DUSHANBE, November 10, 2015, Asia-Plus — Tajik-Kyrgyz order talks scheduled for early November have been postponed.
According to Tajik authorities, the border talks have been postponed due to the formation of a new government in Kyrgyzstan.
“The position of deputy prime minister in charge for the power-wielding agencies has been abolished in the structure of the Kyrgyz government, while co-chairman the Tajik-Kyrgyz intergovernmental commission for delineation of mutual border Abdyrahman Mamataliyev had held this position,” said the source.
The Tajik delegation participating in the border talks is led by Deputy Prime Minister Azim Ibrohim.
We will recall that two meetings of the Tajik-Kyrgyz intergovernmental commission for delineation of mutual border were supposed to take place in Bishkek and Dushanbe this month.
Kyrgyz media in late October cited Kyrgyz Vice-Premier Abdyrahman Mamataliyev as saying that Kyrgyzstan has proposed Tajikistan to exchange the disputable border areas.
“It will be a mutually beneficial exchange — the sides will receive 12 hectares each. We will receive areas located in the village of Kok-Tash, while the Tajik side will receive areas located below Kok-Tash,” Mamataliyev was cited as saying by
AKIpress
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According to him, the two sides have decided not work with different maps. “We will rely on four agreements: 1) the agreement establishing the CIS; 2) the Almaty declaration; 3) the agreement on the border integrity signed in 1994; and 4) the agreement between Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan of 1996 under which we pledged to follow the signed documents,” Kyrgyz vice-premier said.
“98 percent of Kyrgyz-Tajik border will be delineated within the next two years and only areas, where residential buildings are situated in alternate order, will remain to be solved,” Mamataliyev noted.
We will recall that Kyrgyzstan had previously suggested using the maps of the periods of 1955-1959 for demarcation and delimitation of the disputable stretches of the border while Tajikistan had suggested working with documents and maps of the period of 1924-1927. The maps of the early 1920s show the Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic as incorporating Vorukh within its borders while the maps of the 1950s show Vorukh as an exclave within the Kyrgyz Soviet Socialist Republic.
The latest skirmishes sparked by a territorial dispute between residents along the Kyrgyzstan-Tajikistan border escalated on August 4, leaving several people injured and damaging multiple homes.
The area at the focus of this and much previous unrest lies on the jagged frontier where the east of Tajikistan’s Sughd province and Kyrgyzstan’s Batken province meet.
The two countries have been unable to agree on the location of the border they inherited when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. They have delimited only about half of the 971 kilometers. As the population in the dense Ferghana Valley grows, it has become increasingly difficult to demarcate the contested sections, where valuable agricultural land often lies.



