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Kingdom of Kárpátaka
Kárpátaka Királyság
Flag
Flag
Motto: "Isten, áldd meg a Kárpátok" (Kárpát)
"God, bless the Kárpáts"
Capital
and largest city
Neapolisz
Official languagesKárpát
Ethnic groups
(2016)
89.3% Kárpát

9.7% Olohish

1% Zigano
Religion
Táltosism
Demonym(s)Kárpát
GovernmentConstitutional monarchy under a military dictatorship
• Monarch
Árpád II
Csaba Boros
Mihály Hegedüs
LegislatureDiet (currently suspended)
Chamber of Magnates
Chamber of Representatives
Formation
1089
1366
1924
1993
2002-7
Area
• Total
206,872 km2 (79,874 sq mi)
• Water (%)
3.8
Population
• 2016 estimate
6,218,370
• 2008 census
6,194,203
• Density
27.4/km2 (71.0/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)estimate
• Total
$93.159 billion
• Per capita
$8,547
GDP (nominal)estimate
• Total
$41.869 billion
• Per capita
$4,201
Gini (2008)Positive decrease 23.1
low
HDI (2008)0.662
medium
CurrencyKárpát forint (Ft)
Time zoneUTC+6 (NGT)
Date formatdd/mm/yyyy A.M.
Driving sideleft
Calling code996
Internet TLD.kp

Kárpátaka, officially the Kingdom of Kárpátaka (Kárpát: Kárpátaka Királyság), is a sovereign state located on the continent of #NAME# in #NAME#. Kárpátaka is a landlocked country with harsh mountainous terrain. Kárpátaka is bordered by #NAME# to the north, #NAME# to the east, #NAME# to the south, and #NAME# to the west. Its capital and largest city is Neapolisz. Kárpátaka is a constitutional monarchy officially governed by King Árpád II, but de-facto governed by Prime Minister Csaba Boros through a military dictatorship.

The recorded history of Kárpátaka spans well over 3,000 years, with the first history documented being ancient nomads from the great Skuthican Empire. Although its harsh terrain has helped preserve the country's rich culture and homogeneity, Kárpátaka has fallen under foreign influence and many government changes have occurred. Some examples of this include, the #NAME# invading and exploiting Kárpátaka for its rare natural resources, and the Kárpátaka Revolution transforming Kárpátaka into a socialist puppet state of the #soviet union copy#.

Since independence, Kárpátaka has officially been restored to its constitutional monarchic system of governance as it was before foreign take-overs. However, in 2002, a mere nine years after the disestablishment of the socialist state, Kárpátaka was ravished by a bloody civil war instigated by communist loyalists in the military, and the pro-government forces executed a bloodless coup d'etat due to their perceived incompetence of the king. The civil war lasted for five years and ended in 2007 after the last rebel stronghold was obliterated, and the rebel commander, Zsombor Dobos was executed. Despite the official end of the war, a low-intensity insurgency has continued throughout the nation, and many politicians and civilians have been claimed by the conflict. Since then there has been a systematic reconstruction and rebuilding process. Despite the end of the civil war, Kárpátaka has been increasingly unstable. An attempted assassination on Prime Minister Csaba Boros's life took place in 2016, which almost resulted in his death.

Kárpátaka officially describes itself as a democratic constitutional monarchy which formally holds elections, which are almost universally described by foreign observers as sham elections. Outside observers generally describe Kárpátaka as an autocratic military dictatorship, particularly noting the pervasive authoritarianism and the ornate cult of personality around the Boros regime. The Council for National Security, led by Csaba Boros holds power in the state and is currently the only legal political party. The Kárpátakan economy is described as dirigist, most services such as healthcare, education, housing and food production are subsidized or state-funded, and the arms industry is entirely controlled by the government. Kárpátaka officially follows a military-first policy, introduced into the constitution following the end of the civil war.

Kárpátaka is a very conservative and very religious nation contrasted to its counterparts in the world. 96% of Kárpátaka professed their belief in Táltosism, making it the largest religion in the country. The Zigano people of Kárpátaka follow Mohammedanism.

History

Pre-Khaganate

According to historian Tünde Zobor, nomads from the Skuthican Empire were the first settlers in modern-day Kárpátaka. This claim is universally accepted by historians and is implemented in the national foundation myth. Before the unification under Attila, nomadic pastoralism dominated the mountainous country. The area was roughly divided into sixteen clans, or nemzetség. According to modern historians, linguistic evidence points towards ancient Kárpátaka peoples speaking a form of Uralic. The ancient Kárpát people worshipped a form of sun-centred henotheism, and ancient cave paintings support this hypothesis.

