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41. Dushanbe, Tajikistan SIBMAS International Directory Of Performing Arts Collectio
(Republican regional history and Art Museum)). ul. Aini 31 734012 Dushanbe.Telephone +7 (3772) 231 544. Special Collections Culture (tajikistan)
http://www.sibmas.org/idpac/asia/tjd001.html
SIBMAS
International Directory of
Performing Arts Collections and Institutions
Tajikistan
Dushanbe, Tajikistan
Index: Institution names followed by are members of SIBMAS AN Respubliki Tadzhikistan
Institut yazka i literatury im. Rudaki
Biblioteka

(Tajik Academy of Sciences; Institute of Language and Literature; Library)
Date founded: 1951 Rudaki 21 734025 Dushanbe Telephone: +7 (3772) 21 342 Central State Archives of Cinematographic, Photographic and Audio Documents of Tajikistan ul. Negmatata Karabayeva 38/1 734018 Dushanbe Telephone: +7 (3772) 336 379 Central'nyi gosudarstvennyi archiv Tadzhikskoi Respubliki Biblioteka (Central State Archives of the Tajik Republic) Date founded: 1934 Negmata Karabayeva 38/1 734018 Dushanbe Telephone: +7 (3772) 39 571 Natsionalnaya biblioteka respubliki Tadzhikistan (State Republic Library) Date founded: 1933 prospekt Lenina 34 734610 Dushanbe Telephone: +7 (3772) 274 726 Respublikanskij Istoriko-Kraevedceskij i Chudozestvennyj Muzej (Republican Regional History and Art Museum)) ul. Aini 31

42. Tajikistan - MavicaNET
history of tajikistan 8. Tajik Language 5. See also. regional / Asia /Afghanistan State Law / State Power / International Organizations
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43. History Of Tajikistan - MavicaNET
regional Asia tajikistan Path to the top. Culture Science HistoricalSciences World history Archives The history of tajikistan English
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44. Internews - Regions - Tajikistan
Internews tajikistan also participates in a regional news exchange, OtkrytaiaAziia numerous articles on tajikistan s culture, language, history,
http://www.internews.org/regions/centralasia/tajikistan.htm
Ivan Sigal In Tajikistan's Pamiri mountains, a correspondent presents a story for an Internews program. Internews has been active in Tajikistan since 1995, working with some 20 stations to increase the quality and quantity of unbiased information available to citizens of the republic, primarily through supporting the work of independent television broadcasters. Support includes journalism and management training, legal support, marketing consultation, technical and computer assistance as well as the facilitation of two news exchange programs. "Thanks to Internews, my view of news has changed entirely. I'm returning home from this seminar a different person." Murod Vaidulloev, first-time Internews seminar participant

45. USAID: Tajikistan
tajikistan is emerging from five years of civil war between regional and ideological 1997 Peace Accord opened a new phase in tajikistan s short history,
http://www.usaid.gov/pubs/bj2001/ee/tj/
TAJIKISTAN
>> Regional Overview >> Tajikistan Overview Development Challenge Humanitarian Assistance Other Donors FY2001 Program / ...
USAID Search: Tajikistan
Previous Years' Activities
Monday, 13-Jan-2003 12:04:41 EST
Introduction
The Development Challenge
Tajikistan is the poorest of the new Central Asian states and the only one in which underlying ethnic, regional, economic, and ideological strains led to open warfare and major population displacements in 1992, the time of independence. The June 27, 1997 Peace Accord opened a new phase in Tajikistan's short history, formally ending the civil war begun in 1992. The war left at least 50,000 dead and 700,000 displaced people. It also left a legacy of hatred and suspicion that makes reconstruction tenuous and difficult. Tajikistan has made important strides in carrying out the Peace Accord. USAID supports the reconciliation process and the rebuilding of institutional capacity. In the fall of 1998, the U.S. Ambassador and all U.S. employees from Dushanbe were relocated to Almaty, Kazakhstan. In 1999, the country was relatively stable, and opposition forces were reintegrated into civilian society. Unfortunately, due to the security situation, neither USAID officers nor contractors have easy access to development partners or clients. Programs must be managed with limited resident staff. A new constitution was adopted in late 1999. Demobilization has proceeded and parliamentary elections are planned for early 2000. On the negative side, the Government of Tajikistan continues to place significant obstacles to the full participation of opposition parties, as evidenced by the flawed presidential election in November 1999. As a result, election assistance has been put on hold.

