were made with Georgia, Armenia, and Belarus, and a separate
trade agreement called for Turkmenistan to send Tajikistan natural gas
and various other goods in exchange for aluminum, farm machinery, and
consumer goods.
One of Tajikistan's most important trading partners among the Soviet
successor states is Uzbekistan, the source of most of its natural gas
since independence. In 1994 the two countries concluded a barter
agreement, which the International Monetary Fund (IMF--see Glossary)
subsequently criticized as disadvantageous to Tajikistan. According to
the agreement, Uzbekistan was to send Tajikistan natural gas, fuel oil,
and electricity. In return, Uzbekistan was to have mining rights to
various metals in Tajikistan, which also would supply electricity to
locations in southern Uzbekistan lacking generating capacity, as well as
cotton, construction materials, various metals, and other goods. In 1995
Uzbekistan halted its natural gas deliveries several times, citing
nonpayment by Tajikistan.
In the mid-1990s, the uncertain condition of Tajikistan's economy
left the country in a weak position to conduct foreign trade. The
balance of trade was consistently unfavorable; in 1994 imports exceeded
exports by nearly US$116 million, and by 1995 Tajikistan's foreign debt
exceeded US$731 million. Imports consisted mostly of food, energy, and
medicines. The main exports were aluminum and cotton, with a large share
of the production of both commodities earmarked for export. The income
derived from cotton and aluminum sales went largely to pay for
Tajikistan's energy imports, to repay foreign debts in general, and to
cover government expenses.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Government
Tajikistan
In the first years of independence, politics in Tajikistan were
overshadowed by a long struggle for political power among cliques that
sought Soviet-style dominance of positions of power and privilege and a
collection of opposition forces seeking to establish a new government
whose form was defined only vaguely in public statements. The result was
a civil war that began in the second half of 1992. A faction favoring a
neo-Soviet system took control of the government in December 1992 after
winning the civil war with help from Russian and Uzbekistani forces.
Transition to Post-Soviet Government
In the late 1980s, problems in the Soviet system had already provoked
open public dissatisfaction with the status quo in Tajikistan. In
February 1990, demonstrations against government housing policy
precipitated a violent clash in Dushanbe. Soviet army units sent to
quell the riots inflicted casualties on demonstrators and bystanders
alike. Using the riots as a pretext to repress political dissent, the
regime imposed a state of emergency that lasted long after the riots had
ended. In this period, criticism of the regime by opposition political
leaders was censored from state radio and television broadcasts. The
state brought criminal charges against the leaders of the popular front
organization Rastokhez (Rebirth) for inciting the riots, although the
Supreme Soviet later ruled that Rastokhez was not implicated. Students
were expelled from institutions of higher education merely for attending
nonviolent political meetings. The events of 1990 made the opposition
even more critical of the communist old guard than it had been
previously.
In the highly charged political atmosphere after the failure of the
August 1991 coup attempt in Moscow, Tajikistan's Supreme Soviet voted
for independence for the republic in September 1991. That vote was not
intended to signal a break with the Soviet Union, however. It was rather
a response to increasingly vociferous opposition demands and to similar
declarations by Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Following the dissolution of
the Soviet Union, a development in which Tajikistan played no role, the
republic joined the CIS when that loose federation of former Soviet
republics was established in December 1991.
The political opposition within Tajikistan was composed of a diverse
group of individuals and organizations. The three major opposition
parties were granted legal standing at various times in 1991. The
highest-ranking Islamic figure in the republic, the chief qadi
, Hajji Akbar Turajonzoda, sided openly with the opposition coalition
beginning in late 1991. The opposition's ability to govern and the
extent of its public support never were tested because it gained only
brief, token representation in a 1992 coalition government that did not
exercise effective authority over the entire country.
In the early independence period, the old guard sought to depict
itself as the duly elected government of Tajikistan now facing a power
grab by Islamic radicals who would bring to Tajikistan fundamentalist
repression similar to that occurring in Iran and Afghanistan. Yet both
claims were misleading. The elections for the republic's Supreme Soviet
and president had been neither free nor truly representative of public
opinion. The legislative election was held in February 1990 under the
tight constraints of the state of emergency. In the presidential
election of 1991, Nabiyev had faced only one opponent, filmmaker and
former communist Davlat Khudonazarov, whose message had been stifled by
communist control of the news media and the workplace. Despite Nabiyev's
advantageous position, Khudonazarov received more than 30 percent of the
vote.
