O‘zbekiston
Respublikasi
Republic of
Uzbekistan
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 |
 |
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Flag |
Coat of arms |
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Anthem: National
Anthem of the Republic
of Uzbekistan |
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Capital
(and largest city) |
Tashkent
41°16′N,
69°13′E |
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Official languages |
Uzbek |
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Demonym |
Uzbekistani. |
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Government |
Presidential republic |
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- |
President |
Islom Karimov |
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- |
Prime Minister |
Shavkat Mirziyoyev |
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Independence |
from the
Soviet Union |
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- |
Formation |
17471 |
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- |
Declared |
September 1,
1991 |
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- |
Recognized |
December 8,
1991 |
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Completed |
December 25,
1991 |
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Area |
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- |
Total |
447,400 km˛ (56th)
172,742 sq mi |
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- |
Water (%) |
4.9 |
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Population |
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- |
2007 estimate |
27,372,000 (44th) |
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- |
Density |
59/km˛ (136th)
153/sq mi |
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GDP (PPP) |
2007 estimate |
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- |
Total |
$64.149 billion (73th) |
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- |
Per capita |
$2,283 (145th) |
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Gini (2000) |
26.8 (low) |
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HDI (2007) |
▲ 0.702 (medium) (113th) |
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Currency |
Uzbekistan som (O'zbekiston
so'mi) (UZS) |
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Time zone |
UZT
(UTC+5) |
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- |
Summer (DST) |
not observed (UTC+5) |
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Internet TLD |
.uz |
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Calling code |
+998 |
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1 |
As
Bukharian Emirate,
Kokand Khanate,
Khwarezm. |
|
Uzbekistan,
officially the Republic of
Uzbekistan (Uzbek:
O‘zbekiston Respublikasi or
Ўзбекистон Республикаси), is a
doubly landlocked country in
Central Asia, formerly part of
the Soviet Union. It shares
borders with Kazakhstan to the
west and to the north,
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan to the
east, and Afghanistan and
Turkmenistan to the south. Once
part of the Persianized Samanid
and later Timurid empires, the
region was conquered in the
early 16th century by Uzbek
nomads, who spoke an Eastern
Turkic language. Most of
Uzbekistan’s population today
belong to the Uzbek ethnic group
and speak the Uzbek language,
one of the family of Turkic
languages. Uzbekistan was
incorporated into the Russian
Empire in the 19th century and
in 1924 became a constituent
republic of the Soviet Union,
known as the Uzbek Soviet
Socialist Republic (Uzbek SSR).
It is an independent republic
since December 1991.
Uzbekistan's economy relies
mainly on commodity production,
including cotton, gold, uranium,
and natural gas. Despite the
declared objective of transition
to a market economy, Uzbekistan
continues to maintain rigid
economic controls, which often
repel foreign investors. The
policy of gradual, strictly
controlled transition has
nevertheless produced beneficial
results in the form of economic
recovery after 1995.
Uzbekistan's domestic policies
of human rights and individual
freedoms are often criticized by
international organizations.