46. [ Www.RegionalAnalysis.org ]
The purpose of history is to produce a comprehensive picture of the past, but canaccurate histories tajikistan Not Likely to Experience Popular Revolt
http://www.regionalanalysis.org/
FoldNumber = 15; // 0;
Tuesday
21 June, 2005 [ RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY ]
Special Report
In Trying To Document Yugoslav Strife
The purpose of history is to produce a comprehensive picture of the past, but "can accurate histories be written about recent events that are, in themselves, controversial?" This question was addressed by Mile Bjelajac, ... more
RFE/RL Briefings
Tajikistan Not Likely to Experience Popular Revolt
Despite a worsening political situation and a poor economy, a popular uprising similar to those that have recently occurred in Ukraine, Georgia and Kyrgyzstan is unlikely in Tajikistan, according to RFE/RL Tajik Service Director Massoumeh Torfeh. ...
Read more

Chechens: Neglected Allies in the War on Terrorism

The current Russian government has missed an opportunity to cultivate a "potential ally" in the war on terrorism, according to an expert on the peoples of the North Caucasus. Because the Russian government is "indiscriminate" and "treats all Chechens as terrorists ...
Read more
more events [No. 116]

47. CENTRAL ASIA AND THE CAUCASUS Journal Of Social And Political Studies
The border with tajikistan connecting Tashkent to the Ferghana Valley via While each nation of the region learns their history, regional scholars should
http://www.ca-c.org/dataeng/ruzaliev.shtml
sl="1.3"
TURKISTAN: CONSOLIDATING FACTORS FOR ITS PEOPLE
Odil RUZALIEV Odil Rusaliev , Currently graduate student of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA finishing in spring of 2004. He is originally from Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Between 1995 and 2002, he worked first full-time and then part-time for Uzbek State TV Company in Tashkent and had his own news program in English - First Channel News (FCN). Between 1998 and 2002 he also contributed stories on Uzbekistan for CNN World Report. Between 1996 and 2002 he worked full-time for the American Embassy in Tashkent as a media assistant. At Tufts University he studies international relations and namely, security studies and conflict resolution. E-mail: info@uzland.info or Odil.Ruzaliev@tufts.edu
INTRODUCTION
In this paper I would like to discuss some of the main barriers, disagreements and conflicts among the Turkistani countries hindering integration processes in the region. I will offer some reconciliatory mechanisms that could improve the regional cooperation and promote the economic and perhaps even political integration in the region. I will mention consolidating factors of the past and their irrelevance today, speculate about the possibility of the region's unification into a single Turkistani state conglomerate differentiating the approaches taken by the Soviet Union and the European Union in this regard. At the end I will give recommendations on state, non-state and international levels that could potentially contribute to the integration processes in Central Turkistan.

48. Central Asia: Terrorism, Religious Extremisms, Regional Security - Carnegie Endo
tajikistan, which experienced a deadly civil war from 19921997, is somewhere inbetween. Such arguments are an oversimplification of Soviet history.
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&id=1387&prog=zru

