Mo‘ynoq

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Mo‘ynoq
Uzbek: Mo‘ynoq / Мўйноқ
Karakalpak: Moynaq / Мойнақ
The entrance of Mo‘ynoq
The entrance of Mo‘ynoq
Mo‘ynoq is located in Uzbekistan
Mo‘ynoq
Mo‘ynoq
Location in Uzbekistan
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Country Flag of Uzbekistan.svg Uzbekistan
Autonomous Republic Karakalpakstan
District Mo‘ynoq District
Population (2012)
 • Total 18 196

Mo‘ynoq also spelled as Muynak and Moynaq (Uzbek: Mo‘ynoq / Мўйноқ; Karakalpak: Moynaq / Мойнақ; Russian: Муйнак/Muynak) is a city in northern Karakalpakstan in western Uzbekistan. Formerly a sea port, now home to only a few thousand residents at most, Mo‘ynoq's population has been declining precipitously since the 1980s due to the recession of the Aral Sea.

History

The Memorial above the former shore of the Aral Sea, now dried.
Rusting hulks of trawlers abandoned in Mo‘ynoq after the shrinking of the Aral Sea

Once a bustling fishing community and Uzbekistan's only port city with tens of thousands of residents, Mo‘ynoq is now a shadow of its former self, dozens of kilometers from the rapidly receding shoreline of the Aral Sea. Fishing had always been part of the economy of the region, and Mo‘ynoq became a center of industrial fishing and canning. However, overfishing the shallow sea in the past made it very susceptible to economic collapse as the Aral Sea has dried up. A regional agricultural monoculture dominated by cotton production which diverts water from tributary rivers of the sea into irrigation, and severe pollution caused by agricultural chemical runoff, are causing the sea to evaporate and the water that remains is highly saline and very toxic, causing the ecological disaster which is destroying the sea and killing the residents of the towns in its vicinity, including Mo‘ynoq.[1]

Mo‘ynoq's major "tourist attractions" are the armada of rusting hulks that once made up the proud fishing fleet during the Soviet era, and a one-room museum devoted to Mo‘ynoq's heritage as a center of the fishing industry. Poisonous dust storms kicked up by strong winds across the dried and polluted seabed give rise to a multitude of chronic and acute illnesses among the few residents who have chosen to remain, most of them ethnic Karakalpaks, and weather unmoderated by the sea now buffets the town with hotter-than-normal summers and colder-than-normal winters.

Further reading

  • Chasing the Sea: Lost Among the Ghosts of Empire in Central Asia by Tom Bissell

References

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