Civil war in Tajikistan
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Civil war in Tajikistan

Fighting in Tajikistan
Military Conflict
ConflictCivil War in Tajikistan
Date1992-1997
LocationTajikistan
ResultUnited Nations-sponsored armistice, "comprehensive peace agreement" signed, Rahmonov wins the 1999 Tajik presidential election and IRP is allocated 30% of the ministerial positions.
Tajikistan Tajikistan&
Russia Russia&
Uzbekistan Uzbekistan
United Tajik Opposition *22px IRP *22px IMU *Democratic reformists *Gorno-Badakhshan *22px Jamiat-e Islami Afghanistan Islamic State of Afghanistan&
22px Taliban factions&
Supported by:&
22px al-Qaeda&
22px Jamaat-e-Islami&
IranIran&
Pakistan Pakistan
Tajikistan Emomali Rahmon&
Uzbekistan Islam Karimov&
Russia Boris Yeltsin
22px Sayid Abdulloh Nuri (UTO)
Mohammed Sharif Himmatzade (IRP)
Shadman Youssof (Democratic party)
Juma Namangani (IMU)
Unknown Uzbek and Tajikistan forces; 15,000 Russian troops in Tajikistan
50,000 to 100,000 killed, 1.2 million displaced

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The Civil War in Tajikistan began in May 1992 when ethnic groups from the Garm and Gorno-Badakhshan regions, which were underrepresented in the ruling elite, rose up against the national government of President Rahmon Nabiyev, in which people from the Leninabad and Kulyab regions dominated. Politically, the discontented groups were represented by liberal democratic reformists and Islamists, who fought together and later organized under the banner of the United Tajik Opposition. By June 1997 fifty to one hundred thousand people had been killed.
President Rahmonov, UTO leader Sayid Abdulloh Nuri, and Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General Gerd Merrem signed the "General Agreement on the Establishment of Peace and National Accord in Tajikistan" and the "Moscow Protocol" on 27 June 1997 in Moscow, Russia, ending the war.

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