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Tag: 2017 source edit
 
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|alt_coat                    = <!--alt text for coat of arms-->
|alt_coat                    = <!--alt text for coat of arms-->
|symbol_type                = <!--emblem/seal/... based on image_coat-->  
|symbol_type                = <!--emblem/seal/... based on image_coat-->  
|national_motto             = <!--"[[motto]]"--> Unity of purpose, unity of strength
|national_motto =     والله زمان يا سلاحي
|national_anthem            =
|englishmotto =        ''It has been a long time, oh my weapon!''
|national_anthem =    [[File:Walla_Zaman_Ya_Selahy.ogg]]
|royal_anthem                = <!--''[[name of/link to anthem]]''-->  
|royal_anthem                = <!--''[[name of/link to anthem]]''-->  
|other_symbol_type          =  
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|ethnic_groups              =  
|ethnic_groups              =  
|ethnic_groups_year          =  
|ethnic_groups_year          =  
|demonym                    =  
|demonym                    = Bulkhiyeen
|government_type            = {{wp|constitutional republic}}
|government_type            = {{wp|constitutional republic}}
|leader_title1              = The Most Elected Minister
|leader_title1              = The Most Elected Minister
|leader_name1                = Rahani Bintuta
|leader_name1                = Rahani Bintuta
|leader_title2              =  
|leader_title2              = Co-President of Bulkh
|leader_name2                =  
|leader_name2                = [[Pasqual I]]
|sovereignty_type            =  
|sovereignty_type            =  
|sovereignty_note            =  
|sovereignty_note            =  
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|area_magnitude              =  
|area_magnitude              =  
|area                        = <!-- major area size (in [[Template:convert]] either km2 or sqmi first) --> ()
|area                        = <!-- major area size (in [[Template:convert]] either km2 or sqmi first) --> ()
|area_km2                    = 796,939.342
|area_km2                    = 824056.517
|area_sq_mi                  = 307,700
|area_sq_mi                  = 318170
|area_footnote              = <!-- optional footnote for area -->
|area_footnote              = <!-- optional footnote for area -->
|percent_water              =  
|percent_water              =  
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|area_label2                = <!-- label below area_label (optional) -->
|area_dabodyalign            = <!-- text after area_label2 (optional) -->
|area_dabodyalign            = <!-- text after area_label2 (optional) -->
|population_estimate        = 1,500,540
|population_estimate        = 8,500,540
|population_estimate_rank    =  
|population_estimate_rank    =  
|population_estimate_year    =  
|population_estimate_year    =  
|population_census          =  
|population_census          =  
|population_census_year      = [[2025]]
|population_census_year      = [[2025]]
|population_density_km2      = 1.88
|population_density_km2      = 10.315
|population_density_sq_mi    = 4.87
|population_density_sq_mi    = 26.716
|population_density_rank    =  
|population_density_rank    =  
|GDP_nominal                = $3.66 billion
|GDP_nominal                = $190,722,025,688.40
|GDP_nominal_per_capita      = $2,436.46
|GDP_nominal_per_capita      = $22,436.46
|Gini                        =
|Gini                        =
|Gini_rank                  =  
|Gini_rank                  =  
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|footnote7                  =
|footnote7                  =
}}
}}
Bulkh, officially the Representative Republic of Bulkh, is a minor power sovereign country on the northwestern [[Puhktun Sea]] coast of [[Audonia#Daria|Daria]], the south eastern island of [[Audonia]]. It is neighbored by [[Umardwal]] to the west, [[XXX]] to the north, and [[XXX]] to the south. It came to its modern iteration after the [[History_of_Burgundie#Emirati_War|Emirati War]], in [[1897]] both geographically and politically. It is a {{wp|constitutional republic}} with {{wpl|Consociationalism|consociational}} representation, shared between the Arab Muslim population, Bedouin nomads, and the polity of Christians. While suffrage is universal and by secret ballot, it is still common for voters to generally follow their tribal leaders lead on issues. Bulkh is a member of the [[League of Nations]], the {{wpl|International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement}},
'''Bulkh''', officially the '''Representative Republic of Bulkh''', is a minor power sovereign country on the southwestern coast of the [[Daria]] region in [[Audonia]], in a {{wp|real union}} with [[Burgundie]]. It is bound by the [[Sea of Kandahar]] and [[Battganuur]] to the north, the [[Nassarine Bay]] and the [[Bulhkawan Bay]] to the west, the [[Bay of Oduniyye]] to the south, [[Pursat]] to the southeast, and [[Umardwal]] to the east. It came to its modern iteration after the [[History_of_Burgundie#Emirati_War|Emirati War]], in [[1897]] both geographically and politically. For its internal governance and policy Bulkh is a {{wp|constitutional republic}} with {{wpl|Consociationalism|consociational}} representation, shared between the Arab Muslim population, Bedouin nomads, and the polity of Christians. While suffrage is universal and by secret ballot, it is still common for voters to generally follow their tribal leaders lead on issues. For external policy, through its {{wp|real union}} with [[Burgundie]], Bulkh has a unanimous concessions requirement for the [[Bulkh#Government|''Constituent Council'']] to deviate from [[Foreign Relations of Burgundie|Burgoignesc foreign policy]], an option it rarely exercises and has never reached.
 
Bulkh is a member of the [[League of Nations]], and the {{wpl|International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement}}.


Its primary exports are crude oil, {{wpl|Construction aggregate}}, fish, and {{wpl|Cork (material)|cork}}. It maintains a capitalist economy but with certain controls and subsidies around critical industries like food, water, energy, healthcare, and transportation, which are typically managed as a public-private ventures.
Its primary exports are crude oil, {{wpl|Construction aggregate}}, fish, and {{wpl|Cork (material)|cork}}. It maintains a capitalist economy but with certain controls and subsidies around critical industries like food, water, energy, healthcare, and transportation, which are typically managed as a public-private ventures.




Many scholars have criticized its governance and politics, arguing that it is merely a client of [[Burgundie]].
Many scholars have criticized its governance, economy, and politics, arguing that the {{wp|real union}} with [[Burgundie]] makes Bulkh both a colony of [[Burgundie]] and also a dividing factor in the [[Daria]] region of [[Audonia]]. Proponents of the {{wp|real union}} say it has brought prosperity and raised the standard of living significantly while also preserving the traditions of the Bulkhiyeen.


== History ==


=== Prehistoric era ===
==Geography==
[[File:Bulkh_Topo_Map.png|right|250px]]
<gallery mode="packed">
File:Iraqi_Kurdish_villagers_in_field_near_Turkish_border.jpg|Farming in Bulkhan interior
File:Zagros_iraq.png|Southern mountains, Baqunah Mountain Range
File:Wadi_Shawka_looking_North.jpg|Wadi in the Great Kavir desert
File:Basra-Shatt-Al-Arab.jpg|Coastal community
</gallery>
 
===Climate and environment===
{{Further|Prevailing Winds}}
[[File:Bulkh Climate Map.png|250px|right]]
Because it is a coastal state that is on the edge of the The [[Great Kavir]] desert Bulkh has three primary climate zones.
 
Bulkh, along with [[Burgundie|Burgoignesc]], [[Battganuur]], and [[Pursat]] is working on a largescale greening, rewilding, and de-desertification project to reclaim arable land from the [[Great Kavir]] called the [[Great Green Wall]].


==== Stone Age ====
== History ==
===Prehistory===
{{Further|Timeline_of_major_world_events#Prehistory}}
<gallery mode="packed">
</gallery>
It's estimated that the first settlements in the modern area of bulk were settled around 10,000 BCE. These settlements were primarily in the interior where the [[Great Kavir]] desert is today. Some 5,000 years ago, the area was not so arid and the vegetation might have been closer to a {{wp|savanna}}. However, desertification set in around 3000 BCE, and the desert became much like it is today. This desertification pushed the people further south into what is now the known as the Bulkawan Peninsula by 4500 BCE. The interior had become mostly uninhabited by 500 BCE, and the coasts had become the primary areas of both settlement and cultivation of crops. There was still bands of nomads in the desert interior but not nearly to the same extent that there had been two or 3,000 years prior. These coastal settlements became more and more settled as the cultivation of grains and the raising of goats and sheep in the grasslands became more sustainable for the larger populations.


==== Bronze Age ====
===Classical Antiquity===
{{Further|Timeline_of_major_world_events#Classical_Antiquity}}
<gallery mode="packed">
</gallery>


==== Iron Age ====
===Medieval period===
{{Further|Timeline_of_major_world_events#Medieval_history}}
<gallery mode="packed">
</gallery>


=== Classical Antiquity ===
====Oduniyyad Caliphate and Arabization====
{{Further|Oduniyyad Caliphate}}
[[931]] - [[1483]]
<gallery mode="packed">
File:Arabslavers.jpg
</gallery>
The Bedouin peoples of the Bulkawan Peninsula were resistant to the spread of Islam and conquest by the [[Oduniyyad Caliphate]]. While the Caliphs claimed the land as their own, they were never able to formalize the government and taxation system to bring the Bedouin peoples to heel. During the 900s the Caliphate attempted to migrate some {{wp|Masriq|Najdi Arabs}} from the northern deserts of modern day Bulkh and to the area to punish the recalcitrant {{wp|Bedouins}}. The Umardi princes brought their culture to the area, but following the Shia schism they remained Sunni, one of the few ethnically Umardi ruled areas to do so. The Bulkawan Peninsula remained segregated between a Umardi ruling class and a Bedouin population until the fall of the Caliphate. At this point the Umardi princes were expelled back to Umalia and the various Bedouin tribes retired back into their nomadic lifestyles.


=== Golden Age ===
=====Salt and slave trades=====
Main article: [[Oduniyyad Caliphate]]
{{Further|Oduniyyad Caliphate#Trade_Empire|Pre-modern_global_trade#Salt_trade|Pre-modern_global_trade#Oduniyyad_Caliphate's_role_in_the_spice_trade}}


The Bedouin peoples of the Bulkawan Peninsula were resistant to the spread of Islam and conquest by the Oduniyyad Caliphate. While the Caliphs claimed the land as their own, they were never able to formalize the government and taxation system to bring the Bedouin peoples to heel. During the 900s the Caliphate attempted to migrate some Umardis to the area to remove them from southern Audonia and also to make the recalcitrant Bedouins someone else’s problem. The Umardi princes brought their culture to the area, but following the Shia schism they remained Sunni, one of the few ethnically Umardi ruled areas to do so. The Bulkawan Peninsula remained segregated between a Umardi ruling class and a Bedouin population until the fall of the Caliphate. At this point the Umardi princes were expelled back to Umalia and the various Bedouin tribes retired back into their nomadic lifestyles.
====Decline of the Caliphate and the Warlords Period====
[[1483]]-[[1642]]


=== Early modern era ===
=== Early modern era ===
Following the collapse of the [[Caliphate]] the various Bedouin tribes retired back into their nomadic lifestyles. The area remained untouched until the arrival of the Kiravian and NATION colonial efforts in the 15somethings.
{{Further|Timeline_of_major_world_events#Early_modern_history}}
<gallery mode="packed">
</gallery>
Following the collapse of the [[Oduniyyad Caliphate|Caliphate]] the various Bedouin tribes retired back into their nomadic lifestyles. The area remained untouched until the arrival of the Kiravian and NATION colonial efforts in the 15somethings.


