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Revision as of 18:29, 9 June 2006
The Republic of Dagestan [[IPA|/ˈdeɪ̯ɡəstʰæn/]] (Russian: Респу́блика Дагеста́н), older spelling Daghestan, is a federal subject of the Russian Federation (a republic). Template:Federal subject of Russia
Terminology
The direct transliteration of the republic's name is Respublika Dagestan. It is the largest republic of Russia in the northern Caucasus, both in area and population.
The word Daghestan or Daghstan means "country of mountains", it is derived from the Turkic word "dagh" meaning mountain and Persian suffix meaning "land of". The spelling Dagestan is a transliteration of the Russian name and is rather modern.
The republic's name in Persian is داغستان.
Geography
The republic is situated in the North Caucasus mountains. It is the southernmost part of Russia.
- Area: 50,300 km².
- Borders:
- internal: Kalmykia (N), Chechnya (W), and Stavropol Krai (NW)
- international: Azerbaijan (S), Georgia (SW)
- water: Caspian Sea (E)
- Highest point: Bazardyuzi Mountain (4,466 m).
- Maximum N->S distance: 400 km.
- Maximum E->W distance: 200 km.
- Average elevation: no data
Time zone
Dagestan is located in the Moscow Time Zone (MSK/MSD). UTC offset is +0300 (MSK)/+0400 (MSD).
Rivers
There are over 1,800 rivers in the republic. Major rivers include:
Lakes
Dagestan has about 400 km of coast line on the Caspian Sea.
Mountains
Most of the Republic is mountainous, with the Greater Caucasus Mountains covering the south. The highest point is the Bazardyuzi peak at 4,466 m.
Natural resources
Dagestan is rich in oil, natural gas, coal, and more.
Climate
The climate is hot and dry in the summer but the winters are hard in the mountain areas.
- Average January temperature: +2°C
- Average July temperature: +30°C
- Average annual precipitation: 200 (northern plains) to 800 mm (in the mountains).
Administrative divisions
- Main article: Administrative divisions of Dagestan
Demographics
Because its mountainous terrain impedes travel and communication, Dagestan is unusually ethnically diverse, and still largely tribal. Unlike most other parts of Russia, the population of Dagestan is rapidly growing, mostly because of migration.
- Population: 2,576,531 (2002)
- Urban: 1,102,577 (42.8%)
- Rural: 1,473,954 (57.2%)
- Male: 1,242,437 (48.2%)
- Female: 1,334,094 (51.8%)
- Females per 1000 males: 1,074
- Average age: 25.2 years
- Urban: 25.1 years
- Rural: 25.2 years
- Male: 24.0 years
- Female: 26.3 years
- Number of households: 570,036 (with 2,559,499 people)
- Urban: 239,338 (with 1,088,814 people)
- Rural: 330,698 (with 1,470,685 people)
Ethnic groups
There is no single ethnic group with the name Dagestani. The people of Dagestan include over a dozen sizeable groups, including:
- Dagestani peoples — 80%, including:
- people from the Northeast Caucasian language group 67%
- people from the Turkic languages 19%
- Russians — 9%, around 85,000
- Chechens — 3%, around 65,000
- Other — 8%, including
- Tats — 1% around 10,000
- Ukrainians — around 10,000
- Kurdish — fewer than 5,000
- Ossetians — fewer than 5,000
- Mountain Jews — likely fewer than 5,000
There are also tiny groups like the Balkars (who mostly live in Kabardino-Balkaria), or the Ginukh, numbering 200, members of a complex family of indigenous Caucasians — some 40 groups, including other little-known peoples such as the Akhwakh. Notable are also Lak people who immigrated after a Soviet population transfer, and the Hunzib or Khunzal people who live in only four towns in the interior.
The lingua franca in Dagestan is Russian. Over 30 local languages are also commonly spoken.
History
The oldest records about the region refer to the state of Caucasian Albania in the south, with its capital at Derbent. The northern parts, known as Avary, were ruled by a confederation of pagan tribes. Caucasian Albania ruled over what is present day Azerbaijan and the area occupied by the present day Lezghians. It was fought over in classical times by Rome and Persia and was early converted to Christianity. Persia prevailed and, with its conquest by the Arabs, Islam was introduced. Later, in the middle ages, it was a battleground between Persia and Turkey. With the demise of the Ottoman Empire, Russia invaded, against fierce resistance, particularly in Avary. The famous Muslim leader Imam Shamil was from Dagestan. He was an Avar.
In November 1917, a Soviet was proclaimed and, after more than three years of fighting White movement reactionaries and a local nationalists, the Dagestan ASSR was proclaimed on January 20th 1921.