In the first half of 1992, the opposition responded to increased
repression by organizing ever larger proreform demonstrations. When
Nabiyev assembled a national guard force, coalition supporters, who were
concentrated in the southern Qurghonteppa Province and the eastern Pamir
region, acquired arms and prepared for battle. Meanwhile, opponents of
reform brought their own supporters to Dushanbe from nearby Kulob
Province to stage counterdemonstrations in April of that year. Tensions
mounted, and small-scale clashes occurred. In May 1992, after Nabiyev
had broken off negotiations with the oppositionist demonstrators and had
gone into hiding, the confrontation came to a head when opposition
demonstrators were fired upon and eight were killed. At that point, the
commander of the Russian garrison in Dushanbe brokered a compromise. The
main result of the agreement was the formation of a coalition government
in which one-third of the cabinet posts would go to members of the
opposition.
For most of the rest of 1992, opponents of reform worked hard to
overturn the coalition and block implementation of measures such as
formation of a new legislature in which the opposition would have a
voice. In the summer and fall of 1992, vicious battles resulted in many
casualties among civilians and combatants. Qurghonteppa bore the brunt
of attacks by antireformist irregular forces during that period. In
August 1992, demonstrators in Dushanbe seized Nabiyev and forced him at
gunpoint to resign. The speaker of the Supreme Soviet, Akbarsho
Iskandarov--a Pamiri closely associated with Nabiyev--became acting
president. Iskandarov advocated a negotiated resolution of the conflict,
but he had little influence over either side.
The political and military battles for control continued through the
fall of 1992. In November the Iskandarov coalition government resigned
in the hope of reconciling the contending factions. Later that month,
the Supreme Soviet, still dominated by hard-liners, met in emergency
session in Khujand, an antireform stronghold, to select a new government
favorable to their views. When the office of president was abolished,
the speaker of parliament, Imomali Rahmonov, became de facto head of
government. A thirty-eight-year-old former collective farm director,
Rahmonov had little experience in government. The office of prime
minister went to Abdumalik Abdullojanov, a veteran hard-line politician.
Once in possession of Dushanbe, the neo-Soviets stepped up
repression. Three leading opposition figures, including Turajonzoda and
the deputy prime minister in the coalition government, were charged with
treason and forced into exile, and two other prominent opposition
supporters were assassinated in December. There were mass arrests on
nebulous charges and summary executions of individuals captured without
formal arrest. Fighting on a smaller scale between the forces of the old
guard and the opposition continued elsewhere in Tajikistan and across
the border with Afghanistan into the mid-1990s.
The conflict in Tajikistan often was portrayed in Western news
reports as occurring primarily among clans or regional cliques. Many
different lines of affiliation shaped the configuration of forces in the
conflict, however, and both sides were divided over substantive
political issues. The old guard had never reconciled itself to the
reforms of the Gorbachev era (1985-91) or to the subsequent demise of
the Soviet regime. Above all, the factions in this camp wanted to ensure
for themselves a monopoly of the kinds of benefits enjoyed by the ruling
elite under the Soviet system. The opposition coalition factions were
divided over what form the new regime in Tajikistan ought to take:
secular parliamentary democracy, nationalist reformism, or
Islamicization. Proponents of the last option were themselves divided
over the form and pace of change.
In April 1994, peace talks arranged by the United Nations (UN) began
between the post-civil war government in Dushanbe and members of the
exiled opposition. Between that time and early 1996, six major rounds of
talks were held in several different cities. Several smaller-scale
meetings also occurred directly between representatives of both sides or
through Russian, UN, or other intermediaries. Observers at the main
rounds of talks included representatives of Russia, other Central Asian
states, Iran, Pakistan, the United States, the Conference on Security
and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE-- after 1994 the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe, OSCE--see Glossary), and the
Organization of the Islamic Conference. In the first two years, these
negotiations produced few positive results. The most significant result
was a cease-fire agreement that took effect in October 1994. The initial
agreement, scheduled to last only for a few weeks, was renewed
repeatedly into 1996, albeit with numerous violations by both sides. As
a result of the cease fire, the UN established an observer mission in
Tajikistan, which had a staff of forty-three in early 1996.