49. Travel In Dushanbe - Tajikistan - Asia - History - WorldTravelGate.net®-
WorldTravelGate.net®Information about Dushanbe,tajikistan,Asia,history,Gallery In the 19th century the village of Dushanbe was a center for regional
http://www.asiatravelling.net/tajikistan/dushanbe/dushanbe_history.htm
Dushanbe - History Lenin's Statue Dusanbe (in Persian Dosanba which means Monday; in Russian known as Dyushambe until 1929, Stalinabad from 1929 to 1961, and Dushanbe after 1961) is capital and most populous city of Tajikistan. It is located in the Hisor valley, at an average altitude of approximately 823 m, on the Dushanbe river, the lower course of the Varzob at the confluence with the Luchob. According to tradition, the name reflects an earlier practice of holding a market in the area on Mondays. There is archeological evidence of human habitation in the Dushanbe region since the late Neolithic era. Speculation that there may have been a large ancient settlement on the site remains controversial. The earliest historical references to a village named Dushanbe are from the 17th and 18th centuries; by the early 18th century a small fort was associated with it. Dushanbe and its environs were long subject to the beg of Hisor. In the 19th century the village of Dushanbe was a center for regional trade and artisanal production, including weaving, tanning, and ironworking. After a prolonged, though intermittent, struggle for control of the Hisor area among various local and regional rulers, the tsarist government allocated it to the amir of Bukhara in 1868, as compensation for the loss of other parts of his realm to the Russian governorship-general of Turkestan. In 1929 Tajikistan became a Soviet Socialist Republic separate from Uzbekistan, with Dushanbe remaining its capital. Since the 1930s the city has acquired an increasing number of larger public and official buildings (including a sports stadium, a theater for opera and ballet, government headquarters, and a post office) in architectural styles typical of the Soviet Union at the time, though many have decorative details drawn from local traditions. In the 1950s the city government began to construct increasingly tall residential housing, at first four-story apartment buildings, and, since the 1970s, an ever-increasing number of medium- and high-rise apartment buildings, although some neighborhoods of small mud-brick houses remain.

50. Tajikistan Human Development Report 1996 - Appendix A
Materials of the regional Seminar for the Central Asian Countries, Turkey, andMoldova on the a history of Architecture and Construction in tajikistan.
http://www.undp.org/rbec/nhdr/1996/tajikistan/appendixa.htm
Sources Agreement Between CIS Countries on Pension Insurance Akbarov, A.A. "Formation of the Settlements at Agro-Industrial Complexes in the Mountainous Region." in Architectural Planning on the Example of Tajikistan. Irfon Publishing: Dushanbe, 1989. . Low Residential Houses for the Dense Settlements and Towns in Tajikistan. Maorif: Dushanbe, 1994. . Materials of the Sociological Inquiry on the Selection of the Type of Housing, 1990-1991. Akhmedov, A.A.. Minister of Health. Report to the Government of the Republic of Tajikistan on Iodine Deficiency Diseases, 1995. (Unpublished) Annual Reports of the Endocrinological, Psychiatric and Cardiological Dispensaries Birkenes, Robert; Save the Children, USA and UNHCR. Tajikistan: Survey of the Household and Bazaar Economies. Save the Children, USA: Dushanbe, 1996. Committee for Architecture and Construction. Draft Law On Architecture and Town Building. 1995. . National Report of the Republic of Tajikistan at the Conference "Habitat- 2" in Istanbul. Dushanbe, 1996. "Conception of the Development of the Culture of Tajikistan,"

51. Tajikistan Human Development Report - Chapter 1
Without more information on regional disparities, it is hard to bring the energies of history. The Republic of tajikistan is a relatively young state.
http://www.undp.org/rbec/nhdr/tajikistan/chapter1.htm
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION AND COUNTRY BACKGROUND
1.1 INTRODUCTION
The status of Tajikistan is uncertain even now. It is clearly one of the least developed industrialized countries, but to determine the situation of Tajikistan as evaluated by world standards is becoming very urgent. The preparation of the first report on human development in Tajikistan is a contribution to the long and hard effort of elaborating a strategy for the development of all the people of Tajikistan.
The Human Development Index
Table 1.1.1 Human Development Indicators
Life Expectancy (years) Adult Literacy Mean Years of Schooling Income (PPP$*) Tajikistan *Estimate of the Institute of World Economics, Tajikistan.
Table 1.1.2 Human Development Index
Indexed Life Expectancy Indexed Educational Attainment Indexed Adjusted Income Human Development Index Tajikistan
1.2 COUNTRY BACKGROUND
Geographical Locations and Borders
The Republic of Tajikistan is situated in Central Asia between 36 o 40' and 41 o 05' north latitude and 67 o 31' and 75 o 14' east longitude and has a latitude similar to that of Greece and southern regions of Italy and Spain. The territory of the Republic of Tajikistan, stretching for 700 km from east to west and 350 km from north to south, totals 143 thousand square kilometers. It has an irregular border reflecting historical and geographical peculiarities of the Tajik nation's settlement in Central Asia. The border runs along China for 430 km, Afghanistan for 1030 km, Uzbekistan for 950 km, and Kyrgyzstan for 590 km. In the southeast, Tajikistan is separated from Pakistan by a strip of Afghan land, varying from 15 to 65 km in width.