==== Kandahari-Pukhtun colony ====
==== Istroya Oriental colony ====
The area being arid was of little use to colonists. They moved on and found other more temperate sites for settlements in the late 1570s. From [[1578]]-[[1614]] there was no recorded colonial activity in the area. However in [[1615]] a [[Burgoignesc_South_Levantine_Trading_Company#Bourgondii_Royal_Trading_Company|Bourgondii Royal Trading Company]] surveyor mapped the salt flats of the Chott al-Rezid and the company made a mad dash to secure the area.
{{Further|Istroya Oriental colony|Burgoignesc colonial empire}}
[[File:Bergendii_colonies_in_western_Daria.png|right|250px|Istroya Oriental colony in blue.]]
[[File:KPCCity.jpeg|right|250px]]
The area being arid was of little use to colonists. They moved on and found other more temperate sites for settlements in the late 1570s. From [[1578]]-[[1614]] there was no recorded colonial activity in the area. However, in [[1615]] a [[Burgoignesc North Levantine Trading Company|Martillien North Levantine Trading Company (MNLC)]] surveyor mapped the salt flats of the Chott al-Rezid and the company made a mad dash to secure the area.


===== Company rule =====
===== Company rule =====
Main article: [[Burgoignesc_South_Levantine_Trading_Company#Bourgondii_Royal_Trading_Company|Bourgondii Royal Trading Company]]
Main article: [[Burgoignesc North Levantine Trading Company|Martillien North Levantine Trading Company (MNLC)]]


Due to their nomadic lifestyle and their disinterest in engaging the [[occidental]]s, the [[Burgoignesc_South_Levantine_Trading_Company#Bourgondii_Royal_Trading_Company|Bourgondii Royal Trading Company]] largely left the Bedouins of the Bulkawan Peninsula alone and built their colonies around them. By the 1630s timber from Majanub was being brought to build a sprawling complex of fortified towns and salt mining operations. Businesses to support the efforts became very lucrative and wainwrights, shipwrights, and engineers flocked to the area. Beyond the Chott al-Rezid the [[Burgoignesc_South_Levantine_Trading_Company#Bourgondii_Royal_Trading_Company|Company]] build operations at the Chott al-Mouza and the Ben Ghilli Salt Flats. These operations brought millions into the [[Burgoignesc_South_Levantine_Trading_Company#Bourgondii_Royal_Trading_Company|Company]]’s coffers and is one of the primary financial activities that allowed for unfettered expansion in [[Audonia]] and [[Alshar]]. The salt mines brought tens of thousands of colonists from [[Burgundie]], the Levantine Protestant communities on [[Torlen]] and [[Medimeria]], as well as from other parts of [[Audonia]]. The port cities of Avelie and Sant Marten both surpassed 20,000 residents in the 1690s making them bigger than [[Vilauristre]] and [[Port Diteaux]]. The back-breaking work and the blistering heat made for a seedy type coming to seek work in the colony of Bulkawa. This led to rapid development of the vice sectors like prostitution and drinking halls. It also required the establishment of a vast drinking liquid network. This drove the development of the tea plantations in Vitale, [[Pukhgundi]], and other parts of [[Alshar]]. Seeking to exert more control on the political environment that fed into its colonies and to which it exported, the [[Burgoignesc_South_Levantine_Trading_Company#Bourgondii_Royal_Trading_Company|Company]] formed a government in Avelie and formalized its army, navy, and diplomatic corps reorganizing itself as the [[Burgoignesc_South_Levantine_Trading_Company#Bourgondii_Royal_Trading_Company|Bourgognesc Ularian Trading Empire]]. This was met by outrage in many nations both in [[Audonia]] and the [[Occidental]] world, however fear of embargo brought most countries to recognize the sovereignty of the empire in [[1757]].
Due to their nomadic lifestyle and their disinterest in engaging the [[occidental]]s, the [[Burgoignesc North Levantine Trading Company|Martillien North Levantine Trading Company (MNLC)]] largely left the Bedouins of the Bulkawan Peninsula alone and built their colonies around them. By the 1630s timber from Majanub was being brought to build a sprawling complex of fortified towns and salt mining operations. Businesses to support the efforts became very lucrative and wainwrights, shipwrights, and engineers flocked to the area. Beyond the Chott al-Rezid the [[Burgoignesc North Levantine Trading Company|Company]] build operations at the Chott al-Mouza and the Ben Ghilli Salt Flats. These operations brought millions into the [[Burgoignesc North Levantine Trading Company|Company]]’s coffers and is one of the primary financial activities that allowed for unfettered expansion in [[Audonia]]. The salt mines brought tens of thousands of colonists from [[Burgundie]], the Levantine Protestant communities on [[Torlen]] and [[Medimeria]], as well as from other parts of [[Audonia]]. The port cities of Avelie and Sant Marten both surpassed 20,000 residents in the 1690s making them bigger than [[Vilauristre]] and [[Port Diteaux]]. The back-breaking work and the blistering heat made for a seedy type coming to seek work in the colonial province of Bulkawa. This led to rapid development of the vice sectors like prostitution and drinking halls. It also required the establishment of a vast drinking liquid network. This drove the development of the tea plantations in Vitale, [[Pukhgundi]], and other parts of [[Audonia]].


In the Presidency Act of 1771, the Presidency of Bulkhawan was announced, covering much of the colony of Kandahari-Pukhtun but ceded some of the desert interior to the nomads as they were pushed out and forced to renounce their nomadic traditions. This led to intense bad blood between the colonial state and the locals. Colonial [[Battagnuur]]i knights were brought into to escort the Bedouins from their villages but clashes erupted in a number of areas leading to the massacre of the tribal peoples. In the 840 recorded Bedouin encampments in the area with an estimated population of 969,000 people, only 694 encampments and 539,000 people were successfully relocated. The remainder were assumed killed or dispersed into the vast desert waste. The brutal effectiveness of this dispossession of tribal homelands become a model for colonial powers post-independence powers for centuries afterwards. These “Trails of Trauma” paved the way for a huge boom in colonial growth and land redistribution. Vast areas formally reserved for the Bedouin were settled and huge irrigation projects were started to reclaim parts of the desert that were adjacent to littoral areas. There was even an ambitious plan to dredge a channel to the salt-stripped Chott al-Mouza in [[1793]] that was never realized.
In the Presidency Act of 1771, the Presidency of Bulkhawan was announced, covering much of the eastern [[Istroya Oriental colony]] but ceded some of the desert interior to the nomads as they were pushed out and forced to renounce their nomadic traditions. This led to intense bad blood between the colonial state and the locals. Colonial [[Battganuur]]i knights were brought into to escort the Bedouins from their villages, but clashes erupted in a number of areas leading to the massacre of the tribal peoples. In the 840 recorded Bedouin encampments in the area with an estimated population of 969,000 people, only 694 encampments and 539,000 people were successfully relocated. The remainder were assumed killed or dispersed into the vast desert waste. The brutal effectiveness of this dispossession of tribal homelands become a model for colonial powers post-independence powers for centuries afterwards. These “Trails of Trauma” paved the way for a huge boom in colonial growth and land redistribution. Vast areas formally reserved for the Bedouin were settled and huge irrigation projects were started to reclaim parts of the desert that were adjacent to littoral areas. There was even an ambitious plan to dredge a channel to the salt-stripped Chott al-Mouza in [[1793]] that was never realized.


Following the start of the [[Kandara|Great Slavers Bay Rebellion]] a similar call to arms led the Bedouins to unite under Ali Malik, becoming known as Malikites, a proto-communist who wanted to rid the Bulkawan Peninsula of colonial influence and establish a collective paradise. Malik gathered a force of 20,000 Bedouin cavalry and rode west to forcibly gather support for his attempts. The following year, [[1824]], he returned with an army of 250,000. It is unclear if these reports are just of combat troops or included his train but regardless it was a sight to behold. The colonial troops balked and retreated with each engagement and the few occidental soldiers and officers did their best to forestall the inevitable. Fearing the loss of their imperial capital and the salt mines, the [[Burgoignesc_South_Levantine_Trading_Company#Bourgondii_Royal_Trading_Company|Bourgognesc Ularian Trading Empire]] hastily made treaties across [[Audonia]] and [[Alshar]] and redirected its troops to Presidency of Bulkhawan. A force of 45,000 colonial and imperial troops was formed and force-marched through the desert to meet the Malikites head-on. Arriving at the western edge of the Great Kazir desert in March of [[1825]], the Imperial army set about building a camp and reinforcing its supply lines. The massive, cumbersome western-styled army immediately fell prey to the sprightly and spirited, lightning-fast raids of the Malikite army. Their supply lines disrupted and their supply of food and water dwindling, they made a forced march to the northern coast. 540 men died of starvation and thirst along the way, but the remainder were met by the navy and brought back to Sant Marten. As equatorial winter set in all they decided to wait. Garrisons were established at the salt mines and some recently created farming communities were forcibly abandoned and the men impressed into a militia. January of [[1826]] saw the first attempts by the Malikites to probe the defenses of the colonial forces. The Ben Ghilli Salt Flats came under attack January 12th. A small detachment of Malikite cavalry attacked the forward watch posts and were met with cannon fire from the fortified town. A squadron of [[Battganuur]]i knights and [[Umardwal|Umardi]] Sipahis were dispatched to try to find the main Malitike force.
Following the start of the [[Kandara|Great Slavers Bay Rebellion]], a similar call to arms led the Bedouins to unite under Ali Malik, becoming known as Malikites, a proto-communist who wanted to rid the Bulkawan Peninsula of colonial influence and establish a collective paradise. Malik gathered a force of 20,000 Bedouin cavalry and rode south to forcibly gather support for his attempts. The following year, [[1824]], he returned with an army of 250,000. It is unclear if these reports are just of combat troops or included his train, regardless it was a sight to behold. The colonial troops balked and retreated with each engagement and the few occidental soldiers and officers did their best to forestall the inevitable. Fearing the loss of their capital and the salt mines, the [[Burgoignesc North Levantine Trading Company|Company]] hastily made treaties across [[Audonia]] and redirected its troops to Presidency of Bulkhawan. A force of 45,000 colonial troops was formed and force-marched through the desert to meet the Malikites head-on. Arriving at the western edge of the Great Kazir desert in March of [[1825]], the colonial army set about building a camp and reinforcing its supply lines. The massive, cumbersome western-styled army immediately fell prey to the sprightly and spirited, lightning-fast raids of the Malikite army. Their supply lines disrupted and their supply of food and water dwindling, they made a forced march to the southern coast. 540 men died of starvation and thirst along the way, but the remainder were met by the navy and brought back to Sant Marten. As equatorial winter set in all they decided to wait. Garrisons were established at the salt mines and some recently created farming communities were forcibly abandoned and the men impressed into a militia. January of [[1826]] saw the first attempts by the Malikites to probe the defenses of the colonial forces. The Ben Ghilli Salt Flats came under attack January 12th. A small detachment of Malikite cavalry attacked the forward watch posts and were met with cannon fire from the fortified town. A squadron of [[Battganuur]]i knights and [[Umardwal|Umardi]] Sipahis were dispatched to try to find the main Malitike force.