Dagestan became a republic of the modern Russian Federation in 1991. In 1999, a group of Muslim fundamentalists from Chechnya under Shamil Basayev, together with a local converts and exiles from the 1998 uprising attempt, staged an abortive insurrection in Dagestan in which at least hundreds combatants and civilians died. This helped prompt the Russian decision to invade Chechnya later that year.
Dagestani conflict
Since 2000, Dagestan has been place of a low-level guerilla war, bleeding over from Chechnya; the fighting has claimed the lives of hundreds of federal servicemen and officials – mostly members of local police forces – as well as many Dagestani national rebels and civilians.
More recently, among other incidents:
- In early 2005, the government forces surrounded a group of five rebels in a two-story house on the outskirts of Makhachkala. For 17 hours, the rebels battled authorities, killing one of Russia's elite Alpha Group commandos and wounding another, until armored vehicles and a helicopter blew apart most of the house and a neighbouring one, killing all of them.
- In the weeks preceding the battle, insurgents have derailed two trains, sabotaged gas supplies and shot dead a high-ranking intelligence officer from Moscow, as well as a local police chief. A month later, Major General Magomed Omarov, the deputy interior minister, was assassinated in Makhachkala.
- On July 1, 2005, eleven Russian MVD OSNAZ troops were killed and seven wounded in the capital when their trucks were bombed.
- On August 20, 2005, a remote-controlled bomb killed at least three police officers and wounded several more on a downtown street in the Dagestani capital. The bomb detonated as a foot patrol walked past a grove of trees in Makhachkala.
- In January 2006, at least three OMON and spetznaz servicemen died and more than ten were wounded in a 3-day battle on a mountain near Avary between some 3,000 Russian troops led by the republic's Interior Minister and a group of estimated eight armed rebels. Despite heavy artillery and aerial bombardment the fighters managaged to flee the encirclement, leaving behind an abandonened dugout.
- On March 22, 2006, a group of assailants fatally shot the chief administrator of the Botlikh district of Dagestan during a fierce gunbattle in Makhachkala.
Politics
The Parliament of Dagestan is the People's Assembly, consisting of 121 deputees elected for a four year term. The People's Assembly is the highest executive and legislative body of the republic.
According to the Constitution of Dagestan, the highest executive authority lies with the State Council, comprising representatives of fourteen ethnicities. The members of the State Council are appointed by the Constitutional Assembly of Dagestan for a term of four years. The State Council appoints the members of the Government. The State Council is headed by the Chairman of the State Council.
The ethnicities represented in the State Council are Aguls, Avars, Azeris, Chechens, Dargins, Kumyks, Laks, Lezgins, Russians, Rutuls, Tabasarans, Tats, and Tsakhurs.
The Chairman of the State Council was the highest executive post in the republic, held by Magomedali Magomedovich Magomedov until 2006. On February 20, 2006, the People's Assembly passed a resolution terminating this post and disbanding the State Council. Russian President Vladimir Putin offered the People's Assembly the candidature of Mukhu Aliyev for the newly established post of the President of Dagestan. The nomination was accepted by the People's Assembly, and Mukhu Aliyev became the first President of Dagestan.
The Constitution of Dagestan was adopted on July 26, 1994.
Economy
As of 2000, the economy of Dagestan was broken down as follows:
- Industry: 24%
- Agriculture: 35%
- Construction: 26%
- Transport and communications: 5%
- Trade and services: 9%
- Other: 1%
Important industries include food processing, power generation, oil drilling, machine building, chemicals, and instrument making. Dagestan's major exports are oil and fuel. Important agricultural products include fish from the Caspian Sea, wine and brandy, and various garden fruits.
Dagestan continues to be the least urbanized republic in the Caucasus.
Religion
Most of Dagestan's population is Muslim. As with much of the Caucasus region, Dagestan's native Islam consists of Sufi orders that have been in place for centuries. In recent years there has been tension and even violence between local Sufi orders and Wahabbi missionaries who have come to the region seeking converts.
See also
External links
- Template:Ru icon Official Website of Dagestan
- Template:Ru icon Official Website of the Chairman of the State Council of Dagestan
- Template:En icon BBC Country Report on Dagestan
- Template:En icon Dagestan at the NUPI Center for Russian Studies
- Template:En icon History of Dagestan at the Daghestan State University
- Template:En icon University of Texas maps of the Dagestan region
- Template:En icon Sobaka's independent reporting on Dagestan
- Template:En icon BISNIS report - US government report on the economy of Dagestan (2000)
- Template:En icon Radio Free Europe discusses religious tension in Dagestan
- Template:Ru icon DAGnet Catalog of Dagestan Internet resources
- Template:En icon ISN Security Watch: Moscow's North Caucasus quagmire