Panj River

The Panj River (Persian: رودخانه پنج) (/ˈpɑːn/; Tajik: Панҷ, پنج), also known as Pyandzh River or Pyanj River (derived from its Russian name "Пяндж"), is a tributary of the Amu Darya. The river is 1,125 km long and forms a considerable part of the AfghanistanTajikistan border.[2]

Panj River
The Panj river forms much of the border between Tajikistan and Afghanistan
Location
CountryAfghanistan, Tajikistan
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationconfluence of Pamir and Wakhan Rivers
Mouth 
  location
Amu Darya
Length921 km (572 mi)
Basin size114,000 km2 (44,016 sq mi)
Discharge 
  average1,000 m3/s (35,315 cu ft/s)
Official nameLower part of Pyandj River
Designated18 July 2001
Reference no.1084[1]
The Panj River from space

The river is formed by the confluence of the Pamir River and the Wakhan River near the village of Qalʿa-ye Panja (Qal`eh-ye Panjeh). From there, it flows westwards, forming the border of Afghanistan and Tajikistan. After passing the city of Khorog, capital of the Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Region of Tajikistan it receives water from one of its main tributaries, the Bartang River. It then turns towards the southwest, before joining the river Vakhsh and forming the greatest river of Central Asia, the Amudarya. Panj played an important role during Soviet times, and was a strategic river during the Soviet military operations in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

Water consumption

The Panj near Kevron, on the border of Tajikistan and Afghanistan
Panj river

A water treaty between the Soviet Union and Afghanistan, signed in 1946, allows Afghanistan to draw 9 million cubic metres of water a year.[2] It currently draws 2 million cubic metres of water. According to the Panj River Basin Project environmental damage could be expected if Afghanistan drew the entire amount of water from the river that the treaty allows.

Bridges

  • Afghanistan-Tajikistan Bridge: A highway bridge was built over the river between Tajikistan and Afghanistan at Nizhnii Panj. The contract was awarded in May 2005 and the construction of the bridge began in Jan 2006 and was completed in August 2007. The financing was provided by the US, amounting to US$37 million, and the construction was done by an Italian General Construction company Rizzani de Eccher S.p.A. under the ownership of US Army Corps of Engineers. The bridge replaces a barge that could transport only 60 cars a day and which was unusable many months in the year due to strong currents in the river. RAWA reports[3] that this facilitates the heroin trade, the key to the economic miracle in Afghanistan.
  • Another bridge was built at the confluence with the Gunt River at Khorog in 2003.
  • A bridge exists at Langar, which may still be closed.

The Aga Khan Development Network has been engaged in a project to build a series of three bridges across the Panj River between Tajikistan and Afghanistan.[4]

  • The first of these bridges, connecting Tem on the Tajik side with Demogan on the Afghan side, was inaugurated by Tajikistan's President Emomali Rahmonov, Afghanistan's Vice-President Hedayat Amin Arsala and His Highness the Aga Khan in November, 2002.[4][5]
  • This was followed by the inauguration of the Tajik-Afghan Friendship Bridge at Darwaz in July, 2004,[6]
  • The Ishkashim bridge between Ishkashim, Afghanistan and Ishkashim, Tajikistan was inaugurated in October, 2006.[7][8]

See also

References

See also

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