<"38.htm">Government Structure
<"39.htm">Political Parties
<"40.htm">The Media
<"41.htm">Human Rights
<"42.htm">Foreign Relations
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Government Structure
Tajikistan
Independent Tajikistan's initial government conformed to the
traditional Soviet formula of parliamentary-ministerial governance and
complete obeisance to the regime in Moscow. The office of president of
the republic was established in 1990, following the example set by the
central government in Moscow. Until the establishment of the short-lived
coalition government in 1992, virtually all government positions were
held by communist party members. After December 1992, power was in the
hands of factions opposed to reform. Former allies in that camp then
contended among themselves for power.
The 1994 Constitution
In 1994 Tajikistan adopted a new constitution that restored the
office of president, transformed the Soviet-era Supreme Soviet into the
Supreme Assembly (Majlisi Oli), recognized civil liberties and property
rights, and provided for a judiciary that was not fully independent.
Like constitutions of the Soviet era, the document did not necessarily
constrain the actual exercise of power. For example, the mechanism by
which the constitution was formally adopted was a referendum held in
November 1994. Balloting occurred simultaneously with the vote for
president, even though that office could not legally exist until and
unless the constitution was ratified.
The Executive
The president was first chosen by legislative election in 1990. In
the first direct presidential election, held in 1991, former communist
party chief Rahmon Nabiyev won in a rigged vote. The office of president
was abolished in November 1992, then reestablished de facto in 1994 in
advance of the constitutional referendum that legally approved it. In
the interim, the chairman of the Supreme Soviet, Imomali Rahmonov, was
nominal chief of state. In the presidential election of November 1994,
Rahmonov won a vote that was condemned by opposition parties and Western
observers as fraudulent. Rahmonov's only opponent was the antireformist
Abdumalik Abdullojanov, who had founded an opposition party after being
forced to resign as Rahmonov's prime minister in 1993 under criticism
for the country's poor economic situation.
The Council of Ministers is responsible for management of government
activities in accordance with laws and decrees of the Supreme Assembly
and decrees of the president. The president appoints the prime minister
and the other council members, with the nominal approval of the Supreme
Assembly. In 1996 the Council of Ministers included fifteen full
ministers, plus six deputy prime ministers, the chairmen of five state
committees, the presidential adviser on national economic affairs, the
secretary of the National Security Council, and the chairman of the
National Bank of Tajikistan.
The Legislature
The republic's legislature, the Supreme Assembly, is elected directly
for a term of five years. According to the 1994 constitution, any
citizen at least twenty-five years of age is eligible for election. The
unicameral, 230-seat Supreme Soviet elected in 1990 included 227
communists and three members from other parties. The constitution
approved in November 1994 called for a unicameral, 181-seat parliament
to replace the Supreme Soviet. In the first election under those
guidelines, 161 deputies were chosen in February 1995 and nineteen of
the remaining twenty in a second round one month later. (One
constituency elected no deputy, and one elected deputy died shortly
after the election.) In the 1995 parliamentary election, an estimated
forty seats were uncontested, and many candidates reportedly were former
Soviet regional and local officials. The sixty communist deputies who
were elected gave Rahmonov solid support in the legislative branch
because the majority of deputies had no declared party affiliation. Like
the 1994 presidential election, the parliamentary election was not
considered free or fair by international authorities.
The Judiciary
The 1994 constitution prescribes an independent judiciary, including
at the national level the Supreme Court, the Constitutional Court
(theoretically, the final arbiter of the constitutionality of government
laws and actions), the Supreme Economic Court, and the Military Court.
The Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Province has a regional court, and
subordinate courts exist at the regional, district, and municipal
levels. Judges are appointed to five-year terms, but theoretically they
are subordinate only to the constitution and are beyond interference
from elected officials. However, the president retains the power to
dismiss judges, and in practice Tajikistan still lacked an independent
judiciary after the adoption of the 1994 constitution. In June 1993, the
Supreme Court acted on behalf of the Rahmonov regime in banning all four
opposition parties and all organizations connected with the 1992
coalition government. The ban was rationalized on the basis of an
accusation of the parties' complicity in attempting a violent overthrow
of the government.
