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February 26, 2024

Arguably the strangest country in the world is one which most have not heard of. I speak of Turkmenistan, a landlocked country in Central Asia. It is bordered by Uzbekistan to the north, Afghanistan to the east, Iran to the south, and the Caspian Sea to the west.

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I traveled there recently with my son on his quest to visit every country in the world. He is now about 80 percent of the way there. We arrived via Istanbul, a middle of the night flight to Ashgabat, the capitol city of Turkmenistan.

Standing at the edge of the Darvaza Gas Crater

The airport was beautiful and pristine, adorned with marble and gold. Taking photos was verboten as the numerous police officers reminded us.

Getting through immigration to the terminal required six passport checks. Turkmenistan does not seem the type of country that the rest of the world is trying to sneak into.

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A COVID test was also required, which we had to pay for. The swab barely entered my nose, but I think the objective was the fee, not the actual test. Turkmenistan locked down hard during COVID and was one of the last countries to reopen.

A difficult-to-obtain visa is necessary to visit, one of the reasons why Turkmenistan only sees 20-30 foreign tourists a day, less than 10,000 per year, mostly from neighboring countries. Once part of the Soviet Union, it is now an independent country ruled by a charismatic dictator in a cult-of-personality manner. America had one of those too, about a dozen years ago.

As in any dictatorship, rules are strict and harshly enforced. There is no free internet, specifically no news or social media available to residents or visitors. Technically the internet and Wi-Fi worked but almost every website was blocked.

Surprisingly we could do Google searches, reading the search results but unable to access any subsequent links. Wikipedia was also unblocked, where ironically I could easily read about human rights abuses in Turkmenistan. A blocked internet makes it difficult for travel, changing or confirming flights, accommodations, and so on.

Most residents access the web via ever changing VPNs and many of the younger residents are active on social media. The government cracks down on these VPNs but as one is shut down, a new one appears. Where there’s a will, there’s a way.

Some stores in the mall displayed their Instagram handles, surprising if the internet is blocked. Perhaps the blocking is more for show and control.