52. Aga Khan Speech In Tajikistan Nov. 1998
and to remember that the history of tajikistan is the history of the SamanidEmpire. It was thanks to the wisdom of the regional policy of President
http://ismaili.net/timeline/1998/9809sp1.html
SPEECH MADE BY HAZAR IMAM – AT THE ADDRESS TO THE ASSEMBLY DURING THE VISIT TO TAJIKISTAN
Transcribed from Video by the Heritage Staff. 24 September 1998 Your Excellency President Rakhmonov, your Excellency Deputy Chairman Koimdodov of the Majilis Olli, your Excellency Chairman Nyazmamadov, Distinguished guests President Rakhmonov, I want to thank you again for the warm and generous welcome and hospitality you have extended to Me since My arrival in Tajikistan. Your words have touched Me deeply, and I would like everyone to know that though results have been achieved in our common programs, those sorts of results cannot be achieved unless the people who take decisions not only work together but are genuine friends. This friendship enables us to discuss matters of signal importance for the future of Tajikistan. To think about future policies, future decisions, and to remember that the history of Tajikistan is the history of the Samanid Empire. We must not forget that. All Tajiks associate themselves with that remarkable history and we must draw intelligent lessons from that history. These are also matters which the President and I have discussed. At our first meeting you presented Me with the Republic's highest civilian award, the Order of Friendship, which is for Me a very great honour and a wonderful way to begin My second visit to the country. Sometimes these decorations are formalities. But here the name of the decoration is the Order of Friendship and I attach the greatest importance to that friendship. I thank you President Rakhmonov and Chairman Nyazmamadov for your warm words of welcome on this first official event here in Khorog. I deeply appreciate the opportunity to return to Gorno Badakhshan again. I have heard many reports of the developments that have taken place in the region over the past three years as a result of the collaborative efforts of the Government and the agencies of the Aga Khan Development Network. I welcome the opportunity to see first hand, what I have been hearing and reading about. It is also exhilarating to be back in this breath-taking natural setting.

53. Keynote Address By H.E. Emomali Rahmonov, President Of The Republic Of Tajikista
Brief history of regional Cooperation in Transboundary River Basins Upstream nations, such as tajikistan, have an important role to play in ensuring
http://www.transwaterconference2005.org/english/president_statement_e.htm
Main Organizers Program Call for Papers ... Links Quick links Conference Organizers Program Call for papers ... Contact Useful links General information Visa requirements Hotel information Travel information ... Water links KEYNOTE ADDRESS Keynote Address by H.E. Emomali Rakhmonov, President of the Republic of Tajikistan May 31 st – June 1 st , 2005 Dushanbe, Tajikistan Distinguished guests, Ladies and Gentlemen, I am very pleased to welcome you all to Dushanbe, our capital city, and to the International Conference on Regional Cooperation in Transboundary River Basins. This conference is the first major event in support of the declared by the UN International Decade of Action, ‘Water for Life’, 2005-2015, which was initiated by Tajikistan following the International Year of Freshwater and within its frame the International Freshwater Forum in Dushanbe. It is quite logical that lately the world leaders and governments have often focus on the issue of water, as this