As in the Soviet system, the Office of the Procurator General has
authority for both investigation and adjudication of crimes within its
broad constitutional mandate to ensure compliance with the laws of the
republic. Elected to a five-year term, the procurator general of
Tajikistan is the superior of similar officials in lower-level
jurisdictions throughout the country.
Local Government
Below the republic level, provinces, districts, and cities have their
own elected assemblies. In those jurisdictions, the chief executive is
the chairman of a council of people's deputies, whose members are
elected to five-year terms. The chairman is appointed by the president
of the republic. The Supreme Assembly may dissolve local councils if
they fail to uphold the law. For most of the late Soviet and early
independence periods, Tajikistan had four provinces: Leninobod in the
north, Qurghonteppa and Kulob in the south, and the Gorno-Badakhshan
Autonomous Province in the southeast. The precise status of that region
is unclear because separatists have declared it an autonomous republic
and even the government does not always call it a province (see fig.
10). Beginning in 1988, Qurghonteppa and Kulob were merged into a single
province, called Khatlon. (The two parts were separated again between
1990 and 1992.) A large region stretching from the west-central border
through Dushanbe to the north-central border is under direct federal
control.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Political Parties
Tajikistan
As long as Tajikistan was a Soviet republic, political power resided
in the Communist Party of Tajikistan, not in the state. Until 1991 the
party was an integral part of the CPSU, subordinate to the central party
leadership. In the years before independence, several opposition parties
appeared with various agendas. Since the civil war, the opposition's
official participation has been limited severely, although some parties
remain active abroad.
Communist Party of Tajikistan
During the 1920s, Tajik communist party membership increased
substantially. But in the following decades, the percentage of Tajik
membership in the Communist Party of Tajikistan rose and fell with the
cycle of purges and revitalizations. Throughout the Soviet period,
however, Russians retained dominant positions. For example, the top
position of party first secretary was reserved for an individual of the
titular ethnic group of the republic, but the powerful position of
second secretary always belonged to a Russian or a member of another
European nationality.
In the mid-1980s, the Communist Party of Tajikistan had nearly
123,000 members, of whom about two-thirds represented urban regions,
with subordinate provincial, district, and municipal organizations in
all jurisdictions. The Communist Youth League (Komsomol), which provided
most of the future party members, had more than 550,000 members in 1991.
The end of the Soviet era witnessed a waning of interest in party
membership, however, despite the privileges and opportunities the party
could offer. By 1989 many districts were losing members much faster than
new members could be recruited.
In August 1991, the failure of the coup by hard-liners in Moscow
against President Gorbachev left the Communist Party of Tajikistan even
less popular and more vulnerable than it had been before. However,
although it was suspended in 1991, the party in Tajikistan was able to
retain its property during its suspension. Just before sanctions were
imposed, the party changed the adjective in its name from communist
to socialist . In December 1991, the party reassumed its
original name and began a vigorous campaign to recapture its earlier
monopoly of power.
After the civil war, the communist party remained the country's
largest party, although its membership was far smaller than it had been
in the late Soviet era. In the early 1990s, the party rebuilt its
organizational network, from the primary party organizations in the
workplace to the countrywide leadership. Communist candidates did well
in the legislative elections of 1995, although they did not win an
outright majority.
Opposition Parties
The end of the 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s saw the open
establishment of opposition parties representing a variety of secular
and religious views. In 1991 and 1992, these groups engaged in an
increasingly bitter power struggle with those who wanted to preserve the
old order in substance, if not in name. By the summer of 1992, the
battle had escalated into an open civil war that would claim tens of
thousands of lives.
A branch of the Islamic Rebirth Party (IRP) was established in
Tajikistan in 1990 with an initial membership of about 10,000. The
Tajikikistan IRP was established as an open organization, although it
was rumored to have existed underground since the late 1970s. The IRP
received legal recognition as a political party in the changed political
climate that existed after the 1991 Moscow coup attempt. Despite its
links to the party of the same name with branches throughout the Soviet
Union, the Tajikistan IRP focused explicitly on republic-level politics
and national identity rather than supranational issues. When the
antireformists gained power in December 1992, they again banned the IRP.
