Windsurfing makes waves in Turkmenistan





















AVAZA: Better known for its inhospitable desert plains than beach breaks, isolated ex-Soviet Turkmenistan this month welcomed an unlikely group of visitors: a sun-tanned crop of the world's top windsurfers.
Bordering Iran and Afghanistan, the energy-rich Central Asian country played host to a leg of the windsurfing World Cup at a sparkling new Caspian Sea resort that authorities hope can turn the once hermit state into a water sports hub.
International competitors bobbed and weaved through the foaming surf as their sails glistened in the sweltering heat -- an unfamiliar sight in a nation that until 2006 was cut off from the rest of the world by the eccentric two-decade rule of former dictator Saparmurat Niyazov.
“This is such a chance for me!” said a joyous Orazmyrat Arnamammedov, one of only a handful of windsurfers in Turkmenistan.
“It's happiness for me to take part in a competition with sportsmen who are known around the world,” the 32-year-old sports instructor told AFP.
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A picture taken on July 1 2014, shows Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov (C) poses for a family photo with world's top windsurfers, participants of a leg of the windsurfing World Cup, at the Turkmenistan's new Caspian Sea resort of Avaza. — Photo by AFP |
Turkmenistan is on a drive to promote itself as a destination for sports, adventure travel and even beach holidays in a bid to boost tourist numbers from the current 15,000 visitors per year.
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A picture taken on July 4, 2014, shows a general view of the Turkmenistan's new Caspian Sea resort of Avaza. — Photo by AFP |