As the war
in Afghanistan, though now in its 19th year, continues to wind down,
we read less about the country.
It exists
in its present configuration because it was a 19th century
borderlands separating the Russian Empire in central Asia from the British one
in the Indian subcontinent.
This
rivalry between these two powers became known as the “Great Game,” a term
immortalized by Rudyard Kipling.
The
delineation of the final borders of the buffer state of Afghanistan would end a
period of enmity between them.
In the north, an agreement between the empires in 1873
effectively split the historic region of Wakhan by making the Panj and Pamir
Rivers the border between Afghanistan and the Russian Empire. It was finalized
by the 1895 Pamir Boundary Commission.
In the south, the Durand Line agreement of 1893 between
Britain and Afghanistan marked the boundary between British India and
Afghanistan. This left a narrow strip of land ruled by Afghanistan as a buffer
between the two empires, which became known as the Wakhan Corridor.
It
stretches from Afghan Badakhshan to the border with China, between modern-day
Tajikistan and Pakistan.
Afghanistan was considered by the British as an independent
state at the time although the British controlled its foreign and diplomatic
relations.
Though
extremely remote and largely inaccessible, this odd border construction
essentially served one important purpose in the geopolitical struggle between the
two European powers by ensuring that the British and Russian Empires did not
touch at any point.
The Wakhan
Corridor, covering 8,936 square kilometers but in some places barely 15
kilometers across, is a part of the Pamir Mountain region. Its average
elevation is about 5,400 metres.
Due to its altitude and extreme isolation, one
author, Johannes Humlum, has characterized the corridor as “the most elevated,
the wildest, the most inaccessible, and the least populated” place in
Afghanistan.
The Panj River, 1,125 kilometres long, forms a considerable
part of the Afghanistan–Tajikistan border.
Effectively,
this border, stretching across most of northern Afghanistan, divided every
ethnic group that depended on this river and its tributaries. Wakhi, Kyrgyz,
Tajiks, and Uzbeks all were divided between Russian (and later Soviet) Central
Asia and Afghanistan, thus severing family and economic ties.
Today,
official estimates by the United Nations put the population at approximately
10,590, of which about 1,200 are Kyrgyz.
The native
Wakhi are of Iranian origin and, unlike the generally Sunni Kyrgyz, follow the
Ismaili Shiite sect of Islam.
The Wakhjir Pass, 5,000 metres
above sea level at the eastern end of the Corridor, serves as the 76-kilometre border
with China’s Xinjiang Autonomous Region. It was historically part of the Silk
Road trade route between China and Europe.
In 1895 it became the border
between the British and the Russians, although the Chinese and Afghans did not
finally agree on the border until 1964.
There is no road across the
pass, though in 2009 the Chinese constructed a new road to within 10 kilometres
of the border for use by border guards. No other traffic is allowed, though
there is some smuggling across the pass.
Remote both physically and
politically, the Wakhan population feels alienated and economically marginalized
within Afghanistan.
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