=== Early modern era ===
===Late modern period===
=== Contemporary era===
{{Further|Timeline_of_major_world_events#Late_modern_history}}
<gallery mode="packed">
</gallery>
===Contemporary period===
{{Further|Timeline_of_major_world_events#Contemporary_history}}
<gallery mode="packed">
</gallery>
The 20th century in Bulkh saw the rapid adoption of [[Occidental]] memes such as industrialism, capitalism, urbanization, but development has been uneven, mostly occurring in its coastal regions. Following the [[First Great War]], and especially after the [[Second Great War]], Bulkh was rapidly increased its adoption of secularism, and democracy and its cultural and economic ties with [[Burgundie]]. The nation signed a constitution in [[1906]] and became a secular republic. This government set about a series of invasive modernization policies that were not popular, but any resistance was quashed by a corrupt but loyal police force and army. During the [[Second Great War]] [[Burgundie]] and Bulkh were allied against the anti-colonial powers of [[Audonia]] and [[Alshar]] and this arrangement made the government and elite incredibly rich. This income disparity as well as the [[Occidental]]ization caused a rift in the nation that ultimately led to a communist insurgency in the western part of the country during the 1960s-80s. During this period the government further embraced [[Burgundie]] and became a rising star in the globalizing world. It has become a stable global trading partner for nations and has developed a strong manufacturing sector that rivals any in the [[Middle seas region]]. Today, Bulkh is a key second tier manufacturing hub for industrializing nations and nations with moderate and lower incomes. It is also serves as a point of power projection for [[Burgundie]] in the [[Audonia]]/[[Alshar]]i interface zone, through which it also conducts its own modest power projection.
The 20th century in Bulkh saw the rapid adoption of [[Occidental]] memes such as industrialism, capitalism, urbanization, but development has been uneven, mostly occurring in its coastal regions. Following the [[First Great War]], and especially after the [[Second Great War]], Bulkh was rapidly increased its adoption of secularism, and democracy and its cultural and economic ties with [[Burgundie]]. The nation signed a constitution in [[1906]] and became a secular republic. This government set about a series of invasive modernization policies that were not popular, but any resistance was quashed by a corrupt but loyal police force and army. During the [[Second Great War]] [[Burgundie]] and Bulkh were allied against the anti-colonial powers of [[Audonia]] and [[Alshar]] and this arrangement made the government and elite incredibly rich. This income disparity as well as the [[Occidental]]ization caused a rift in the nation that ultimately led to a communist insurgency in the western part of the country during the 1960s-80s. During this period the government further embraced [[Burgundie]] and became a rising star in the globalizing world. It has become a stable global trading partner for nations and has developed a strong manufacturing sector that rivals any in the [[Middle seas region]]. Today, Bulkh is a key second tier manufacturing hub for industrializing nations and nations with moderate and lower incomes. It is also serves as a point of power projection for [[Burgundie]] in the [[Audonia]]/[[Alshar]]i interface zone, through which it also conducts its own modest power projection.


Line 154: Line 200:


The BPR did enact a number of land-use policies that took away what nascent private property laws had been enacted in the early 20th century, but their was very little privately held property in the regions they controlled so these reforms were largely symbolic. The government created a Revolutionary Peoples Liberation Army which boasted, on average, 5,000 troops and a further 15,000 guerillas. While not significant in number these troops were enough to engage, confound, and occasionally defeat the Army of Bulkh throughout the 70s.
The BPR did enact a number of land-use policies that took away what nascent private property laws had been enacted in the early 20th century, but their was very little privately held property in the regions they controlled so these reforms were largely symbolic. The government created a Revolutionary Peoples Liberation Army which boasted, on average, 5,000 troops and a further 15,000 guerillas. While not significant in number these troops were enough to engage, confound, and occasionally defeat the Army of Bulkh throughout the 70s.
==Geography==
[[File:Bulkh_Topo_Map.png|right|250px]]
<gallery mode="packed">
File:Iraqi_Kurdish_villagers_in_field_near_Turkish_border.jpg|Farming in Bulkhan interior
File:Zagros_iraq.png|Southern mountains, Baqunah Mountain Range
File:Wadi_Shawka_looking_North.jpg|Wadi in the Great Kavir desert
File:Basra-Shatt-Al-Arab.jpg|Coastal community
</gallery>
Bulkh forms the eastern most expanse of the Great Kavir desert and the northwestern [[Puhktun Sea]] coast of [[Audonia#Daria|Daria]], the south eastern island of [[Audonia]]. It is bound in interior in the northwest by the foothills of the Mahagheh Mountains in the west by the Great Kavir desert, and the Baqunah Mountain Range in the southwest.
===Climate and environment===
[[File:Bulkh Climate Map.png|250px|right]]
Because it is a coastal state that is on the edge of the The Great Kavir desert Bulkh has three primary climate zones. Arid in the interior and tropical on the coast with a semi-arid interface zone between them. The Baqunah Mountain Range forms a small, high-elevation humid continental zone.
Climate varies greatly within Bulkh. In the highlands, temperatures range between 10 and 20 °C (50 and 68 °F) during cold and hot seasons respectively. The rest of the country has temperatures rarely falling lower than 20 °C (68 °F). The hottest period extends between November and February (25–31 °C or 77.0–87.8 °F) while the coldest period occurs between May and August (15–20 °C or 59–68 °F). Annual temperature is 20 °C (68.0 °F). The climate is cool in high mountainous regions.
Coastal Bulkh has two major rainfall periods: one is uni-modal (October–April) and the other is bi-modal (October–December and March–May). The former is experienced in southern and central parts of the country, and the latter is found along the northern coast. The bi-modal rainfall is caused by the seasonal migration of the {{wpl|Intertropical Convergence Zone}}.
{{Weather box
| width = auto
| metric first = Yes
| single line  = Yes
| location    = Al Qadria
| collapsed = No
| Jan record high C = 35.0
| Feb record high C = 35.2
| Mar record high C = 35.0
| Apr record high C = 35.0
| May record high C = 32.9
| Jun record high C = 33.0
| Jul record high C = 31.8
| Aug record high C = 31.9
| Sep record high C = 33.8
| Oct record high C = 33.7
| Nov record high C = 34.0
| Dec record high C = 34.5
| year record high C = 35.2
| Jan high C = 31.8
| Feb high C = 32.4
| Mar high C = 32.1
| Apr high C = 30.7
| May high C = 29.8
| Jun high C = 29.3
| Jul high C = 28.9
| Aug high C = 29.4
| Sep high C = 30.3
| Oct high C = 30.9
| Nov high C = 31.4
| Dec high C = 31.6
| year high C = 30.7
| Jan low C = 23.5
| Feb low C = 23.3
| Mar low C = 22.8
| Apr low C = 22.4
| May low C = 21.3
| Jun low C = 19.2
| Jul low C = 18.2
| Aug low C = 18.1
| Sep low C = 18.4
| Oct low C = 19.7
| Nov low C = 21.3
| Dec low C = 22.8
| year low C = 20.9
| Jan record low C = 18.1
| Feb record low C = 18.4
| Mar record low C = 19.6
| Apr record low C = 19.6
| May record low C = 16.2
| Jun record low C = 14.4
| Jul record low C = 13.7
| Aug record low C = 12.8
| Sep record low C = 14.3
| Oct record low C = 15.8
| Nov record low C = 17.6
| Dec record low C = 18.8
| year record low C = 12.8
| rain colour = green
| Jan rain mm = 76.3
| Feb rain mm = 54.9
| Mar rain mm = 138.1
| Apr rain mm = 254.2
| May rain mm = 197.8
| Jun rain mm = 42.9
| Jul rain mm = 25.6
| Aug rain mm = 24.1
| Sep rain mm = 22.8
| Oct rain mm = 69.3
| Nov rain mm = 125.9
| Dec rain mm = 117.8
| year rain mm = 1149.7
| unit rain days = 1.0 mm
| Jan rain days = 7
| Feb rain days = 4
| Mar rain days = 11
| Apr rain days = 18
| May rain days = 13
| Jun rain days = 5
| Jul rain days = 4
| Aug rain days = 4
| Sep rain days = 3
| Oct rain days = 5
| Nov rain days = 8
| Dec rain days = 9
| year rain days =
| Jan humidity = 77
| Feb humidity = 76
| Mar humidity = 80
| Apr humidity = 84
| May humidity = 81
| Jun humidity = 78
| Jul humidity = 77
| Aug humidity = 76
| Sep humidity = 75
| Oct humidity = 76
| Nov humidity = 78
| Dec humidity = 78
| year humidity = 79
| Jan sun = 235.6
| Feb sun = 223.2
| Mar sun = 213.9
| Apr sun = 156.0
| May sun = 213.9
| Jun sun = 222.0
| Jul sun = 223.2
| Aug sun = 266.6
| Sep sun = 252.0
| Oct sun = 275.9
| Nov sun = 252.0
| Dec sun = 241.8
| year sun =
| Jand sun  = 7.6
| Febd sun  = 7.9
| Mard sun  = 6.9
| Aprd sun  = 5.2
| Mayd sun  = 6.9
| Jund sun  = 7.4
| Juld sun  = 7.2
| Augd sun  = 8.6
| Sepd sun  = 8.4
| Octd sun  = 8.9
| Novd sun  = 8.4
| Decd sun  = 7.8
| yeard sun = 7.6
}}


==Government and Politics==
==Government and Politics==
Bulkh is a secular {{wpl|Consociationalism|Consociational}} democratically elected oligarchic state with power being shared by the elites of the majority Muslim Arab community (68% of the population) and the minority Christian (20% of the population) and Bedouin (12% of the population) communities. Representatives to the ''Constituent Council'' are directly elected by their constituency and serve for a term of 3 years. There is a 4 term limit to service on the Constituent Council.
Bulkh is a secular {{wpl|Consociationalism|Consociational}} democratically elected oligarchic state with power being shared by the elites of the majority Muslim Arab community (68% of the population) and the minority Christian (20% of the population) and Bedouin (12% of the population) communities. Representatives to the ''Constituent Council'' are directly elected by their constituency and serve for a term of 3 years. There is a 4-term limit to service on the Constituent Council.


From within the elected members of the legislative body a ''Most Elected Minister'' is elected for a 6 year period to serve as the head of the executive branch. There are no term limits to the Executive branch.
From within the elected members of the legislative body a ''Most Elected Minister'' is elected for a 6-year period to serve as the head of the executive branch. There are no term limits to the Executive branch.


===Federal subdivisions===
===Federal subdivisions===
Line 313: Line 214:
*Northern half of the interior
*Northern half of the interior
*Southern half of the interior
*Southern half of the interior
===Politics===
''What political factions exist? Who has ruled predominantly?''
===Law===
''What kind of laws and legal system does your country employ?''


==Demographics==
===Military===
''What kind of people live in your country?''
<gallery mode="packed">
===Ethnicity===
File%3AMarine_Aircraft_Group_11_at_Shaikh_Isa_airfield_1991.JPEG|Joint Burgo-Bulkh Iylia Airforce Base
File%3A2022_A188_010_P_001_001.jpg|[[Royal Air Service of Burgundie]] Fighter/interceptor Escadrille 3 of the Wind Scorpion Escadron
</gallery>
The military of Bulkh is small but highly professional. It is comprised of three branches the Army (land), the Maritime Defense Force (navy and coast guard), and the Republican Escadrille (air force and ostensibly space force).
 
