The residents of the Yaghnob Valley had to pool their own resources to build a road up to Bedef village. However, this road is deteriorating as there are no more funds available for maintenance work. The valley is still effectively isolated for more than six months of the year and the people have little access to the outside world and, in particular, to emergency health services. Recently, a brand new road has at last been built, leading to the very heart of the valley. However, as in many similar cases, this has turned out to have mixed blessings. On the one hand, it has indeed improved access to the outside world, but - likewise - it has equally improved the access of the outside world to the valley and increasing numbers of outsiders, with greater financial resources, have been attracted to exploit the economic potential of the valley. The current population of the valley is about 492 people (82 families) according to 2008 census, but the population fluctuates according to season. Nevertheless, the overall trend appears downwards, as the younger people seem less inclined to remain in the valley, due to the paucity of health and educational facilities available locally. ;Proposed Yaghnob Protected Area In 1989-1992, Anvar J. Buzurukov (as the head of the Protected Areas Department of the Ministry of the Environment) initiated, planned and led scientific feasibility studies towards establishing the first national and natural parks in the Tajik SSR. In 1992, the biggest high mountain park in USSR-
Pamir National Park was designated, now called the Tajik National Park, a year before the same team established the first nature reserve in Tajikistan, the Shirkent Nature Park). In addition, Anvar Buzurukov and his team with the first environmental
non-governmental organization in Tajikistan, the Tajik Social and Ecological Union (TSEU), formed with support from the
Ayni district authorities, in 1991 began the development of a technical proposal towards developing a protected area in the Yaghnob Valley, for both the natural environment and for the indigenous people. Unfortunately, the
civil war of 1992-97 put these plans on hold. In 2007 A.J. Buzurukov, as founder of the TSEU, planned and organized a multidisciplinary expedition to the Yaghnob Valley, with the support of the
Ayni Development Committee, the UNDP's Ayni Regional Office and the
UK government. Together with independent researchers, the expedition attempted to renew the initiatives to save and protect the valley's natural environment and the lifestyles and the language of its people. They prepared a report entitled,
A brief scientific feasibility study, with proposed pre-project activities, for establishing the Yaghnob Natural Ethnography Park (YNEP). (downloadable on www.yagnob.org) Advocates have long called for a special status to be given to the valley and the
Yaghnobi language. One solution would be to create the YNEP, which would be the first such in the northern region of
Tajikistan. It would protect the valley from any increase in environmentally-damaging activities, such as
overgrazing, but would support sustainable and
responsible tourism. Plans for the YNEP were discussed and approved during the first international scientific conference on environmental and developmental issues in the Yaghnob Valley:
Ancient Sogdiana: Past, Present and Future, which took place on the 18–19 October 2007 in
Dushanbe in
Tajikistan. The conference delegates formulated an appeal to the government and citizens of
Tajikistan, and also to international organizations, for support in the establishment of the Yaghnob Natural Ethnography Park and for help in the sustainable and responsible development of the Yaghnob Valley, including improvements in the infrastructure. The conference concluded that the priority was to improve the living conditions of the
Yaghnobi people and the quality of their lives. The Yaghnobi community, for its part, needed to play a more active role and become involved in all the subsequent initiatives, learning how to plan and implement the development projects themselves. ==Yaghnobi villages==