Marjah
Marjah مارجه |
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U.S. Marines on a patrol next to a poppy field in 2010
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Location in Afghanistan | |
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Country | Afghanistan |
Province | Helmand Province |
District | Nad Ali |
Population [1][2][3] | |
• Total | 80-85,000 (disputed) 125,000 (with surrounding area - also disputed) |
Time zone | UTC+4:30 |
Marjah (also spelled Marjeh; Pashto/Persian: مارجه ) is an agricultural town in southern Afghanistan. It has a population between 80,000 - 125,000 spread across 80 - 125 square miles (320 km2), an area larger than Cleveland or Washington D.C.[4] The town sits in Nad Ali District of Helmand Province, southwest of the provincial capital Lashkar Gah. There are some unconfirmed reports that Marjah is planned to be turned into a separate district.notable elder haji abdul rehman was setteled from ruyan into Marjah, his sons are khawas ,toorabaz,Abdul hayee,and his younger male child Merajan.
Population and economy
Marjah is geographically situated in one of Afghanistan's major belts of poppy fields,[5] which are a source of funds for the Taliban.[6] According to one figure, 10% of global illicit opium production in the year 2000 originated from the Marjah/Nad-i-Ali area.[7] During the 1950s and 1960s the United States funded a scheme, run by the Helmand and Arghandab Valley Authority, to irrigate the fields around Marjah (Lashkar Gah/Helmand was nicknamed "Little America"), with many canals remaining to this day.[1][6]
In conjunction with this American-led development, which included building and staffing a number of local schools, the Afghan government jump-started a program in 1959 to resettle Pashtun nomads to the area, providing them each with "almost 15 acres of land, two oxen and free seeds", with a focus on growing wheat.[8] Besides facing a number of technical problems,
Climate
Data collected in the 1950s in the Marjah/Chah-i-Anjirs area showed an average rainfall of over one inch per month from December through March, peaking in January at 2.46 inches. The rest of the year experienced little or no precipitation, and besides January, there was actually a consistent net loss of water through evaporation. June, July, and August experienced average high temperatures of over 100 °F (38 °C), while the average lows in winter bottomed out at just above freezing in December and January.[9]
See also
- Marjah Accelerated Agricultural Transition (2010 project)
References
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marjah, Afghanistan. |
Further reading
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- ↑ Gareth Porter, Inter Press Service, 8 March 2010, Fiction of Marjah as City Was U.S. Information War
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