The Army had 5 brigades (3 infantry, 1 armored, and 1 air assault). It was reformed entirely during [[Operation Kipling]] eschewing many archaic and tribalistic traditions. It is viewed as the safeguard of secular republicanism and its traditions and virtues follow those concepts. The army's strategic objectives are all defensive in nature but it's air assault brigade has some minor expeditionary capacities, within a limited scope. It is postulated that Bulkh could launch expeditionary operations against [[Battganuur]], [[Chaukhira]], [[Pursat]], [[Umardwal]], and [[Yanuban]], although sustainment would become an issue after a week of sustained fighting.
 
The Maritime Defense Force (MDF) is formed around 4 destroyer squadrons, with a total of 8 destroyers, 18 frigates, 29 frigates and avisos, 63 littoral patrol craft, 5 ocean going tugs, 2 hydrological survey ships, and 2 dredgers. It also has an amphibious assault craft and 3 replenishment oilers that it purchased from [[Burgundie]] in the late 1990s through the mid 2020s which constitutes its only expeditionary capability.
The MDF also has a modest air wing with 13 fighter/torpedo bombers, 19 fighter/interceptors, 17 maritime patrol/meteorological survey aircraft, and 2 AWACS.
 
The Republican Escadrille is a force of 7 air wings, 4 fighter/interceptors wings, two fighter/bomber wings, and one AWACS/Electronic Warfare wing. The Escadrille also oversees the countries Strategic Forces and its arsenal of ICBMs, the true number is unknown, but it is estimated that it is around 47.
 
==Society==
{{Pie chart
{{Pie chart
| radius = 100
| radius = 100
| thumb = right
| thumb = right
| caption = Self-reported ethnic origin in the XXX (20XX)
| caption = Self-reported ethnic origin in Bulkh (2030)


| other =  
| other =  
| label1 = [[1 People]]
| label1 = {{wp|Arab}}
| value1 =81.4
| value1 =62.4
| color1 =LightYellow
| color1 =CadetBlue
| label2 =[[2 People]]
| label2 ={{wp|Bedouin}}
| value2 =7.2
| value2 =22.8
| color2 =DarkCyan
| color2 =DarkCyan
| label3 =[[3 People]]
| label3 =[[Ebidi]]
| value3 =3.8
| value3 =3.8
| color3 =LimeGreen
| color3 =Brown
| label4 =[[4 People]]
| label4 = [[Occidental]]
| value4 =2.8
| value4 =2.8
| color4 =CadetBlue
| color4 =#4169E1
| label5 =[[5 People]]
| label5 = other/multi-ethnic
| value5 =2.2
| value5 =8.2
| color5 =NavajoWhite
| color5 =NavajoWhite
| label6 =[[6 People]]
| value6 = 1.4
| color6 =Pink
| label7 =Other
| value7 =1.2
| color7 =Brown
}}
}}
''What ethnic groups make up your country?''
<gallery mode="packed">
===Language===
File:Bulkhawani_person_01.png|Bulkhawani business man
''What language or languages do your country's people use? Are there any previously used languages no longer common? Are these languages native to your country or shared with another?''
File:Bulkhawani_person_02.png|Modern urbanite woman
===Religion===
File:Bulkhawani_person_03.png|Bedouin woman in traditional wear
File:Bulkhawani_person_04.png|Nadji woman in traditional wear
File:Children living next to Daurra Oil Refinery in Iraq.jpg|Bulkhawani children
File:001126-AlMutanabbi-Baghdad-IMG 8201-2.jpg|Bulkhawani man playing an oud in the street
File:A_Bedouin_girl_in_Nuweiba_-_Egypt.jpg|Bedouin girl
File:Bedouins_making_bread.jpg|Bedouins making bread which is gonna be covered in sand, I can feel it in my teeth, I hate it.
</gallery>
 
With 65% of its 1.5 million residents concentrated in coastal cities. The largest ethnic group, comprising 68%, are {{wp|Arab}} {{wp|Muslim}}s, further divided into subgroups like the politically powerful Umardi and the commercially engaged Najdi. Christians make up 20%, concentrated in the south and cities, while {{wp|Bedouin}} groups account for the remaining 12%. {{wp|Modern Standard Arabic|Standard Arabic}} and [[Burgoignesc language|Burgoignesc]] reign as official languages, while regional dialects and religious tongues are recognized within the states in which they occur. {{wp|Islam}}, primarily {{Wp|Sunni}}, dominates religious practice, though {{wp|Christianity}} maintains a strong presence. Society maintains a loose class system with a growing urban middle class, while Bedouin communities hold onto tight-knit tribal affiliations. Traditional gender roles persist, but progress towards women's empowerment is evident in recent years. Ethnic and religious tensions, social inequality, Bedouin integration challenges, and rapid urbanization's growing pains pose ongoing hurdles for Bulkh's diverse populace.
 
===Religious demographics===
{{Pie chart
{{Pie chart
| radius = 100
| radius = 100
| thumb =left
| thumb = right
| caption = Religious affiliations in Bulkh (2031)
| caption = Self-reported religious affiliation in Bulkh (2030)


| other =  
| other =  
| label1 = Sunni Muslim
| label1 = {{wp|Sunni Islam}}
| value1 =59
| value1 =55.5
| color1 =CadetBlue
| color1 =#3B7A57
| label2 = Shia Islam
| label2 ={{wp|Suffi Islam}}
| value2 =9
| value2 =12.5
| color2 =DarkCyan
| color2 =#4B6F44
| label3 = Calvinist
| label3 =[[Mercantile Reform Protestant]]ism
| value3 =15
| value3 =16.3
| color3 =LimeGreen
| color3 =#1B1B1B
| label4 = Catholic
| label4 = [[Catholicism]]
| value4 =5
| value4 =2.8
| color4 =LightYellow
| color4 =#800080
| label5 = Other
| label5 = Animist/traditional religions
| value5 =12
| value5 =3.8
| color5 =NavajoWhite
| color5 =#7E5E60
| label6 = {{wp|Jewish}}
| value6 =.9
| color6 =#4169E1
| label7 = other/irreligious
| value7 =8.2
| color7 =NavajoWhite
}}
}}
The population in Bulkh are majority Muslim with 68% population professing that faith. Of those 59% are of the Sunni branch of Islam and 9% are of the Shia branch. There is a long history of sectarian violence between the two factions, which was exploited by the during the [[Burgoignesc South Levantine Trading Company|Bourgondii Royal Trading Company]] during the [[Burgoignesc colonial empire|Kandahari-Pukhtun colony and the Bulkhawan Presidency]]. The majority of Shia Muslims were pushed into newighboring [[Umardwal]] which is a majority Shia nation. In modern Bulkh, especially since secularization in the latter half of the 20th century, sectarian violence has almost entirely disappeared, but it does rear its ugly head when there are times of uncertainty and upheaval.


Also as a result of [[Burgoignesc colonial empire|colonization]] there is a sizable Christian minority in Bulkh, around 20% of the total population. The Calvinist faiths, predominately [[Merchantile Reform Protestantism]], because Bulkh was colonized as a [[Pharisedom]], are chief among them, 15% of the total population. However, there is a [[Catholic Church|Catholic]] populace in the country as well. The Archbishop of Bulkh is Farajallah bin Tawil. He oversees three Dioceses, the Diocese of al-Qadria which covers the southern half of the coastal region, led by Bishop Ikram bin Idris; the Dioceses of Port Abultah which covers the northern half of the coast, led by Bishop Naadir el-Arafat; and the Diocese of Tel Kernah, the interior diocese, led by Bishop Thaamir bin Tamer. During the colonial period the Christian population was a much larger portion of the total population but after the departure fo the [[Bergendii]] in the 1830s the faith dwindled significantly both through reprisal killings and also mass conversions. The percentage of Bulkhan's self-reporting as Christian has increased significantly since [[Operation Kipling]] in the 1960s, 70s, and early 80s. Interaction with large numbers of [[Bergendii]] and [[Urcea]]n soldiers, diplomats, and business persons made it en vogue and modern to convert to a form of Christianity, especially in the more affluent and intellectual circles.
Faith plays a central role in shaping Bulkh's social fabric. 68% of the population identifies as {{wp|Muslim}}, primarily {{wp|Sunni}}. However, nuanced interpretations and cultural practices create a diverse religious landscape. Christianity finds fertile ground with 20% adherence, with [[Mercantile Reform Protestant]]ism and [[Catholicism]] forming the main denominations. Vestiges of the colonial past remain, with communities practicing Christian liturgical languages, like Latin.
 
===Linguistic demographics===
{{wp|Modern Standard Arabic|Standard Arabic}} serves as the official language, unifying discourse in government, education, and media. Regional dialects like Najdi and Wahanji Arabic resonate within their respective communities, while Bedouin groups preserve their unique heritage through diverse Arabic dialects. [[Burgoignesc language|Burgoignesc]], a reminder of the [[Burgoignesc colonial empire|colonial era]], remains present in pockets, primarily used in business and higher education.


===Education===
''How many people in your country are educated?''
==Culture and Society==
''What do your people do, and what are they like?''
===Education===
''What is your country's education system like? How do the schools work? What do people think about education?''
===Attitudes and worldview===
''How do your country's people view life?''
===Kinship and family===
''How are families or kinship groups structured in your country?''
===Cuisine===
===Cuisine===
''What do your people eat?''
<gallery mode="packed">
===Religion===
File:Food in Israel.jpg|Falafel plate
''What do your people believe? Rather than demographics, as above, think about how important religion is to your people and their view about their own and other religions. What is the relationship between the prevailing view and minority religious groups? Is it an official religion, and do any laws exist about free worship?''
File:Persian cuisine - Kabab Koobideh.jpg|Kebab koobideh
===Arts and Literature===
File:Kibbeh Nayyeh.jpg|Kibbeh
''What type of art do your people make? Do they have a tradition of painted art, well-crafted television shows, or great music?''
</gallery>
===Sports===
Common ingredients include {{wp|olives}} and {{wp|olive oil}}, {{wp|pitas}}, {{wp|honey}}, {{wp|sesame seeds}}, {{wp|dates}}, {{wp|sumac}}, {{wp|chickpeas}}, {{wp|mint}}, {{wp|rice}} and {{wp|parsley}}, and popular dishes include {{wp|kebabs}}, {{wp|dolmas}}, {{wp|falafel}}, {{wp|baklava}}, {{wp|yogurt}}, {{wp|doner kebab}}, {{wp|shawarma}} and {{wp|mulukhiyah}}. The region was also influenced by dumplings from [[Dolong]] brought through the [[Silk Road]]; {{wp|turmeric}} and other spices from [[Pukhgundi]]; {{wp|cloves}}, {{wp|peppercorns}} and {{wp|allspice}} from the [[Spice Islands]]; {{wp|okra}} from [[Kandara]], and {{wp|tomatoes}} from [[Crona]].
''Does your country have any major sports leagues? What types of sports are played, both professionally and for fun by your country's people?"
 