At that point, the party claimed 20,000 members, but no impartial
figures were available for either the size of its membership or the
extent of its public support. After the civil war, the party changed its
name to the Movement for Islamic Revival.
Two other parties, the Democratic Party and Rastokhez (Rebirth), also
were banned, with the result that no opposition party has had official
sanction since early 1993. The Democratic Party, which has a secular,
nationalist, and generally pro-Western agenda, was founded by
intellectuals in 1990 and modeled on the contemporaneous parliamentary
democratization movement in Moscow. In 1995 the party moved its
headquarters from Tehran to Moscow. Although the government nominally
lifted its ban on the Democratic Party in 1995, in practice the party
remains powerless inside the republic. In early 1996, it joined several
other parties in signing an agreement of reconciliation with the
Dushanbe government.
Like the Democratic Party, Rastokhez was founded in 1990 with
substantial support from the intellectual community; its visibility as
an opposition popular front made Rastokhez a scapegoat for the February
1990 demonstrations and riots in Dushanbe (see Transition to Post-Soviet
Government, this ch.). In 1992 Rastokhez, the Democratic Party, and
another party, La"li Badakhshon, played an important role in the
opposition movement that forced President Nabiyev to resign. The
leadership of the much-weakened Rastokhez movement also made peace with
the Dushanbe regime early in 1996.
La"li Badakhshon is a secularist, democratic group that was
founded in 1991. The chief aim of the party, which represents mainly
Pamiris, is greater autonomy for the Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous
Province. La"li Badakhshon joined with the other three opposition
groups in the demonstrations of spring 1992.
Since the civil war, several new political parties have functioned
legally in Tajikistan. Some are organized around interest groups such as
businessmen, some around powerful individuals such as former prime
minister Abdumalik Abdullojanov. All of these parties lack the means to
influence the political process, however. For instance, the most
important of them, Abdullojanov's Popular Unity Party, was prevented by
the government from mounting an effective campaign in the legislative
elections of February 1995.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - The Media
Tajikistan
At the time of independence, Tajikistan had several long-established
official newspapers that had been supported by the communist regime.
These included newspapers circulated throughout the republic in Tajik,
Russian, and Uzbek, as well as papers on the provincial, district, and
city levels. Beginning in 1991, changes in newspapers' names reflected
political changes in the republic. For example, the Tajik republican
newspaper, long known as Tojikistoni Soveti (Soviet
Tajikistan), became first Tojikistoni Shuravi (using the
Persian word for "council" or "soviet") and then Jumhuriyat
(Republic). The equivalent Russian-language newspaper went from Kommunist
Tadzhikistana (Tajikistan Communist) to Narodnaya gazeta
(People's News-paper). Under the changing political conditions of the
late-Soviet and early independence periods, new newspapers appeared,
representing such groups as the journalists' union, the Persian-Tajik
Language Foundation, cultural and religious groups, and opposition
political parties. After antireformists returned to power at the end of
1992, however, the victors cracked down on the press.
In the Soviet era, Tajikistan's magazines included publications
specializing in health, educational, rural, and women's issues, as well
as communist party affairs. Several were intended especially for
children. Literary magazines were published in both Russian and Tajik.
The Academy of Sciences of Tajikistan published five scholarly journals.
In the postindependence years, however, Tajikistan's poverty forced
discontinuation of such items. In the early 1990s, Tajikistan had three
main publishing houses. After the civil war, the combination of
political repression and acute economic problems disrupted many
publication activities. In this period, all of the country's major
newspapers were funded fully or in part by the government, and their
news coverage followed only the government's line. The only news agency,
Khovar, was a government bureau. Tajikistan drew international criticism
for the reported killing and jailing of journalists.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Human Rights
Tajikistan
Under the extension of emergency powers justified by the government
in response to opposition in 1993 and 1994, numerous human rights
violations were alleged on both sides of the civil war. A wave of
executions and "disappearances" of opposition figures began
after antireformist forces captured Dushanbe in December 1992. The
People's Front of Tajikistan, a paramilitary group supported by the
government, was responsible in many such cases. In 1993 and 1994, a
number of journalists were arrested, and prisoners of conscience were
tortured for alleged antigovernment activities. In 1994 some prisoners
of conscience and political prisoners were released in prisoner
exchanges with opposition forces. The death sentence, applicable by
Tajikistani law to eighteen peacetime offenses, was officially applied
in six cases in both 1993 and 1994, but only one person, a political
prisoner, is known to have been executed in 1994. No state executions
were reported in 1995.