54. Tajikistan Country Guide - History And Government - World Travel Guide Provided
tajikistan. history and Government. history The Tajiks come from an ancientstock – the despite the reservations of the other two main regional powers,
http://www.worldtravelguide.net/data/tjk/tjk580.asp
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Overview

General Information

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Tajikistan
Tajikistan
History and Government
History: The Tajiks come from an ancient stock – the inhabitants of the Pamir Mountains claim to be the only pure descendants of the Aryan tribes who invaded India over 4000 years ago, and that the Saxon tribes of Western Europe also originated there. Tajikistan’s inaccessibility has protected it from most invaders, although Alexander the Great founded a city on the site of modern-day Khojand, calling it Alexandria Eskate (Alexandria the Furthest). However, the mountains effectively spared it from the Mongols, although it was under their aegis. After the dissolution of the Mongol Empire, Tajikistan was successively ruled by the emirs of Samarkand, Bukhara, and finally, Kokhand. It was eventually ceded to the Russian sphere of influence in the dying days of the ‘Great Game’ of political intrigue between the Russian Empire and the British in India at the end of the 19th century. The Bolsheviks were not made welcome and the Basmachi movement continued to resist them until the early-1930s. Enver Pasha (d. 1924) and Ibraghim Beg (d. 1931) both came to their end in Tajikistan. During the fighting, some 200,000 Tajiks fled to Afghanistan. Tajikistan’s distance and remoteness again saved it during the Soviet era, when it escaped more lightly than other republics did.

55. United Nations Counter-Narcotics Chief Visits Central Asia, Urges Greater Region
I urge the countries of Central Asia to engage in much greater regional in tajikistan is a milestone in the history of drug control in the region.
http://www.unis.unvienna.org/unis/pressrels/2004/unisnar845.html
Home Site Map Contact Us UN Links UN Homepage UNOV Homepage UN News Centre UN Website Locator UN Webcast Latest press releases Advanced Search The United Nations in Vienna Press Releases Issued in Vienna ... Frequently Asked Questions UNIS/NAR/845
21 May 2004 United Nations Counter-Narcotics Chief Visits Central Asia, Urges Greater Regional Co-operation against Drugs, Crime and Terrorism VIENNA, 21 May (UN Information Service) Antonio Maria Costa, Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), will pay an official visit to Central Asia from 24 to 29 May. During his visit to Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Afghanistan, Mr. Costa will meet with heads of state and senior government officials to review the drug control and crime prevention situation in the region. After visiting Tashkent in Uzbekistan and meeting with senior government officials there on 24-25 May, Mr. Costa will travel on to Bishkek to participate at the invitation of President Askar Akayev in the 26 May launch of the Drug Control Agency of the Kyrgyz Republic. The day after in Dushanbe, Mr. Costa will attend the celebration of the fifth anniversary of the Drug Control Agency in Tajikistan, established with the support of UNODC. In Dushanbe, Mr. Costa will also participate in an assistance coordination meeting on 28 May and then visit the border regions. UNODC drug reduction and crime prevention assistance priorities for Central Asia are focused on strengthening border controls in Central Asian countries neighbouring Afghanistan; promoting cross border cooperation, including operational coordination at national, regional and international levels; and improving drugs and crime prevention mechanisms. UNODC in Central Asia also provides legal advisory services and precursor control support. In the area of demand reduction, UNODC is launching several new regional projects, which will enhance government capacities in monitoring and evaluation, promoting best practices in prevention, treatment and rehabilitation, supporting the diversified services for various target groups and establishing an Addiction Research and Training Institute for Central Asia (ARTICA). The total budget for proposed and ongoing UNODC projects is more than US$ 35 million.

