Sokh District
Image:Enclaves in [Kyrgyzstan EN.png|thumb|right|Map showing the three main exclaves in Kyrgyzstan, So'x is in the middle]
Sokh District is a district of Uzbekistan's Fergana Region. It consists of two exclaves of Uzbekistan, surrounded by Kyrgyzstan. Despite being part of Uzbekistan, its population is almost entirely ethnic Tajiks, and the southern part of the district is closer to the border with Tajikistan than with the rest of Uzbekistan. Its capital is the town of Ravon. It has an area of and it has 80,600 inhabitants as of 2022. The district consists of seven urban-type settlements and four rural communities. Another village in the district is Limbur.
Geography
The territory of Sokh is divided into two parts, separated by Kyrgyzstan:Soʻx, which is much more extensive than Northern Sokh. The area encompasses nineteen localities with an urban population of 65.9 percent and a rural population of 34.1 percent. It is 99 percent Tajik, 0.7 percent Kyrgyz and 0.3 percent Uzbek.The exclave's name comes from the river Sokh, long, which crosses the territory and waters its fertile valley. The exclave is surrounded by the Kyrgyz Batken Region. Sokh's border is long, with nine border posts guarded by Kyrgyzstan.Chon Qora-Qalacha, comprising the villages of Chon-Qora and Qalacha.
Population
, the population is 80,600. Despite being a part of Uzbekistani territory and being surrounded by Kyrgyzstan, its population is mostly Tajik.History
Together with Kokand, Sokh was one of the centres of the Basmachi uprising from 1918 to 1924. At that time, Sokh was still directly connected with Uzbekistan.Sokh was created in 1955. Local legend holds that “the territory was lost by a Kyrgyz Communist Party official in a card game with his Uzbek counterpart.” Others say it made sense to assign the area to Uzbekistan because the roads running along the Sokh river connected to Uzbekistan to the north rather than going through the rugged Kyrgyz territory to the east and west of the area in question.
In 1999, Uzbekistan claimed that militants from the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan were using Sokh as their base to attack Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Earlier that year, Tashkent had been rocked by a series of car bombings attributed to the IMU. Uzbekistan began mining the borders around Sokh, angering the Kyrgyz who claim Uzbekistan placed mines on its territory.