Bangi District
Bangi District is a district of Takhar Province, Afghanistan.
Geography
Bangi has an area of 566 square kilometers, comparatively equivalent to the area of Hitra Island. The district does have access to the highway linking Kunduz and Taloqan, which is a major road. Bangi has two tributaries of the Bangi River running through the district. One of them originates in Ishkamish District and the other originates in Khost wa Fereng District. They meet in Bangi District and run to the Khanabad River. There is one bridge over the Bangi river, which connects 15000 people with the district center. Before it was built, a portion of the district would be cut off from the rest for several months.Bangi is bordered by Dasht-e-Archi to the north, Baharak to the northeast, Taluqan to the east, Chal to the southeast, Ishkamish to the south, and Khanabad to the west. Khanabad is located in Kunduz Province, with all other districts in Takhar Province. Bangi may also border Aqtash District, but Aqtash is a temporary district.
There are 59 villages in Bangi District.
History
Bangi was first recognized in 1998 in the 329 Afghanistan district set, mapped by AIMS.The district was considered to be an anti-Taliban bulwark in 2010 because of its large Uzbek population. The district governor was killed by the Taliban in 2015. Later in 2015, the Taliban claimed to have captured Bangi. Two years later, the Taliban claimed that the entire district was under full governmental control.
Bangi was considered to be under full government control in late 2017 by the BBC, but just a few months later SIGAR classified it as contested.
An irrigation canal that benefits over 7,500 people was built in 2019.