TAJIKISTAN: ISMAILI RESURGENCE</I> - 2005-11-05

Date: 
Saturday, 2005, November 5
Location: 

The Ismailis of Tajikistan, a religious minority concentrated in the eastern mountains, have come a long way since Soviet times, when they were afraid even to have a picture of their spiritual leader the Aga Khan on display at home.

person_place_reference: 
H.H. Prince Karim Aga Khan IV

Articles - TAJIKISTAN: ISMAILI RESURGENCE</I> - 2005-11-05

Tajikistan Struggles to Integrate Ismaili Pamiris Living Along Afghan Border 2020-04-30

Gorno-Badakhshan (Source: RFE/RL
Source: 
jamestown.org EURASIA DAILY MONITOR Volume: 17 Issue: 60

Eastern Tajikistan’s Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Region—comprising more than half of the historical mountainous region of Badakhshan, which it shares with northern Afghanistan—is one of the most isolated, impoverished and unsettled places in Central Asia. Gorno-Badakhshan was a center of resistance to Dushanbe during the civil war in the 1990s, and the central government has since worked hard to try to bring it to heel, alternating threats of a military crackdown with expanded economic assistance (see EDM, October 18, 2018; Ozodandishon, October 23, 2018).

Articles - TAJIKISTAN: ISMAILI RESURGENCE</I> - 2005-11-05

News ArticleGorno-Badakhshan (Source: RFE/RLTajikistan Struggles to Integrate Ismaili Pamiris Living Along Afghan Border 2020-04-30 jamestown.org EURASIA DAILY MONITOR Volume: 17 Issue: 60