Turkmenistan is made up mainly of desert and has the smallest population of the five former Soviet republics in Central Asia.
It possesses the world's fifth largest reserves of natural gas, and has substantial deposits of oil.
Turkmenistan is made up mainly of desert and has the smallest population of the five former Soviet republics in Central Asia.
It possesses the world's fifth largest reserves of natural gas, and has substantial deposits of oil.
Yet it is still impoverished, and since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 has remained largely closed to the outside world.
It is effectively a one-party state, that party being the Democratic Party of Turkmenistan led by the late president Saparmurat Niyazov until he his death in December 2006.
The late leader styled himself Turkmenbashi, or Father of the Turkmen, and made himself the centre of an omnipresent cult of personality. Mr Niyazov, who was made president for life in 1999, spent large sums of public money on numerous grandiose projects, but not on social welfare.
His successor, Kurbanguly Berdymuhamedov, says he will follow in Mr Niyazov's footsteps, but has shown signs of a different approach, for instance by eschewing the pomp that accompanied his predecessor's public appearances.
His influence spread into every conceivable area of life in the republic. Turkmens were even expected to take spiritual guidance from his book, Ruhnama, a collection of thoughts on Turkmen culture and history.
Turkmenistan is the most ethnically homogeneous of the Central Asian republics, the vast majority of its population consisting of Turkmens. There are also Uzbeks, Russians and smaller minorities of Kazakhs, Tatars, Ukrainians, Azerbaijanis and Armenians.
In contrast to other former Soviet republics, it has been largely free of inter-ethnic hostilities. However, strong tribal allegiances can be a source of tension.
With foreign investors keeping away, the Turkmen economy remains underdeveloped.
The country has been unable to benefit fully from its oil and gas deposits due to the absence of export routes and because of a dispute between the Caspian Sea littoral states over the legal status of the sea where the oil wells are to be found.
Turkmenistan produces roughly 60 billion cubic metres of natural gas each year and about two-thirds of its exports go to Russia's Gazprom. A protracted dispute between the two countries over the price ended in September 2006 when Gazprom agreed to pay 54% more.
President: Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov
Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov was sworn in as president after winning elections in February 2007 with 89% of the vote.
There were six candidates in the poll, all from the Democratic Party of Turkmenistan. Exiled figures from the Turkmen opposition were banned from competing. Electoral officials put turnout out at over 95%. Rights groups and Western diplomats condemned the election as rigged.
Weeks later the president was chosen as chairman of the People's Council, Turkmenistan's highest legislative body. He was the only candidate.
A former deputy prime minister, Mr Berdymukhamedov became acting president after authoritarian leader Saparmyrat Niyazov died in December 2006. Mr Niyazov had been in power since Soviet times.
His nomination for the presidency surprised observers because under the constitution the post should have gone to People's Council chairman Ovezgeldy Atayev. However, after Mr Niyazov died Mr Atayev became the subject of a criminal investigation and was sacked.
The new president has promised to continue the policies of his predecessor but also to introduce reforms, including unlimited access to the internet, better education and higher pensions.
Soon after coming to power, he restored pensions to more than 100,000 elderly citizens, reversing President Niyazov's decisions to withdraw them the previous year.
Once Mr Niyazov's personal dentist, Mr Berdymukhamedov became Turkmen health minister in 1997 and deputy premier in 2001. One of his tasks was to implement Mr Niyazov's health service reforms which are widely seen as having brought about its near collapse.
Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov was born in 1957.
The Turkmen government has an absolute monopoly of the media. The authorities monitor media outlets, operate printing presses and lay down editorial policies.
The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe has described the lack of press freedom in the country as "unprecedented" in the body's history.
Paris-based Reporters Without Frontiers said former President Niyazov's only use for the media was to "promote his own glory".
Turkmenistan has "one of the worst media climates in the world," according to the Canada-based International Freedom of Expression exchange forum.
Programmes from Russian TV stations are censored before being rebroadcast.
Turkmentelecom and other state bodies control internet access. There are around 70,000 internet users (ITU, March 2008). All foreign-based Turkmen opposition websites are blocked.
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