Karaganda

   

Karaganda (Russian: Караганда) or Qaraghandy (Kazakh: Қарағанды) is the capital of the audany (Russian oblast) of the same name in Kazakhstan. Pop. 437,000 (1999).

Karaganda is an industrial city, built to exploit nearby coal mines using the slave work of prisoners of concentration camps. It was briefly considered as a candidate for the captal of the (then) recently independent Republic of Kazakhstan, but its bid was turned down in favor of Astana. In support of this bid, a large international airport was built, which today goes mostly unused.

It is the third most populous city in Kazakhstan, behind Almaty, and Astana.

It was the birthplace of Akhmad Kadyrov, the president of the Chechen Republic who died on 9 May 2004.

Karaganda is often used as the punchline in a popular joke in the former USSR. The city is fairly isolated in a vast area of uninhabited steppe, and is thought by many to be "the middle of nowhere". When used in the locative case, the final syllable rhymes with the russian word for "where". Thus the exchange: "You're going where?" "To Karaganda." Has a rhyming, silly sound, and its nuance could be approximated in American English as: "Where are you going?" "To Kalamazoo!" or "Timbuktu!"

The name "Qaraghandy" approximately translates to "place rich in acacia".

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