===Symbols===
Religion has impacted the cuisine by making {{wp|lamb}} the primary meat since {{wp|Muslim}}s do not eat pork, and beef was sacred under the [[Arunid Empire]] and therefore it's cultivation never took off. Alcohol is Haram under Islamic law but young urban cosmopolitans do imbibe alcohol. Palm wine is locally produced but all other alcohols are imported.
''Are there any prominent symbols which are well known to represent your country?''
====Alcohol====
Alcohol is Haram under Islamic law and temperance has been a central point of [[Mercantile Reform Protestantism]] at some points of the late modern period. These religious prohibitions, however, haven't eliminated alcohol consumption in Bulkh, especially in the 21st century, amongst a burgeoning population of young, [[Occidental|occidental]]y educated, urban cosmopolitans. Their once discreet defiance has become more overt in the last few decades and has given rise to a burgeoning drinking culture, thriving primarily in the bustling urban centers. [[Granquai Restaurant Chain]] has become a haven for young urbanites seeking to indulge in the sweet nectar of the Gods, hamdullah. While ostensibly serving a menu of local and international cuisine, Granquai's lounges features a place, discreetly tucked away from public view for these youth and offers a sense of community and liberation, away from the prying eyes of the generally conservative society. The young urban professional drinking scene in Bulkh extends beyond mere hedonism. It represents a generational shift, a quiet rebellion against stringent social norms. Young Bulkhiyeen, exposed to global influences through education and media, are increasingly questioning traditional values. Alcohol, in this context, becomes a tool of self-expression, a symbol of defiance against a conservative establishment.
 
Palm wine is made locally from the sap of palm trees. It predates [[Oduniyyad Caliphate]]'s and {{Wp|Islam}}'s arrival in the region and enjoys a degree of cultural acceptance, especially in the {{wp|Bedouin}} community. Often associated with rural communities and traditional festivities, palm wine has been shielded from religious interference, but its alcohol content is artificially made lower out of respect for Islamic morays.
 
===Architecture===
<gallery mode="packed">
File:0A1A7581.jpg
File:Córdoba (5157827355).jpg
File:Bab Oudaia2.jpg
File:Pavillon Cour des Lions Alhambra Granada Spain.jpg
</gallery>
Much of the ancient surviving architecture in Bulkh is comprised of the {{wp|Islamic architecture|Islamic architectural style}} brought by the [[Oduniyyad Caliphate]]. Much of these are religious buildings like mosques and masjid and other are government buildings primarily in the large urban settlements that would become the cities along the coasts. In the [[[[Timeline_of_major_world_events#Early_modern_history|early modern period]], architectural influences came primarily from the [[Occidental world]], especially the styles in [[Burgundie]]. These [[Levantia|Levantine]] styles persisted and even after the collapse of the [[Burgoignesc colonial empire]] and a resurgence of [[Occidental]] architectural motifs became the norm, especially in the late 20th century, after [[Operation Kipling]]. However, in the 1990s until now there has been a revival of more classical building methods, local building materials, architectural motifs reminiscent of Islamic styles of the past. While most urban cores reflect the more [[Occidental]] styles of the late 20th century and early 21st century, other less densely populated areas are much more visually reminiscent of the previous architectural styles. In the most remote areas, in the northern part of the country, the nomadic lifestyle of {{wp|Bedouins}} has led to an almost complete absence of permanent architecture and as those populations were settled in the 20th century with the influences of {{wp|modernist architectural styles}} and thinking some of the buildings came to reflect the tent like structures used by the nomadic Bedouins.
 
==Economy==


==Economy and Infrastructure==
''How does your country's economy work?''
===Industries and Sectors===
Bulkh is an industrialized nation with a strong manufacturing sector. It's close ties with [[Burgundie]] have led to a number of agreements with has allowed Burgoignesc companies to establish manufactories in Bulkh while paying local salaries, however all manufactories must comply to [[Burgundie|Burgoignesc]] health and safety standards.
Bulkh is an industrialized nation with a strong manufacturing sector. It's close ties with [[Burgundie]] have led to a number of agreements with has allowed Burgoignesc companies to establish manufactories in Bulkh while paying local salaries, however all manufactories must comply to [[Burgundie|Burgoignesc]] health and safety standards.
====Manufacturing====
===Manufacturing===
Ship building has risen to the forefront of Bulkh's manufacturing sector. It serves as an excellent foil to [[Burgundie]]'s more expensive ship building industry.
====Shipbuilding====
====Agriculture====
[[File:Bulk carrier Bulk Holland at Oil Refinery Anchorage 4, Cockburn Sound, July 2022 03.jpg|200px|right|Bulk carrier built in Bulkh.]]
[[File:Nautilus_Maxi_(1976)_Seløy_undervannservice.jpg|200px|right|A Bulkh build cable-laying ship.]]
Unlike [[Burgundie]]'s focus on technological marvels, Bulkh's shipbuilding industry carves its niche through affordability and practicality. Catering to companies and merchant marines from less advantaged nations, Bulkh prioritizes building reliable and cost-effective vessels like workhorse {{wp|bulk carrier}}s, efficient {{wp|tugboats}}, and specialized {{wp|cable layer}} for underwater infrastructure. Their {{wp|offshore support vessels}}, ranging from Platform Supply Vessels (PSVs) to Multi-Purpose Support Vessels (MPSVs), cater to diverse offshore activities, all constructed with adaptability and affordability in mind.
This strategic focus resonates with their diverse clientele. Regional shipping companies operating within neighboring countries or the [[Daria]] region find immense value in Bulkh's cost-effective solutions tailored for regional trade routes. Similarly, emerging market players seeking to build their initial fleets for global market entry rely on Bulkh's affordability. Independent operators and even NGOs benefit from Bulkh's ships, allowing them to participate in maritime trade without breaking the bank. The industry even boasts a history of cooperation with NGOs, building affordable vessels for humanitarian aid and disaster relief efforts.
Bulkh's competitive edge hinges on several factors. Firstly, affordability remains paramount, achieved through access to readily available materials and labor, keeping prices lower than Western counterparts. Secondly, adaptability plays a crucial role, with shipyards readily customizing designs to specific client needs within their capabilities. Additionally, shorter lead times are a major advantage, thanks to simpler designs and streamlined processes. Finally, government support acts as a catalyst, offering subsidies and tax breaks to further incentivize shipbuilding in the country.
However, challenges loom on the horizon. Modernization is crucial to remain competitive in the long run, demanding investments in cutting-edge technology. Environmental regulations also necessitate ongoing upgrades and adaptations to meet stricter standards regarding emissions and waste disposal. Furthermore, emerging competition from other developing nations entering the sector increases pressure to innovate continuously.
 
'''Shipwrights in Bulkh'''
[[File:310000 ton tanker in Japan Marine United Corporation kure.jpg|200px|right]]
*Dar Al-Bahr Shipyards: Located in the bustling northern port city of Aaqira, Dar Al-Bahr is a state-owned enterprise known for its large-scale bulk carriers and tankers. They boast a long history and employ thousands of skilled workers, making them a cornerstone of Bulkh's shipbuilding industry.
*Emirates Marine Consortium: Situated in the heart of the industrial zone of Aaqira, this Bulkho-[[Burgundie|Burgoignesc]] consortium brings together several smaller shipyards, leveraging their combined expertise to build offshore support vessels like PSVs and MPSVs. Their collaborative approach allows them to handle complex projects and cater to diverse offshore needs.
*Al-Noor Shipyard: Operating in the southern coastal town of Daylah, Al-Noor specializes in building cable layers and other specialized vessels for underwater infrastructure projects. Their commitment to precision and adherence to international standards makes them a preferred choice for sensitive marine operations.
*Khalid Bay Shipyard: Nestled on the shores of the scenic Khalid Bay, this independent shipyard specializes in building smaller, fuel-efficient vessels like tugboats and fishing boats. Their focus on innovation and customization attracts clients seeking agile and cost-effective solutions.
*Phoenix Shipyard: This family-owned shipyard, located in the historical southern port of Qalat, has a long tradition of building small, wooden dhows for traditional fishing and coastal transportation. Their focus on preserving this cultural heritage while incorporating sustainable practices sets them apart.
 
====Construction aggregate====
[[File:Briqueterie au Sénégal 01.jpg|250px|right]]
Bulkh has a massive {{wp|sand mining}} and {{wp|elutriation}} industry in support of its {{wp|construction aggregate}} industry. It cultivates and exports 4.8 megatonnes of sand and silica. Bulkh also has {{wp|Gypsum#Mining|gypsum mining}} the excavates 12 million tonnes of the substance. These aggregates are exported or combined in {{wp|concrete}} dry-mix, and {{wp|cinderblocks}} and sold premixed and packaged around the world.
 
===Agriculture===
Although Bulkh is mostly arid, the nation is a major agricultural producer and exporter, with over 325,300 employed in agriculture, forestry and fishing. Because of the climate the largest agricultural subsector is grazing (sheep, goats, and Zebu cattle) in the large semiarid zones. Across the country there is a mix of irrigation and dry-land farming. Plantation farming for crops like tea, rice, sugar, and rubber exist in the heavy rainfall coastal zones but the heavy winds from the interior desert keep much of the moisture restricted to the coast.
Although Bulkh is mostly arid, the nation is a major agricultural producer and exporter, with over 325,300 employed in agriculture, forestry and fishing. Because of the climate the largest agricultural subsector is grazing (sheep, goats, and Zebu cattle) in the large semiarid zones. Across the country there is a mix of irrigation and dry-land farming. Plantation farming for crops like tea, rice, sugar, and rubber exist in the heavy rainfall coastal zones but the heavy winds from the interior desert keep much of the moisture restricted to the coast.
Pisciculture is also a formidable subsector with sizable domestic and deep-water fleets, farms, and sustenance communities.
Pisciculture is also a formidable subsector with sizable domestic and deep-water fleets, farms, and sustenance communities.
The success of Bulkh to become a major agricultural power despite the odds is facilitated by its policies of long-term visions and promotion of agricultural reforms that greatly increased the country's agricultural industry.


{{wp|olives}} and {{wp|olive oil}}, {{wp|pitas}}, {{wp|honey}}, {{wp|sesame seeds}}, {{wp|dates}}, {{wp|sumac}}, {{wp|chickpeas}}, {{wp|mint}}, {{wp|rice}} and {{wp|parsley}}.


The success of Bulkh to become a major agricultural power despite the odds is facilitated by its policies of long-term visions and promotion of agricultural reforms that greatly increased the country's agricultural industry.
===Infrastructure===
====Air====
Bulkh has two international airports the Malik International Airport in metro al Qadria, serving the southern half of the country. The other is Bi-smi llah Intermodal Transit Centre which is a commercial air, rail, and passenger ferry hub that serves the northern part of the country and the southeastern coast of the [[Sea of Kandahar]].
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!Name
!Location
!Type
!Brief description
![[Air_Traffic_Regulatory_Organization#Airport_codes|Code(s)]]
!Picture
|-
|[[Malik International Airport]]
|{{flag|Bulkh}}, al Qadria
|Passenger and cargo
|24/7/365 air traffic control operations, 3x runways, capable of receiving all airframes, cargo terminal, passenger terminal, complete maintenance facilities, integrated customs and border control service
||[[Air Traffic Regulatory Organization|ATRO]]: AMB
{{wp|International Civil Aviation Organization airport code|ICAO}}: AMBH
|[[File%3AAnnaba_(Argelia)_(39792080482).jpg|150px|center]]
|-
|[[Bi-smi llah Intermodal Transit Centre]]
|{{flag|Bulkh}}, Aaqira
|Passenger and cargo
|24/7/365 air traffic control operations, 2x runways, capable of receiving all airframes, cargo terminal, passenger terminal, complete maintenance facilities, integrated customs and border control service
||[[Air Traffic Regulatory Organization|ATRO]]: ABB
{{wp|International Civil Aviation Organization airport code|ICAO}}: ABBH
|[[File%3AISS-65_Beirut_Rafic_Hariri_International_Airport%2C_Lebanon.jpg|150px|center]]
|-
|}


===Currency===
''What exchange systems are used within your country's economy?''
===Healthcare===
''How do people in your country procure medical care? How is it paid for?''
===Labor===
''How is labor organized within your country? Are there any social institutions or unions which deal with labor concerns?''
===Transportation===
====Road====
====Rail====
====Rail====
====Maritime====
<gallery mode="packed">
====Air====
File:0248_BeitBridgeZimbabwe_19920728.jpg
Bulkh has one international airport the Malik International Airport.
</gallery>
 
Bulkh uses [[Track gauges around the world|Standard gauge]], 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) as most of its rail infrastructure has been under the auspices of [[Burgundie]] and its sphere of influence in the [[Middle seas region]], who all use that rail gauge.