Afghanistan-based oppositionist forces, who labeled themselves a
government in exile, were accused by the Dushanbe government of killing
a large number of civilians and some government soldiers near the Afghan
border. These accusations had not been confirmed by impartial observers
as of early 1996. Amnesty International appealed to both sides to
desist, without apparent effect.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Foreign Relations
Tajikistan
Tajikistan had a ministry of foreign affairs for nearly forty years
before it became an independent state at the end of 1991. As long as it
was part of the Soviet Union, however, the republic had no power to
conduct its own diplomacy. The central objective of newly independent
Tajikistan's foreign policy was to maximize its opportunities by
developing relations with as many states as possible. Particular
diplomatic attention went to two groups of countries: the other former
Soviet republics and Tajikistan's near neighbors, Iran and Afghanistan,
which are inhabited by culturally related peoples. At the same time,
Tajikistan pursued contacts with many other countries, including the
United States, Turkey, and Pakistan. In 1995 Tajikistan opened its first
embassy outside the former Soviet Union, in Turkey. The potential for
political support and economic aid is at least as important in shaping
Tajikistan's diplomacy as are ideological and cultural ties.
Former Soviet Republics
Like the other Central Asian republics, Tajikistan joined the CIS,
which was created in December 1991, three weeks before the Soviet Union
collapsed officially. Shortly before opposition demonstrators forced
President Rahmon Nabiyev to resign in August 1992, he asked several
presidents of former Soviet republics, including President Boris N.
Yeltsin of Russia, to help him stay in power. They refused this request.
In the fall of 1992, the increasingly embattled coalition government
that succeeded Nabiyev asked the other members of the CIS to intervene
to end the civil war. However, such assistance was not provided.
Through the mid-1990s, Russia played a role in independent Tajikistan
by its military presence there, in the form of the 201st Motorized Rifle
Division and the Border Troops (see Russia's Role in the Early 1990s,
this ch.). Russian personnel in Dushanbe acted as advisers to the
post-civil war government. Russians also held important positions in the
Dushanbe government itself, most notably the Ministry of Defense, which
was led from 1992 to 1995 by Aleksandr Shishlyannikov. Yuriy Ponosov,
who had a generation of experience as a CPSU official in Tajikistan
before the breakup of the Soviet Union, became Tajikistan's first deputy
prime minister in March 1996.
The protection of the Russian minority in strife-ridden Tajikistan is
a stated foreign policy goal of the Russian government. Russia's concern
was eased somewhat by the conclusion of a dual-citizenship agreement
between the two countries in 1995. Russia also has justified its active
involvement in the affairs of Tajikistan by citing the need to defend
the Tajikistan-Afghanistan border--and thus, the CIS--from penetration
by Islamic extremism and drug trafficking.
Independent Tajikistan has troubled relations with two neighboring
former Soviet republics, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, a situation that
began long before independence. In the 1980s, a dispute over two scarce
resources in Central Asia, water and arable land, soured relations
between Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. In June 1989, the situation burst
into spontaneous, grassroots violence over competing claims to a small
parcel of land. That conflict led to mutual recriminations that
continued until a settlement was reached in 1993. Tensions were
heightened in 1992 by Kyrgyzstan's fear that the Tajikistani civil war
would spill over the border, which had never been defined by a bilateral
treaty. Despite tense relations between the two republics, Kyrgyzstan
attempted to negotiate an end to Tajikistan's civil war, and it sent
medicine and other aid to its beleaguered neighbor. After the civil war,
Kyrgyzstan sent a contingent of troops to Tajikistan as part of the
joint CIS peacekeeping mission (see The Armed Forces, this ch.).
