Tajiks in dam resettlement complain of compensation problems

DUSHANBE, June 28, 2011, Asia-Plus — The coordinator of the Tajik program to resettle thousands of people from the area around the Roghun Dam project says there are problems getting the villagers full compensation for their homes, preventing them from leaving, Radio Liberty’s Tajik Service reports. Tahmina Jourayeva, who works in the Tajik Human Rights […]

RFE/RL

DUSHANBE, June 28, 2011, Asia-Plus — The coordinator of the Tajik program to resettle thousands of people from the area around the Roghun Dam project says there are problems getting the villagers full compensation for their homes, preventing them from leaving, Radio Liberty’s Tajik Service reports.

Tahmina Jourayeva, who works in the Tajik Human Rights Office, said the villagers” compensation for leaving their homes is not enough to build new houses in the places where they are being relocated.

She added that the relocated people are not receiving the compensation in one lump sum because the government wants to distribute it in three parts.

Davlatoy Dahmardayeva, who lives in the Sicharogh village in the Nourobod district, told RFE/RL on June 24 that they are ready to move into their new homes because they understand the importance of the Roghun Dam and hydropower plant it will supply.

But she said they do not want it to be built without them being properly compensated for the loss of their homes and communities.

Dodarjon Jobirov, an official from the Nurobod district located about 110 kilometers east of Dushanbe, told RFE/RL that every family is to receive between 130,000-200,000 somoni ($28,500-$44,000) to reimburse them for their homes and to build a new house.

Earlier this month, the World Bank director of strategy and operations in Europe and Central Asia, Theodore Ahlers, announced that the Tajik government has temporarily stopped the resettling of the villagers from the Roghun Dam area.

Ahlers said the resettlement was suspended until the results of two ongoing World Bank-commissioned studies looking into the dam”s economic feasibility and its social and environmental impact are available.

The studies, expected to be completed in late 2012, will help Tajik authorities develop a proper resettlement framework based on the needs of the affected populations.

The effort to resettle people from the Roghun zone that will be flooded behind what is to become the world”s tallest dam began in 2009.

A special government regulation adopted in January 2009 envisaged the moving of more than 4,700 families — or about 30,000 people — from 63 villages in the districts of Roghun and Nourobod to Danghara, Tursunzoda, and Darband.

Official reports say 600 families were resettled from the projected reservoir area in 2009 and about 1,000 families were relocated in 2010.

These reports fail to mention, however, that many of the officially resettled families — particularly elderly family members — have continued to live in their native villages.

Since it began, the Roghun Dam resettlement scheme has drawn intense criticism from those being resettled, human rights organizations, and some political analysts.

Article translations:

Related Articles

Оби зулол

Most Read

Join us on social media!

Recent Articles

Farzona Emomali, the daughter of the President of Tajikistan, became a Candidate of Sciences in Medicine

Since August 2025, she has been the head of the Department of Reforms, Primary Health Care, and International Relations of the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Tatarstan.

Two cemeteries are being demolished in Dushanbe and what will be built on the vacated site?

A correspondent from "Asia-Plus" visited two cemeteries to show you how it happens.

Digital transformation of Tajikistan: from online services to a new economy

Governments across the world are entering a critical phase...