===Energy===
A single-track railway serves as the backbone of Bulkh's rail infrastructure, primarily transporting bulk goods like minerals and agricultural products from north to south. Branch lines extend to specific industrial hubs and mining regions, playing a crucial role in resource transportation. However, the limited network coverage hinders regional development, and the aging infrastructure calls for modernization to improve speed, safety, and capacity. Despite these challenges, future plans are in motion. Ongoing projects aim to modernize existing lines with sustainable materials and climate-resilient designs, while ambitious expansion plans seek to connect more cities and facilitate regional trade. Public-private partnerships as well as foreign investment, primarily from [[Burgundie]] are seen as key to securing the funding and expertise needed to transform Bulkh's rail network into a robust and inclusive force for the future.
''What type of energy keeps your nation going? Are you renewable or use fossil fuels, and if you are renewable, how recently did your country transition?''
===Technology===
''How advanced is your country? Is it an innovator, or does it largely import new developments?''
==Military==
The military of Bulkh is small but highly professional. It is compromised of three branches the Army (land), the Maritime Defense Force (navy and coast guard), and the Republican Escadrille (air force and ostensibly space force).


The Army had 5 brigades (3 infantry, 1 armored, and 1 air assault). It was reformed entirely during [[Operation Kipling]] eschewing many archaic and tribalistic traditions. It is viewed as the safeguard of secular republicanism and it's traditions and virtues follow those concepts. The army's strategic objectives are all defensive in nature but it's air assault brigade has some minor expeditionary capacities, within a limited scope. It is postulated that Bulkh could launch successful expeditionary operations against [[Umardwal]], [[Salarive]], [[Pukhgundi]], and [[Peshawarbi]], although sustainment would become an issue after two weeks of sustained fighting.
====Roads====
National highways face the constant battle against harsh desert conditions and resource limitations. Secondary gravel roads serve smaller towns and communities but succumb to seasonal flooding. These unpaved local roads provide crucial last-mile connectivity, yet navigating them, especially during rains, can be hazardous. A major contract has been signed with [[Estia-Odoneru Gypsum, Salt, and Aggregate]] and [[O%27Shea_Corporation#O'Shea_Industrial|O'Shea Industrial Services]] to extend the paved infrastructure to many villages in exchange for exclusive rights to the vast aggregate resources available in the country.


The Maritime Defense Force (MDF) is formed around 4 destroyer squadrons, with a total of 8 destroyers, 18 frigates, 29 frigates and avisos, 63 littoral patrol craft, 5 ocean going tugs, 2 hydrological survey ships, and 2 dredgers. It also has an amphibious assault craft and 3 replenishment oilers that it purchased from [[Burgundie]] in the late 1990s through the mid 2020s which constitutes it's only expeditionary capability.
=====Louage=====
The MDF also has a modest air wing with 13 fighter/torpedo bombers, 19 fighter/interceptors, 17 maritime patrol/meteorological survey aircraft, and 2 AWACS.
A '''louage''' is a minibus shared taxi in many parts of [[Daria]] that were [[Burgoignesc colonial empire|colonized]] by [[Burgundie]]. In [[Burgoignesc language|Burgoignesc]], the name means "rental." Departing only when filled with passengers not at specific times, they can be hired at stations. Louage ply set routes, and fares are set by the government. In contrast to other share taxis in [[Audonia]], louage are sparsely decorated. Louages use a color-coding system to show customers what type of transport they provide and the destination of the vehicle. Louages with red lettering travel from one state to another, blue travel from city to city within a state, and yellow serves rural locales. Fares are purchased from ticket agents who walk throughout the louage stations or stands. Typical vehicles include: the [[MILCAR#Trucks|MILCAR Jornalero]], the [[TerreRaubeuer_Motor_Car_Company|TerreRaubeuer Valliant 130]], and the [[Cross_Trucking_Company#Industrial_and_Construction|CTC M237-07]].


The Republican Escadrille is a force of 7 air wings, 4 fighter/interceptors wings, two fighter/bomber wings, and one AWACS/Electronic Warfare wing. The Escadrille also oversees the countries Strategic Forces and it's arsenal of ICBMs, the true number is unknown but it is estimated that it is around 47.
====Energy and electricity====
[[File:72,000 panel solar field at Nellis AFB.jpg|250px|right]]
In [[2024]], Bulkh and [[Burgundie|Burgoignesc]] [[List_of_companies_by_industry_in_Burgundie#Utilities|Gaia Energy Corporation]], completed a 4,660-acre solar park and battery project. It consists of 875 megawatts (MW) of solar and 3,320 megawatt-hours (MWh) of energy storage.


== See Also ==
== See also ==
Ba'athist Ixraq
*[[Burgoignesc thalattocracy#Cultural_usage|Burgoignesc thalattocracy]]
*[[Middle seas region]]


{{Audonia topics}}
{{Audonia topics}}
 
[[Category:Audonia]]
[[Category:Countries]]
[[Category:Countries]]
[[Category:Countries in Audonia]]
[[Category: Burgundie]]
[[Category:NPC Countries]]
[[Category:NPC Countries]]
[[Category: Burgoignesc NPC Countries]]
[[Category: Burgoignesc NPC Countries]]
[[Category:Map Completion Project (Completed)]]
[[Category:Bulkh]]
[[Category:Bulkh]]
[[Category:Map Completion Project]]
{{Template:Award winning article}}
[[Category:2024 Award winning pages]]
[[Category:2023 Award winning pages]]
[[Category:IXWB]]

Latest revision as of 20:46, 13 June 2024

Bulkh
Flag of
Flag
Motto: والله زمان يا سلاحي
It has been a long time, oh my weapon!
Anthem: 
Political Map of Bulkh
Political Map of Bulkh
Capitalal Qadria
Demonym(s)Bulkhiyeen
Governmentconstitutional republic
• The Most Elected Minister
Rahani Bintuta
• Co-President of Bulkh
Pasqual I
Area
• 
824,056.517 km2 (318,170.000 sq mi)
Population
• Estimate
8,500,540
• Density
10.315/km2 (26.7/sq mi)
GDP (nominal)estimate
• Total
$190,722,025,688.40
• Per capita
$22,436.46
Date formatdd-mm-yy
Driving sideright side

Bulkh, officially the Representative Republic of Bulkh, is a minor power sovereign country on the southwestern coast of the Daria region in Audonia, in a real union with Burgundie. It is bound by the Sea of Kandahar and Battganuur to the north, the Nassarine Bay and the Bulhkawan Bay to the west, the Bay of Oduniyye to the south, Pursat to the southeast, and Umardwal to the east. It came to its modern iteration after the Emirati War, in 1897 both geographically and politically. For its internal governance and policy Bulkh is a constitutional republic with consociational representation, shared between the Arab Muslim population, Bedouin nomads, and the polity of Christians. While suffrage is universal and by secret ballot, it is still common for voters to generally follow their tribal leaders lead on issues. For external policy, through its real union with Burgundie, Bulkh has a unanimous concessions requirement for the Constituent Council to deviate from Burgoignesc foreign policy, an option it rarely exercises and has never reached.

Bulkh is a member of the League of Nations, and the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement.

Its primary exports are crude oil, Construction aggregate, fish, and cork. It maintains a capitalist economy but with certain controls and subsidies around critical industries like food, water, energy, healthcare, and transportation, which are typically managed as a public-private ventures.


Many scholars have criticized its governance, economy, and politics, arguing that the real union with Burgundie makes Bulkh both a colony of Burgundie and also a dividing factor in the Daria region of Audonia. Proponents of the real union say it has brought prosperity and raised the standard of living significantly while also preserving the traditions of the Bulkhiyeen.


Geography

Climate and environment

Because it is a coastal state that is on the edge of the The Great Kavir desert Bulkh has three primary climate zones.

Bulkh, along with Burgoignesc, Battganuur, and Pursat is working on a largescale greening, rewilding, and de-desertification project to reclaim arable land from the Great Kavir called the Great Green Wall.

History

Prehistory

It's estimated that the first settlements in the modern area of bulk were settled around 10,000 BCE. These settlements were primarily in the interior where the Great Kavir desert is today. Some 5,000 years ago, the area was not so arid and the vegetation might have been closer to a savanna. However, desertification set in around 3000 BCE, and the desert became much like it is today. This desertification pushed the people further south into what is now the known as the Bulkawan Peninsula by 4500 BCE. The interior had become mostly uninhabited by 500 BCE, and the coasts had become the primary areas of both settlement and cultivation of crops. There was still bands of nomads in the desert interior but not nearly to the same extent that there had been two or 3,000 years prior. These coastal settlements became more and more settled as the cultivation of grains and the raising of goats and sheep in the grasslands became more sustainable for the larger populations.

Classical Antiquity

Medieval period

Oduniyyad Caliphate and Arabization

931 - 1483

The Bedouin peoples of the Bulkawan Peninsula were resistant to the spread of Islam and conquest by the Oduniyyad Caliphate. While the Caliphs claimed the land as their own, they were never able to formalize the government and taxation system to bring the Bedouin peoples to heel. During the 900s the Caliphate attempted to migrate some Najdi Arabs from the northern deserts of modern day Bulkh and to the area to punish the recalcitrant Bedouins. The Umardi princes brought their culture to the area, but following the Shia schism they remained Sunni, one of the few ethnically Umardi ruled areas to do so. The Bulkawan Peninsula remained segregated between a Umardi ruling class and a Bedouin population until the fall of the Caliphate. At this point the Umardi princes were expelled back to Umalia and the various Bedouin tribes retired back into their nomadic lifestyles.

Salt and slave trades

Decline of the Caliphate and the Warlords Period

1483-1642

Early modern era

Following the collapse of the Caliphate the various Bedouin tribes retired back into their nomadic lifestyles. The area remained untouched until the arrival of the Kiravian and NATION colonial efforts in the 15somethings.

Istroya Oriental colony

Istroya Oriental colony in blue.
Istroya Oriental colony in blue.

The area being arid was of little use to colonists. They moved on and found other more temperate sites for settlements in the late 1570s. From 1578-1614 there was no recorded colonial activity in the area. However, in 1615 a Martillien North Levantine Trading Company (MNLC) surveyor mapped the salt flats of the Chott al-Rezid and the company made a mad dash to secure the area.

