Badakhshan Province
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Badakhshān بدخشان Province of Afghanistan |
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Administration | Provincial government | |
- | Provincial seat | Fayzabad |
- | Governor | Munshi Abdul Majid |
Population | ||
- | 2006 (estimate) | 823,000 (13th of 32) |
- | 1979 census | 497,000 |
- | 2008 population density | 19.8 per km² |
- | Ethnic groups | Tajik Uzbek Kyrgyz |
- | Languages | Persian (Dari) |
Geography | ||
- | Total area | 44,059 km² (5th of 31) |
- | Water area | 0 km² |
- | Time zone | UTC+4:30 |
Subdivisions | ||
- | Districts | 29 |
Divisions prior to 2005 realignment
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Infrastructure | ||
- | Airports | 6 |
Identifiers | ||
- | ISO 3166-2 code | AF-BDS |
Badakhshan (Persian: بدخشان - Badakhshān) is one of the 34 provinces of Afghanistan, consisting of 29 districts. It is located in the north-east of the country, between the Hindu Kush and the Amu Darya. It is part of the Badakhshan region.
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[edit] Geography
Badakshan is primarily bordered by Tajikistan to the north and east. A slim sliver of the province, called the Wakhan Corridor, also extends above northern Pakistan's Chitral and the disputed Northern Areas of Jammu and Kashmir to a border with China. The province has a total area of 44,059 km², most of which is occupied by the Hindu Kush and Pamir mountain ranges.
Badakhshan was a stopover on the ancient Silk Road trading path, and China has shown great interest in the province after the fall of the Taliban, helping to reconstruct roads and infrastructure in the province, probably with an interest in the province's mineral wealth.
[edit] History
Badakhshan's name was given by the Sassanids and derives from the word badaxš (an official Sassanian title). The suffix of the name, -ān, means the region belonged to someone with the title badaxš (analogous to Azerbaijan, Isfahan, Tehran, etc).[1]
Badakhshan was the only province not occupied by the Taliban during their drive to control the country. Burhanuddin Rabbani, a Badakhshan native, and Ahmad Shah Massoud were the last remnants of the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance during the peak of Taliban control in 2000 and 2001, and they used the province as their base of operations. The province was about to fall to the Taliban when the American invasion allowed the Northern Alliance to reclaim control of the country with the aid of American military air power and assistance.
The current Governor of the province is Munshi Abdul Majid. Previously, it was Sayed Amin Tareq.
[edit] Economics
Despite massive mineral reserves, Badakhshan is one of the most destitute areas in the world. Opium poppy growing is the only real source of income in the province and Badakhshan has one of the highest rates of maternal mortality in the world, due to the complete lack of health infrastructure, inaccessible locations, and bitter winters of the province.
Since ancient times, Badakhshan was the world's only source of lapis lazuli.[2] Most recent mining activity has focused on lapis lazuli, with the proceeds from the lapis mines being used to fund Northern Alliance troops, and before that, anti-Soviet Mujahideen fighters. Recent geological surveys have indicated the location of other gemstone deposits, in particular rubies and emeralds.[1] Exploitation of this mineral wealth could be key to the region's prosperity. [2]
[edit] Capital City
Fayzabad, the capital of Badakhshan sits on the Kokcha River and has an approximate population of 15,000. The chief commercial and administrative center of NE Afghanistan and the Pamir region, Fayzabad also has rice and flour mills. In winter the city is sometimes isolated by deep snow. In 1979 it was a focus of Afghan guerrillas attempting to repel the Soviet invasion. Fayzabad was taken by Soviet forces in 1980 and became a major Soviet garrison town.
[edit] Demographics
The population of the province is estimated at 823,000 people[3]. Majority of them are Tajiks. There is also the Tajik sub-group, the Pamiri people, with small Uzbek and Kyrgyz minorities. The residents of the province are largely Sunni but a small volume of Ismaili Muslims are also in the area.
Historical population estimates for Badakhshan Province are as follows[4]:
- 2006: 823,000 (World Gazetteer)
- 2004: 725,700 (Central Statistics Office)
- 2000: 923,144 (Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
- 1998: 924,747 (Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
- 1997: 663,700 (Central Statistics Office)
- 1991: 615,156 (ProMIS UNIDATA)
- 1990: 554,374 (USAID)
- 1979: 497,798 (Central Statistics Office)
[edit] Districts of Badakhshan
District | Map # | Capital | Population[5] | Area | Notes |
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Arghanj Khwa | 6 | 12,000 | Created in 2005 within Fayzabad District | ||
Argo | 6 | 45,000 | Created in 2005 within Fayzabad District | ||
Baharak | 7 | Baharak | 14,000 | Sub-divided in 2005 | |
Darayim | 6 | 65,000 | Created in 2005 within Fayzabad District | ||
Darwaz | 1 | 21,000 | Sub-divided in 2005 | ||
Darwazi Bala | 1 | 11,000 | Created in 2005 within Darwaz District | ||
Fayzabad | 6 | Fayzabad | 46,000 | Sub-divided in 2005 | |
Ishkashim | 8 | Ishkashim | 11,000 | ||
Jurm | 10 | 3,000 | Sub-divided in 2005 | ||
Khash | 10 | 48,000 | |||
Khwahan | 2 | Khwahan | 14,000 | Sub-divided in 2005 | |
Kishim | 9 | 63,000 | Sub-divided in 2005 | ||
Kohistan | 7 | 12,000 | Created in 2005 within Baharak District | ||
Kuf Ab | 2 | 16,000 | Created in 2005 within Khwahan District | ||
Kuran wa Munjan | 11 | Kuran wa Munjan | 8,000 | ||
Ragh | 4 | Ragh | 37,000 | ||
Shahri Buzurg | 5 | Shahri Buzurg | 42,000 | ||
Shighnan | 3 | 24,000 | |||
Shiki | 6 | 26,000 | |||
Shuhada | 7 | 31,000 | |||
Tagab | 6 | 22,000 | |||
Tishkan | 9 | 23,000 | Created in 2005 from Kishim District | ||
Wakhan | 13 | 13,000 | |||
Warduj | 7 | 17,000 | |||
Yaftali Sufla | 6 | 39,000 | |||
Yamgan | 7 | 20,000 | |||
Yawan | 4 | 27,000 | |||
Zebak | 12 | Zebak | 7,000 |
[edit] Notable people from Badakhshan
- Burhanuddin Rabbani - leader of the Jamiat-e Islami political party and former president of Afghanistan
- Tahir Badakhshi - political activist
- Latif Pedram - political activist and candidate for Afghanistan's presidency
[edit] References
- ^ Eilers, W. "BADAKŠĀN". Encyclopædia Iranica (Online Edition). United States: Columbia University. Retrieved on January 2008.
- ^ Cite error: Invalid
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- ^ World Gazetteer.
- ^ Afghanistan Geographic & Thematic Layers
- ^ 1 Badakhshan
[edit] External links
- Recent activities and developments in Badakhshan
- Dupree, Nancy Hatch (1977): An Historical Guide to Afghanistan. 1st Edition: 1970. 2nd Edition. Revised and Enlarged. Afghan Tourist Organization. [3]
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