Turkmenistan erects giant gilded dog monument

Statue to beloved alabai breed towers over traffic on roundabout in Ashgabat

The large, stocky breed is known as wolf crusher for its prowess in guarding sheep and goats. Photograph: Reuters
The large, stocky breed is known as wolf crusher for its prowess in guarding sheep and goats. Photograph: Reuters

A huge gilded statue of a dog has been unveiled on a busy roundabout in the capital of Turkmenistan by the country’s longtime leader.

President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov is fond of the local alabai dogs, having written an ode to the breed as well as gifting one to Russian president Vladimir Putin.

The statue, with a screen showing the beloved dogs in action wrapped around the pedestal, joins another on a different major junction in Ashgabat, also coated in gold, of Mr Berdymukhamedov himself, seated on a horse.

Dogs and horses are sources of national pride in the isolated desert nation, where they are widely used by the many traditional herders among the population of six million, which largely depends on revenues from natural gas reserves.

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Mr Berdymukhamedov has run the tightly-controlled former Soviet republic since 2007 and is unofficially known as Arkadag, or protector.

He has praised the alabai, or Central Asian shepherd dog, as national heritage and written a book as well as a poem about them. He gave Mr Putin an alabai puppy in 2017.

The large, stocky breed is known as wolf crusher for its prowess in guarding sheep and goats and is also used to guard homes and for dog fights, a popular entertainment in Turkmenistan. – Guardian