Company rule

Main article: Martillien North Levantine Trading Company (MNLC)

Due to their nomadic lifestyle and their disinterest in engaging the occidentals, the Martillien North Levantine Trading Company (MNLC) largely left the Bedouins of the Bulkawan Peninsula alone and built their colonies around them. By the 1630s timber from Majanub was being brought to build a sprawling complex of fortified towns and salt mining operations. Businesses to support the efforts became very lucrative and wainwrights, shipwrights, and engineers flocked to the area. Beyond the Chott al-Rezid the Company build operations at the Chott al-Mouza and the Ben Ghilli Salt Flats. These operations brought millions into the Company’s coffers and is one of the primary financial activities that allowed for unfettered expansion in Audonia. The salt mines brought tens of thousands of colonists from Burgundie, the Levantine Protestant communities on Torlen and Medimeria, as well as from other parts of Audonia. The port cities of Avelie and Sant Marten both surpassed 20,000 residents in the 1690s making them bigger than Vilauristre and Port Diteaux. The back-breaking work and the blistering heat made for a seedy type coming to seek work in the colonial province of Bulkawa. This led to rapid development of the vice sectors like prostitution and drinking halls. It also required the establishment of a vast drinking liquid network. This drove the development of the tea plantations in Vitale, Pukhgundi, and other parts of Audonia.

In the Presidency Act of 1771, the Presidency of Bulkhawan was announced, covering much of the eastern Istroya Oriental colony but ceded some of the desert interior to the nomads as they were pushed out and forced to renounce their nomadic traditions. This led to intense bad blood between the colonial state and the locals. Colonial Battganuuri knights were brought into to escort the Bedouins from their villages, but clashes erupted in a number of areas leading to the massacre of the tribal peoples. In the 840 recorded Bedouin encampments in the area with an estimated population of 969,000 people, only 694 encampments and 539,000 people were successfully relocated. The remainder were assumed killed or dispersed into the vast desert waste. The brutal effectiveness of this dispossession of tribal homelands become a model for colonial powers post-independence powers for centuries afterwards. These “Trails of Trauma” paved the way for a huge boom in colonial growth and land redistribution. Vast areas formally reserved for the Bedouin were settled and huge irrigation projects were started to reclaim parts of the desert that were adjacent to littoral areas. There was even an ambitious plan to dredge a channel to the salt-stripped Chott al-Mouza in 1793 that was never realized.

Following the start of the Great Slavers Bay Rebellion, a similar call to arms led the Bedouins to unite under Ali Malik, becoming known as Malikites, a proto-communist who wanted to rid the Bulkawan Peninsula of colonial influence and establish a collective paradise. Malik gathered a force of 20,000 Bedouin cavalry and rode south to forcibly gather support for his attempts. The following year, 1824, he returned with an army of 250,000. It is unclear if these reports are just of combat troops or included his train, regardless it was a sight to behold. The colonial troops balked and retreated with each engagement and the few occidental soldiers and officers did their best to forestall the inevitable. Fearing the loss of their capital and the salt mines, the Company hastily made treaties across Audonia and redirected its troops to Presidency of Bulkhawan. A force of 45,000 colonial troops was formed and force-marched through the desert to meet the Malikites head-on. Arriving at the western edge of the Great Kazir desert in March of 1825, the colonial army set about building a camp and reinforcing its supply lines. The massive, cumbersome western-styled army immediately fell prey to the sprightly and spirited, lightning-fast raids of the Malikite army. Their supply lines disrupted and their supply of food and water dwindling, they made a forced march to the southern coast. 540 men died of starvation and thirst along the way, but the remainder were met by the navy and brought back to Sant Marten. As equatorial winter set in all they decided to wait. Garrisons were established at the salt mines and some recently created farming communities were forcibly abandoned and the men impressed into a militia. January of 1826 saw the first attempts by the Malikites to probe the defenses of the colonial forces. The Ben Ghilli Salt Flats came under attack January 12th. A small detachment of Malikite cavalry attacked the forward watch posts and were met with cannon fire from the fortified town. A squadron of Battganuuri knights and Umardi Sipahis were dispatched to try to find the main Malitike force.

Late modern period

Contemporary period

The 20th century in Bulkh saw the rapid adoption of Occidental memes such as industrialism, capitalism, urbanization, but development has been uneven, mostly occurring in its coastal regions. Following the First Great War, and especially after the Second Great War, Bulkh was rapidly increased its adoption of secularism, and democracy and its cultural and economic ties with Burgundie. The nation signed a constitution in 1906 and became a secular republic. This government set about a series of invasive modernization policies that were not popular, but any resistance was quashed by a corrupt but loyal police force and army. During the Second Great War Burgundie and Bulkh were allied against the anti-colonial powers of Audonia and Alshar and this arrangement made the government and elite incredibly rich. This income disparity as well as the Occidentalization caused a rift in the nation that ultimately led to a communist insurgency in the western part of the country during the 1960s-80s. During this period the government further embraced Burgundie and became a rising star in the globalizing world. It has become a stable global trading partner for nations and has developed a strong manufacturing sector that rivals any in the Middle seas region. Today, Bulkh is a key second tier manufacturing hub for industrializing nations and nations with moderate and lower incomes. It is also serves as a point of power projection for Burgundie in the Audonia/Alshari interface zone, through which it also conducts its own modest power projection.

Bulkh People's Republic

In 1964, communist insurgents from Umardwal spilled into the eastern provinces of Bulkh and established a People's Republic. Federal forces attempted to route the insurgents but the vast desert and lack of development in the region led to a long and tedious campaign of attrition. A formal People's Republic of Bulkh was accepted by a referendum of the people of the western provinces in 1968. At this time the Burgundie extended Operation Kipling to include the Bulkh People's Republic.

From 1968-1982 the Bulkh People's Republic (BPR) was a break away region of Bulkh that hosted its own agrarian socialist government and society. It rose in opposition to the increasingly urbanist, industrialist, and capitalist society that was forming in the aftermath of the Second Great War. Its center of power was in the market settlement of Tall Diwabjah. Despite its aims, the BPR was never successful in its attempts to fully realize its socialist ideals as it occupied mostly inarable, inhospitable desert and was, from 1974 until its defeat in 1982, constantly at war with government forces.

The BPR was most of a political movement than a defacto state and the population it oversaw were largely Bedouin nomads and transient herders who owed no particular allegiance to the BPR's government. It did some international recognition from other communist and socialist states but it was never seriously considered by most nations and had no trade arrangements with any other states. In its own internal census of 1980 it reported to have a population of 325,493 people, but the government of Bulkh has never reported more than 25,390 people in the areas under BPR control in the 1965 or 1985 censuses of the regions.

The BPR did enact a number of land-use policies that took away what nascent private property laws had been enacted in the early 20th century, but their was very little privately held property in the regions they controlled so these reforms were largely symbolic. The government created a Revolutionary Peoples Liberation Army which boasted, on average, 5,000 troops and a further 15,000 guerillas. While not significant in number these troops were enough to engage, confound, and occasionally defeat the Army of Bulkh throughout the 70s.

Government and Politics

Bulkh is a secular Consociational democratically elected oligarchic state with power being shared by the elites of the majority Muslim Arab community (68% of the population) and the minority Christian (20% of the population) and Bedouin (12% of the population) communities. Representatives to the Constituent Council are directly elected by their constituency and serve for a term of 3 years. There is a 4-term limit to service on the Constituent Council.

From within the elected members of the legislative body a Most Elected Minister is elected for a 6-year period to serve as the head of the executive branch. There are no term limits to the Executive branch.

Federal subdivisions

Buhlk is divided into 5 provinces and a Federal District.

  • The Federal District
  • Southern coastal region to be named
  • Central coastal region to be named
  • Northern coastal region to be named
  • Northern half of the interior
  • Southern half of the interior

Military

The military of Bulkh is small but highly professional. It is comprised of three branches the Army (land), the Maritime Defense Force (navy and coast guard), and the Republican Escadrille (air force and ostensibly space force).

The Army had 5 brigades (3 infantry, 1 armored, and 1 air assault). It was reformed entirely during Operation Kipling eschewing many archaic and tribalistic traditions. It is viewed as the safeguard of secular republicanism and its traditions and virtues follow those concepts. The army's strategic objectives are all defensive in nature but it's air assault brigade has some minor expeditionary capacities, within a limited scope. It is postulated that Bulkh could launch expeditionary operations against Battganuur, Chaukhira, Pursat, Umardwal, and Yanuban, although sustainment would become an issue after a week of sustained fighting.

The Maritime Defense Force (MDF) is formed around 4 destroyer squadrons, with a total of 8 destroyers, 18 frigates, 29 frigates and avisos, 63 littoral patrol craft, 5 ocean going tugs, 2 hydrological survey ships, and 2 dredgers. It also has an amphibious assault craft and 3 replenishment oilers that it purchased from Burgundie in the late 1990s through the mid 2020s which constitutes its only expeditionary capability. The MDF also has a modest air wing with 13 fighter/torpedo bombers, 19 fighter/interceptors, 17 maritime patrol/meteorological survey aircraft, and 2 AWACS.

The Republican Escadrille is a force of 7 air wings, 4 fighter/interceptors wings, two fighter/bomber wings, and one AWACS/Electronic Warfare wing. The Escadrille also oversees the countries Strategic Forces and its arsenal of ICBMs, the true number is unknown, but it is estimated that it is around 47.

Society

Self-reported ethnic origin in Bulkh (2030)

  Arab (62.4%)
  Bedouin (22.8%)
  Ebidi (3.8%)
  Occidental (2.8%)
  other/multi-ethnic (8.2%)

With 65% of its 1.5 million residents concentrated in coastal cities. The largest ethnic group, comprising 68%, are Arab Muslims, further divided into subgroups like the politically powerful Umardi and the commercially engaged Najdi. Christians make up 20%, concentrated in the south and cities, while Bedouin groups account for the remaining 12%. Standard Arabic and Burgoignesc reign as official languages, while regional dialects and religious tongues are recognized within the states in which they occur. Islam, primarily Sunni, dominates religious practice, though Christianity maintains a strong presence. Society maintains a loose class system with a growing urban middle class, while Bedouin communities hold onto tight-knit tribal affiliations. Traditional gender roles persist, but progress towards women's empowerment is evident in recent years. Ethnic and religious tensions, social inequality, Bedouin integration challenges, and rapid urbanization's growing pains pose ongoing hurdles for Bulkh's diverse populace.

Religious demographics

Self-reported religious affiliation in Bulkh (2030)

  Sunni Islam (55.5%)
  Suffi Islam (12.5%)
  Catholicism (2.8%)
  Animist/traditional religions (3.8%)
  Jewish (.9%)
  other/irreligious (8.2%)

Faith plays a central role in shaping Bulkh's social fabric. 68% of the population identifies as Muslim, primarily Sunni. However, nuanced interpretations and cultural practices create a diverse religious landscape. Christianity finds fertile ground with 20% adherence, with Mercantile Reform Protestantism and Catholicism forming the main denominations. Vestiges of the colonial past remain, with communities practicing Christian liturgical languages, like Latin.

Linguistic demographics

Standard Arabic serves as the official language, unifying discourse in government, education, and media. Regional dialects like Najdi and Wahanji Arabic resonate within their respective communities, while Bedouin groups preserve their unique heritage through diverse Arabic dialects. Burgoignesc, a reminder of the colonial era, remains present in pockets, primarily used in business and higher education.

