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Aksay (Kazakh: Ақсай, romanized: Aqsai) is a town in north-western Kazakhstan. It is the administrative center of Borili District in West Kazakhstan Region. Population: 32,873 (2009 Census results); [1] 28,953 (1999 Census results). [1] It is an important oil and gas town, serving as an operational base for the nearby Karachaganak Field.
The county is the only Kazakh autonomous county in the province of Gansu. [4] As of 2005, 41.3% of the county's population were ethnic Kazakhs, up slightly from the 40.7% recorded in 1996. [ 4 ] Other ethnic groups in the county include the Han , the Hui , the Uighur , the Tibetans and 6 other ethnic minorities .
Kazakhs in China form the largest community of Kazakhs outside Kazakhstan.They are one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China.There is one Kazakh autonomous prefecture – Ili in Xinjiang – and three Kazakh autonomous counties – Aksay in Gansu, and Barkol and Mori in Xinjiang.
This page was last edited on 21 December 2017, at 15:42 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Aksai may refer to: Aksay Kazakh Autonomous County , an autonomous county in Gansu Province, People's Republic of China Aksai Chin , a region located at the juncture of China, India and Pakistan
A Kazakh government critic with a following of more than 1 million subscribers on YouTube survived an assassination attempt in central Kyiv, his wife and Ukrainian authorities said Wednesday.
The Kazakh Aul of the United States, a nonprofit organization that has members in the entire country and is dedicated to Kazakh cultural education and support of the Kazakh population in U.S. The aul runs a summer camp called Zhaliau Heritage Camp focused on bringing Kazakh culture into the lives of Kazakh adoptees in the U.S..
The New York area Uzbek community is diverse and has 3 main sub-communities: Uzbek Muslims who first came to the United States in the 1980s as political refugees from the Soviet Union living in Morris County, New Jersey, many of whom are staunchly anti-communist and upwardly mobile; newer Uzbek Muslim immigrants to New York City who have ...