Kulobi people
The Kulobi people, also spelt Kulyabi or Kulabi, are the inhabitants of the southwest area of Tajikistan.
History
The term Kulobi comes from the Kulob Oblast that existed during the Soviet period and was merged with Qurghonteppa Oblast in 1992 to create Khatlon Province. The Kulobis are ethnic Tajiks and speak Tajik. During the Civil War in Tajikistan the Kulyabis fought on the side of the government against Gharmis and Pamiris. Emomalii Rahmon, from Dangara in Kulob oblast, became president of Tajikistan in November 1992 when Kulobi militiamen took control of the capital Dushanbe from opposition forces.[1] The current government in Tajikistan is perceived to be dominated by Kulobis.[2]
gollark: I was actually considering implementing a more full-featured attestation system in potatOS for the disks, including a chain of trust for signing key stuff (to avoid just having a single master key stored in Site Null on switchcraft) and revocations, but didn't do it.
gollark: PotatOS uses that for disk signing.
gollark: There's ECC stuff available.
gollark: Previously you used to be able to identify the location of computers by ID if they were sending GPS pings, but that's anonymized now.
gollark: I also have a thing which integrates that with a reader thing for the Opus status broadcasts, so it can track a lot of information, and the location, of anyone using Opus on their neural interfaces.
References
- Edward W. Walker (Spring 2006). "Ethnic War, Holy War, War O. War: Does The Adjective Matter In Explaining Collective Political Violence?" (PDF). Berkeley Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies Working Paper Series. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 12, 2006. Retrieved 2008-03-16.
- "Human Rights Questions: Human Rights Situations And Reports Of Special Rapporteurs And Representatives". United Nations. 24 October 1996. Retrieved 2008-03-16.
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