Tajikistan's relations with Uzbekistan present a contradictory
picture. On the one hand, Tajik intellectuals, and at times the Dushanbe
government, have criticized Uzbekistan for discrimination against its
Tajik minority. In response, citing fears of Islamic radicalism in
Tajikistan, Uzbekistan closed its Tajik-language schools in mid-1992. On
the other hand, antireformists in both republics have maintained good
relations based on the interest they shared in the defeat of reformers
in Tajikistan in the early 1990s. Uzbekistan gave military support to
the factions that won Tajikistan's civil war and closed its border with
Tajikistan in the fall of 1992 to prevent opposition refugees from the
civil war from fleeing to Uzbekistan.
After the civil war, Uzbekistan's attitude toward Tajikistan became
increasingly ambivalent. One aspect of Uzbekistan's policy continued its
earlier effort to prevent the opposition from taking power in
Tajikistan; a 1993 cooperation treaty between the two countries,
stipulating a role for Uzbekistan's air force in the defense of
Tajikistan--which has no air force of its own--manifested that concern.
However, the government in Tashkent was increasingly displeased that the
dominant factions among the victors in Tajikistan's civil war were much
less amenable to Uzbekistan's leadership than were the factions that had
controlled Tajikistani politics before the war. By 1995 the Uzbekistani
government was urging the government in Dushanbe to be more conciliatory
toward the opposition in postwar peace talks.
The leaders of Kazakstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and
Uzbekistan repeatedly extolled the value of regional economic and
environmental cooperation in the early 1990s. In reality, however, only
limited progress was made toward such cooperation. Oil and natural gas
producers Kazakstan and Turkmenistan interrupted fuel deliveries to
Tajikistan, in the hopes of improving the terms of the sales agreements
that had prevailed under the Soviet system. With consumer goods
generally in short supply, Tajikistan has taken measures to prevent
citizens of the neighboring republics from purchasing such items from
Tajikistani stockpiles. Tajikistan also is wary of regional water use
plans that might increase the share of Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan in
water emanating from Tajikistan.
Iran
When Tajikistan declared independence, Iran was one of the first
countries to extend diplomatic recognition, and the first to establish
an embassy in Dushanbe. In 1992 Iran provided training for a group of
Tajik diplomats from Tajikistan. After 1991 bilateral contacts in the
mass media and in sports increased significantly, and Iran funded
construction of several new mosques in Tajikistan. Some of Tajikistan's
most important contacts with Iran in the early 1990s were cultural. For
example, Tajikistan held an Iranian film festival, an exhibition of
Iranian art, and two exhibits of Iranian publications. Dushanbe was the
site of international conferences on Persian culture and the Tajik
language. In the early 1990s, Iranian books and magazines became
increasingly available in Tajikistan, and Dushanbe television carried
programs from Iran. The main obstacle to such cultural contact is the
fact that only a very small portion of the Tajikistani population can
read the Arabic alphabet (see Ethnic Groups and Forces of Nationalism,
this ch.).
Despite the obvious ideological differences between the Islamic
revolutionary regime in Iran and the secular communist regime in newly
independent Tajikistan, Nabiyev actively cultivated relations with Iran.
When Nabiyev's position was threatened in 1992, his speeches repeatedly
stressed both the cultural and the religious ties between the two
countries. He subsequently made a direct request for aid from Iranian
president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani (see Transition to Post-Soviet
Government, this ch.).
The leading figures of the Islamic revival movement in Tajikistan say
emphatically that whatever eventual form of Islamic state they advocate
for Tajikistan, Iran is not the model to be followed. Part of the reason
for this position is that Iran is predominantly Shia Muslim while
Tajikistan is mainly Sunni, a distinction with important implications
for the organization of the religious leadership and its relationship
with the state. An equally important reason is that the social
structures of Tajikistan and Iran are considered too different for
Iran's linkage of religious and political powers to be adopted in
Tajikistan.
In the fall of 1992, Iran repeatedly offered to help mediate
Tajikistan's civil war in cooperation with other Central Asian states.
Although such offers produced no negotiations, Iran did send food and
set up camps for refugees from Tajikistan. After the civil war,
relations between Iran and the new government in Dushanbe included
efforts to develop a modus vivendi as well as periodic recriminations.
Iran worked with Russia in attempting to negotiate a peace agreement
between the Dushanbe government and the opposition. In July 1995,
Tajikistan opened an embassy in Tehran, one of its few outside the
former Soviet Union.
