Tribe Seeks Recognition in Census

As a nationwide census gets under way in Kyrgyzstan, one group in the south of the country is seeking to register as a hitherto unrecognised nation.

Tribe Seeks Recognition in Census

As a nationwide census gets under way in Kyrgyzstan, one group in the south of the country is seeking to register as a hitherto unrecognised nation.

IWPR

Institute for War & Peace Reporting
Wednesday, 25 March, 2009
Most observers regard the Kypchaks as just one of the many tribal divisions and subdivisions that make up the Kyrgyz nation, but Kamchybek Samatov, a retired teacher from the village of Bujum in Batken region, thinks otherwise.



In the latest round in a two-decade struggle for formal recognition of a distinct ethnicity, Samatov and his supporters plan to give their identity – and their language too – as “Kypchak” when the census-takers come round.



Other villagers in Bujum interviewed by reporter Ulukbu Amirova appeared less certain about whether they need separate status, or whether their southern dialect is really a different language.



Census officials say they will write down exactly what people tell them, although that does not mean the responses will form the basis for recording the presence of a Kypchak nation.



(For more on the Kypchaks, see Kyrgyzstan: Alarm at Tribal Claim to Separate Status, RCA No. 569, 10-Mar-09.)

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