56. Asia Times
In the case of tajikistan, China dropped most of its claim to the Pamir Mountains both in history and concerns about future jobs and regional influence.
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/EF18Ad02.html
Search Asia Times
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China
Central Asia: Fears over China's power
By Antoine Blua
PRAGUE - China's rise as a "great power" is raising fears in Central Asia that Beijing will eventually dominate the region both economically and militarily.
These fears come despite the friendly relations that have developed between regional governments over the past decade. China has repeatedly stressed that it wants to offer cooperation, not domination. But such assurances have not kept Central Asians such as Dushanbe resident Abdelmalek Tordeli from worrying about the long-term consequences of a Chinese superpower. "In my opinion China will be one of the superpowers in the future. [But] I do not feel any threat for Tajikistan right now," he said.
Beijing's intensified diplomatic activity in the region was highlighted this month when Chinese President Hu Jintao visited Kazakhstan as part of his first foreign trip as head of state. After talks with Hu, President Nursultan Nazarbaev told reporters, "There are no unsolved social, economic or political issues between Kazakhstan and China today."

57. Civil War In Tajikistan: Causes, Developments And Prospects For Peace
In fact, Soviet history is the only history tajikistan, influence in tajikistanand challenge Uzbekistan for regional domination.
http://www.eisenhowerinstitute.org/programs/globalpartnerships/securityandterror
Mission Board of Directors Staff Employment Opportunities Internship Opportunities Building International Partnerships Democracy and Accountable Governance Living History Scholarships Books Book Reviews Civil War in Tajikistan: Causes, Developments and Prospects for Peace by Sergei Gretsky Introduction Throughout the years of its Soviet history Tajikistan was known as a forlorn
outpost having the highest birth rate and infant mortality in the USSR, the
last hearth of anti-Soviet resistance and the Basmachi movement which went
on into the late 1930s. In fact, Soviet history is the only history Tajikistan,
as a nation, has ever had. It appeared on the map of the world in the mid-1920s,
with the other countries of Central Asia, when the Soviets nationally
and territorially delimitated Turkestan, which they inherited from the tsars

58. The Conflict In Tajikistan: Questions Of Regionalism
Both approaches had and have a place in the history of the development The traditional regional diversity of tajikistan should have been
http://www.eisenhowerinstitute.org/programs/globalpartnerships/securityandterror
Mission Board of Directors Staff Employment Opportunities Internship Opportunities Building International Partnerships Democracy and Accountable Governance Living History Scholarships Books Book Reviews The Conflict in Tajikistan: Questions of Regionalism by Davlat Khudonazar(ov) The conflict and subsequent civil stalemate in Tajikistan has been analyzed
by specialists in either regional or political measurements, i.e. North versus
South or democratic-Islamists versus communists. Both approaches had and have a place in the history of the development
of conflict, which was a reflection of the republic's surge to independence
in the wake of the collapse of the USSR. Independence, permitting the
creation of a new type of state, turned out to be premature for the regionally
divided nation. Within the conditions of post-Soviet independence

59. Regional Links - ISEEES At UC Berkeley
history and Mission regional Links. General References; Country Links Eurasianet.org s page on tajikistan, sponsored by the Central Eurasia Project
http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~iseees/resources2.html
Regional Links
General References
See also:
Country Links
Albania Armenia Azerbaijan Belarus Bosnia and Herzegovina

60. MRG - Online Bookshop
Indonesia regional Conflicts and State Terror Examines tajikistan s history,recent civil war and future prospects. add to basket
http://www.minorityrights.org/BookshopBody.asp
africa
'Erasing the Board': Report of the international research mission into crimes under international law committed against the Bambuti Pygmies in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo top UK £
US $ Minority Rights Group
War crimes and crimes against humanity committed against the Bambuti in the Democratic Republic of Congo add to basket
Burundi: Breaking the Cycle of Violence top UK £
US $ Filip Reyntjens
Outlines the political history of Burundi, focusing on the situation since the 1993 coup. add to basket
Burundi: Prospects for Peace top UK £
US $ Filip Reyntjens
The search for peace and stability in Burundi. add to basket
Eritrea and Tigray top UK £ US $ Colin Legum and James Firebrace 3rd Edition. An analysis of the background and course of the liberation movement. add to basket Eritrea: Towards Unity in Diversity top UK £ US $ David Pool Describes Eritrea's efforts to reconstruct a multi-ethnic society after 30 years of civil war. add to basket Ethiopia: A New Start ?

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