Afghanistan
Tajikistan's relations with Afghanistan, the country with which it
shares its long southern border, have been affected not only by the
cultural and ethnic links between inhabitants of the countries but also
by the way the Soviet regime tried to use those links to ensure the
survival of a communist government in Kabul after 1979. The Soviets put
Tajiks from Tajikistan in positions of power in the Soviet-backed Afghan
government and sent propaganda publications from Tajikistan to
Afghanistan. Afghans were brought to Tajikistan for education and
communist indoctrination, and Tajiks served in the Soviet military
occupation of Afghanistan. In 1991 the political climate in Tajikistan
allowed some citizens to criticize the war openly, although there was no
reliable gauge of how widely this antiwar opinion was shared.
Into the early 1990s, the communist government in Dushanbe and the
then-communist government in Kabul favored the development of economic
relations and exchanges in the fields of education and publishing.
During the civil war, the antireformist side alleged that its opponents
relied heavily on the subversive actions of Afghan mujahidin .
Most neutral observers dismissed the large-scale role of Afghans as a
propaganda ploy.
Rugged terrain and poor border enforcement make the Tajikistan-
Afghanistan border very permeable. Beginning in 1992, border
crossings--for private smuggling, to escape the Tajikistani civil war,
or to obtain weapons for one side or the other in that war--became
increasingly numerous. By early 1993, the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees estimated that 50,000 to 70,000 refugees had
gone from southern Tajikistan to northern Afghanistan. By 1994 many of
them had returned home, although the exact number is not available.
Relations between Tajikistan's post-civil war government and
Afghanistan often were troubled through the first half of the 1990s.
Tajikistan accused Afghanistan of complicity in cross-border attacks by
exiled opposition members based in northern Afghanistan. In turn,
Afghanistan accused Russian forces on the Tajikistan side of the border
of killing Afghan civilians in reprisal attacks. The situation changed
in late 1995 and early 1996, when Russia began to support President
Burhanuddin Rabbani's faction in the ongoing Afghan civil war. Rabbani
then tried to improve relations with the Dushanbe government and to
mediate a settlement between it and the opposition.
The United States
Although the United States was the second country to open an embassy
in Dushanbe, that outpost was evacuated in October 1992, at the height
of the civil war, and was not reopened until March 1993. Beginning in
1992, antireformists and the opposition both sought support from the
United States. Thus, a trip by Secretary of State James Baker to
Tajikistan in February 1992 antagonized members of the opposition, who
saw the visit as granting tacit approval to Nabiyev's political
repression. Relations with the opposition were improved somewhat a few
months later, when a human rights delegation from the United States
Congress met with several opposition leaders.
During the civil war, the United States provided emergency food
supplies and medicines to Tajikistan, and independent Tajikistan
continued the cooperative program on earthquake forecasting techniques
that had begun with the United States during the Soviet era. By the
mid-1990s, United States policy toward Tajikistan centered on support
for peace negotiations and on encouraging Tajikistan to develop closer
relations with the IMF and other financial organizations that could help
in the rebuilding process.
China
The main source of tension between China and Tajikistan is China's
claim on part of Tajikistan's far eastern Gorno-Badakhshan region.
Between 1992 and 1995, sixteen rounds of negotiations between China and
a commission representing Russia, Tajikistan, Kazakstan, and Kyrgyzstan
failed to produce a border agreement. An interim agreement, scheduled
for signing in April 1996, stipulated that no attacks would be launched
across the border in either direction and that both sides would provide
ample notice of military exercises in the area. Despite their border
dispute, China and the post-civil war government of Tajikistan share a
hostility toward reformist political movements, especially those that
could be stigmatized as Islamic fundamentalist. By the mid-1990s, this
common ground had become the basis for a working relationship between
the two governments.
International Organizations
Tajikistan joined the UN in 1992. In the fall of that year, the
Tajikistani coalition government requested UN aid in ending the civil
war and supporting political democratization, but only a UN mission and
a call for an end to hostilities resulted. Tajikistan joined the CSCE in
February 1992. In 1993 and 1994, membership was obtained in the
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), the World
Bank, the IMF, and the Economic Cooperation Organization.
Tajikistan
Tajikistan - Bibliography
Tajikistan
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Tajikistan