Cuisine

Common ingredients include olives and olive oil, pitas, honey, sesame seeds, dates, sumac, chickpeas, mint, rice and parsley, and popular dishes include kebabs, dolmas, falafel, baklava, yogurt, doner kebab, shawarma and mulukhiyah. The region was also influenced by dumplings from Dolong brought through the Silk Road; turmeric and other spices from Pukhgundi; cloves, peppercorns and allspice from the Spice Islands; okra from Kandara, and tomatoes from Crona.

Religion has impacted the cuisine by making lamb the primary meat since Muslims do not eat pork, and beef was sacred under the Arunid Empire and therefore it's cultivation never took off. Alcohol is Haram under Islamic law but young urban cosmopolitans do imbibe alcohol. Palm wine is locally produced but all other alcohols are imported.

Alcohol

Alcohol is Haram under Islamic law and temperance has been a central point of Mercantile Reform Protestantism at some points of the late modern period. These religious prohibitions, however, haven't eliminated alcohol consumption in Bulkh, especially in the 21st century, amongst a burgeoning population of young, occidentaly educated, urban cosmopolitans. Their once discreet defiance has become more overt in the last few decades and has given rise to a burgeoning drinking culture, thriving primarily in the bustling urban centers. Granquai Restaurant Chain has become a haven for young urbanites seeking to indulge in the sweet nectar of the Gods, hamdullah. While ostensibly serving a menu of local and international cuisine, Granquai's lounges features a place, discreetly tucked away from public view for these youth and offers a sense of community and liberation, away from the prying eyes of the generally conservative society. The young urban professional drinking scene in Bulkh extends beyond mere hedonism. It represents a generational shift, a quiet rebellion against stringent social norms. Young Bulkhiyeen, exposed to global influences through education and media, are increasingly questioning traditional values. Alcohol, in this context, becomes a tool of self-expression, a symbol of defiance against a conservative establishment.

Palm wine is made locally from the sap of palm trees. It predates Oduniyyad Caliphate's and Islam's arrival in the region and enjoys a degree of cultural acceptance, especially in the Bedouin community. Often associated with rural communities and traditional festivities, palm wine has been shielded from religious interference, but its alcohol content is artificially made lower out of respect for Islamic morays.

Architecture

Much of the ancient surviving architecture in Bulkh is comprised of the Islamic architectural style brought by the Oduniyyad Caliphate. Much of these are religious buildings like mosques and masjid and other are government buildings primarily in the large urban settlements that would become the cities along the coasts. In the [[early modern period, architectural influences came primarily from the Occidental world, especially the styles in Burgundie. These Levantine styles persisted and even after the collapse of the Burgoignesc colonial empire and a resurgence of Occidental architectural motifs became the norm, especially in the late 20th century, after Operation Kipling. However, in the 1990s until now there has been a revival of more classical building methods, local building materials, architectural motifs reminiscent of Islamic styles of the past. While most urban cores reflect the more Occidental styles of the late 20th century and early 21st century, other less densely populated areas are much more visually reminiscent of the previous architectural styles. In the most remote areas, in the northern part of the country, the nomadic lifestyle of Bedouins has led to an almost complete absence of permanent architecture and as those populations were settled in the 20th century with the influences of modernist architectural styles and thinking some of the buildings came to reflect the tent like structures used by the nomadic Bedouins.

Economy

Bulkh is an industrialized nation with a strong manufacturing sector. It's close ties with Burgundie have led to a number of agreements with has allowed Burgoignesc companies to establish manufactories in Bulkh while paying local salaries, however all manufactories must comply to Burgoignesc health and safety standards.

Manufacturing

Shipbuilding

Bulk carrier built in Bulkh.
Bulk carrier built in Bulkh.
A Bulkh build cable-laying ship.
A Bulkh build cable-laying ship.

Unlike Burgundie's focus on technological marvels, Bulkh's shipbuilding industry carves its niche through affordability and practicality. Catering to companies and merchant marines from less advantaged nations, Bulkh prioritizes building reliable and cost-effective vessels like workhorse bulk carriers, efficient tugboats, and specialized cable layer for underwater infrastructure. Their offshore support vessels, ranging from Platform Supply Vessels (PSVs) to Multi-Purpose Support Vessels (MPSVs), cater to diverse offshore activities, all constructed with adaptability and affordability in mind. This strategic focus resonates with their diverse clientele. Regional shipping companies operating within neighboring countries or the Daria region find immense value in Bulkh's cost-effective solutions tailored for regional trade routes. Similarly, emerging market players seeking to build their initial fleets for global market entry rely on Bulkh's affordability. Independent operators and even NGOs benefit from Bulkh's ships, allowing them to participate in maritime trade without breaking the bank. The industry even boasts a history of cooperation with NGOs, building affordable vessels for humanitarian aid and disaster relief efforts. Bulkh's competitive edge hinges on several factors. Firstly, affordability remains paramount, achieved through access to readily available materials and labor, keeping prices lower than Western counterparts. Secondly, adaptability plays a crucial role, with shipyards readily customizing designs to specific client needs within their capabilities. Additionally, shorter lead times are a major advantage, thanks to simpler designs and streamlined processes. Finally, government support acts as a catalyst, offering subsidies and tax breaks to further incentivize shipbuilding in the country. However, challenges loom on the horizon. Modernization is crucial to remain competitive in the long run, demanding investments in cutting-edge technology. Environmental regulations also necessitate ongoing upgrades and adaptations to meet stricter standards regarding emissions and waste disposal. Furthermore, emerging competition from other developing nations entering the sector increases pressure to innovate continuously.

Shipwrights in Bulkh

  • Dar Al-Bahr Shipyards: Located in the bustling northern port city of Aaqira, Dar Al-Bahr is a state-owned enterprise known for its large-scale bulk carriers and tankers. They boast a long history and employ thousands of skilled workers, making them a cornerstone of Bulkh's shipbuilding industry.
  • Emirates Marine Consortium: Situated in the heart of the industrial zone of Aaqira, this Bulkho-Burgoignesc consortium brings together several smaller shipyards, leveraging their combined expertise to build offshore support vessels like PSVs and MPSVs. Their collaborative approach allows them to handle complex projects and cater to diverse offshore needs.
  • Al-Noor Shipyard: Operating in the southern coastal town of Daylah, Al-Noor specializes in building cable layers and other specialized vessels for underwater infrastructure projects. Their commitment to precision and adherence to international standards makes them a preferred choice for sensitive marine operations.
  • Khalid Bay Shipyard: Nestled on the shores of the scenic Khalid Bay, this independent shipyard specializes in building smaller, fuel-efficient vessels like tugboats and fishing boats. Their focus on innovation and customization attracts clients seeking agile and cost-effective solutions.
  • Phoenix Shipyard: This family-owned shipyard, located in the historical southern port of Qalat, has a long tradition of building small, wooden dhows for traditional fishing and coastal transportation. Their focus on preserving this cultural heritage while incorporating sustainable practices sets them apart.

Construction aggregate

Bulkh has a massive sand mining and elutriation industry in support of its construction aggregate industry. It cultivates and exports 4.8 megatonnes of sand and silica. Bulkh also has gypsum mining the excavates 12 million tonnes of the substance. These aggregates are exported or combined in concrete dry-mix, and cinderblocks and sold premixed and packaged around the world.

Agriculture

Although Bulkh is mostly arid, the nation is a major agricultural producer and exporter, with over 325,300 employed in agriculture, forestry and fishing. Because of the climate the largest agricultural subsector is grazing (sheep, goats, and Zebu cattle) in the large semiarid zones. Across the country there is a mix of irrigation and dry-land farming. Plantation farming for crops like tea, rice, sugar, and rubber exist in the heavy rainfall coastal zones but the heavy winds from the interior desert keep much of the moisture restricted to the coast. Pisciculture is also a formidable subsector with sizable domestic and deep-water fleets, farms, and sustenance communities. The success of Bulkh to become a major agricultural power despite the odds is facilitated by its policies of long-term visions and promotion of agricultural reforms that greatly increased the country's agricultural industry.

olives and olive oil, pitas, honey, sesame seeds, dates, sumac, chickpeas, mint, rice and parsley.

Infrastructure

Air

Bulkh has two international airports the Malik International Airport in metro al Qadria, serving the southern half of the country. The other is Bi-smi llah Intermodal Transit Centre which is a commercial air, rail, and passenger ferry hub that serves the northern part of the country and the southeastern coast of the Sea of Kandahar.

Name Location Type Brief description Code(s) Picture
Malik International Airport  Bulkh, al Qadria Passenger and cargo 24/7/365 air traffic control operations, 3x runways, capable of receiving all airframes, cargo terminal, passenger terminal, complete maintenance facilities, integrated customs and border control service ATRO: AMB

ICAO: AMBH

Bi-smi llah Intermodal Transit Centre  Bulkh, Aaqira Passenger and cargo 24/7/365 air traffic control operations, 2x runways, capable of receiving all airframes, cargo terminal, passenger terminal, complete maintenance facilities, integrated customs and border control service ATRO: ABB

ICAO: ABBH

Rail

Bulkh uses Standard gauge, 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) as most of its rail infrastructure has been under the auspices of Burgundie and its sphere of influence in the Middle seas region, who all use that rail gauge.

A single-track railway serves as the backbone of Bulkh's rail infrastructure, primarily transporting bulk goods like minerals and agricultural products from north to south. Branch lines extend to specific industrial hubs and mining regions, playing a crucial role in resource transportation. However, the limited network coverage hinders regional development, and the aging infrastructure calls for modernization to improve speed, safety, and capacity. Despite these challenges, future plans are in motion. Ongoing projects aim to modernize existing lines with sustainable materials and climate-resilient designs, while ambitious expansion plans seek to connect more cities and facilitate regional trade. Public-private partnerships as well as foreign investment, primarily from Burgundie are seen as key to securing the funding and expertise needed to transform Bulkh's rail network into a robust and inclusive force for the future.

Roads

National highways face the constant battle against harsh desert conditions and resource limitations. Secondary gravel roads serve smaller towns and communities but succumb to seasonal flooding. These unpaved local roads provide crucial last-mile connectivity, yet navigating them, especially during rains, can be hazardous. A major contract has been signed with Estia-Odoneru Gypsum, Salt, and Aggregate and O'Shea Industrial Services to extend the paved infrastructure to many villages in exchange for exclusive rights to the vast aggregate resources available in the country.

Louage

A louage is a minibus shared taxi in many parts of Daria that were colonized by Burgundie. In Burgoignesc, the name means "rental." Departing only when filled with passengers not at specific times, they can be hired at stations. Louage ply set routes, and fares are set by the government. In contrast to other share taxis in Audonia, louage are sparsely decorated. Louages use a color-coding system to show customers what type of transport they provide and the destination of the vehicle. Louages with red lettering travel from one state to another, blue travel from city to city within a state, and yellow serves rural locales. Fares are purchased from ticket agents who walk throughout the louage stations or stands. Typical vehicles include: the MILCAR Jornalero, the TerreRaubeuer Valliant 130, and the CTC M237-07.

Energy and electricity

In 2024, Bulkh and Burgoignesc Gaia Energy Corporation, completed a 4,660-acre solar park and battery project. It consists of 875 megawatts (MW) of solar and 3,320 megawatt-hours (MWh) of energy storage.

See also