Khaganate

As a federation of unified clans, Kárpátaka was established in 1089 under the rule of the mythical Attila. Attila ruthlessly conquered all vastly diverse sixteen clans into a unified nation. This amalgamation of different languages and cultures is commonly accepted as to what gave rise to the modern Kárpát people and the Kárpát language. Initially, the newfound Khaganate was a decentralised federation of nomadic clans. This changed in 1093 after a peasant rebellion devastated the nation and killed many. Attila introduced sweeping centralisation methods, including peasants swearing an oath of loyalty directly to him, the Khagan, instituting provincial atamans when no such thing existed, and forcefully promoting himself as the clan leader. In 1099, when making the daily ablutions atop Mount Ígért, Attila claimed to have experienced a divine revelation, in which a divine messenger of Tenger revealed golden tablets containing the text of what is the Arvisura. Attila set it upon himself to convert his realm to this new, divinely inspired faith and did so with relative success.

Early 20th Century

Late 20th Century

21st Century

Geography

Climate

Kárpátaka has a continental climate, with mild summers and cold winters where snowing is commonplace. Average annual temperature is 6.5 °C (43.7 °F) in the winter, and 29 °C (84.2 °F) in the summer. The average yearly rainfall is approximately 625 mm (24.6 in). Winter in Kárpátaka starts in late December and lasts until early March. Winters usually bring moderate daily snowfall, little sunlight, and cold winds. Summer starts in late June and ends in late September, and are characterised by warm sunlight and frequent rainshowers.

Environment

Government and politics

Politics

Kárpátaka is officially a constitutional monarchy ruled by King Árpád II. However, since the 2003 coup d'état, the country has been controlled by Csaba Boros and his Council for National Security, or CfNS for short, by military dictatorship. Since Boros' rise to power, the King has been stripped of all his political and administrative posts, and only exists to bolster support for the Boros regime. Since the coup, Boros has declared himself as Prime Minister, and indefinitely suspended the Diet and given himself complete dictatorial power through ruling by decree.

Law and judicial system

Administrative divisions

Foreign Relations

Military

Kárpátaka follows a military-first policy in order to secure the nation and the government. The Prime Minister holds the title of commander-in-chief of the nation's armed forces following the removal of the King's removal from the said post. Since 2008, the armed forces are under a unified command structure. In 2017, the army had 103,810 personnel on active duty, and 225,745 personnel on reserve duty. The Kárpát army is divided into the Ground Forces and the Air Force. As Kárpátaka is landlocked, the nation possesses no notable naval force, only patrol boats for the large river systems.

Military service is mandatory, and all fit for services males must serve two years of the draft upon graduating secondary school.

Society

we live in a society

Human rights

Human rights in Kárpátaka remain extremely poor according to many non-government observers. Human Rights International alleges that there severe restrictions on the freedom of association, expression, movement, reproduction and speech in place, and the Boros regime routinely employs the usage of torture and executions. NGOs have given the Kárpát people the label of "World's Most Oppressed" under the Boros regime, because of the blatant disregard for natural human rights. The government, police and military are all often considered to be suffering from rampant corruption, and all have their share in human rights abuses. Both national and international journalists who criticise the government or report on alleged abuses are harassed, threatened, detained and in rare circumstances, killed outright. Homosexuality is illegal, punishable by a life sentence in one of many clandestine prison camps.

During the civil war, many people accused of supporting the Mass People’s Liberation Army were arrested and held without charge or trial. Both human and civil rights were flagrantly violated during the civil war, with mass-rape being a notorious phenomenon of the war. Many MPLA soldiers and supporters were tortured for mere fun, with loyalists using the most sadistic methods. Civilians supporters were held in detention, often indefinitely, and were usually executed by the loyalist soldiers, making no distinction between man, woman, or child.

Prison camps

The Correction Bureau of Kárpátaka is responsible for internal security, and allegedly runs various networks of subterranean and mountainous prison camps. Defectors and escapees have testified to the legitimacy of said camps, where regime opposition is imprisoned for a life-sentence, alongside their family and the next two generations. The camps are allegedly run in the most inhumane conditions known to man, inmates are subjected to physical and psychological torture, starvation, rape, forced labour & abortions. Though unconfirmed, many have claimed that human experimentation is commonplace in the many concentration camps in Kárpátaka.

Cult of personality

Economy

Energy

Industry

Infrastructure

Transport

Demographics

Languages

Religion

Education

Health

Culture

Architecture

Cuisine

Horse riding

Literature

Folk art

Music

Science and technology

Sports

See also

Further reading