Khatlon
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Khatlon (Tajik/Persian: Хатлон/ختلان) or Khatlan is the most populous province (Вилоят/Viloyat) in Tajikistan. It is situated in the southwest of the country, between the Hissar range in the north and the Panj River in the south and borders on Afghanistan in the southeast and on Uzbekistan in the west. Khatlon is informally divided into the Qurghonteppa region (Western Khatlon) – with the Kofarnihon and Vakhsh river valleys – and the Kulob region (Eastern Khatlon). Both regions were merged in November 1992 into the Khatlon oblast. The capital is the city of Qurghonteppa, formerly known as Kurgan-Tyube.
Khatlon has an area of 24,600 square kilometres and consists of 25 districts – 14 in Western Khatlon and 11 in Eastern Khatlon. The total population of Khatlon in 2000 was 2,149.5 Million – 1,074.2 men and 1,075.3 women. The population in Khatlon is mainly engaged with agricultural activities, especially cotton growing and cattle raising. Only two or three percent of the population is working in the industrial sector.
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[edit] History
During the Soviet era, Khatlon became one of the two main cotton regions in Tajikistan. The other one is in Sughd (Leninabad). Collectivisation of agriculture was implemented aggressively in the early 1930s, 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 violations against peasants, substantial expansion of the irrigation network, and forcible resettlement of mountain peoples and people from Uzbekistan to the lowlands.[1]
The results of this policy are to be seen in the ethnic composition of Salua oblast as well as in the fact that the Tajik population identifies themselves either as Garmis (resettled from the mountains) or Kulobis. These groups never melted, and fought against each other during the Civil War in Tajikistan. Khatlon oblast suffered the heaviest damage in Tajikistan.
Since the conflicts leading to the civil war were never really resolved, tensions in the region still exist. The eastern part – Kulob – is home to the president and his clan and has thus gained a lot of political influence. During Soviet times, the region cooperated with the then ruling elite from Leninabad, and was responsible for the militia, the army and the security forces. Kulob is regarded as a very conservative region. In the capital Qurghonteppa and parts of Kulob, the Islamic opposition has a lot of support among the Garmis.
[edit] Districts
- Baljuvon district
- Beshkent district
- Bokhtar district
- Vakhsh district
- Vose' district
- Ghozimalik district
- Danghara district
- Yovon district
- Kolkhozobod district
- Kulob district
- Qabodiyon district
- Qizil-Mazor district
- Qumsangir district
- Muminobod district
- Norak district
- Panj district
- Sarband district
- Farkhor district
- Khovaling district
- Hojamaston district
- Chubek district
- Jilikul district
- Shahrtuz district
- Shuro-obod district
[edit] Demography
The ethnic composition of Kulob region is: 85 % Tajiks, 13 % Uzbeks, 2 % others. In Qurghonteppa the breakdown is 59 % Tajiks, 32 % Uzbeks and three percent Russian.
[edit] References
- ^ Muriel Atkin. Tajikistan in: Glenn E. Curtis (ed.): Kazakstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan, Country Studies, Washington: 1997. pp. 197-290.