The Mervi Beluch are closely related to those Baloch in Afghanistan[5] and Iran who live near the modern borders of Turkmenistan.[4] Kerim Khan is one of the prominent of the Baloch of Turkmenistan, who helped Turkmens arrested by the Soviet government from prison.[6] Except the Baloch, the entire ancient oasis is now Turkified, with the Turkmens forming a vast majority of the population.
Under Soviet Turkmenistan textbooks in the Balochi language based on the Latin script and newspapers in Balochi were published in Ashgabat and Mary,[6] but since the independence of Turkmenistan, the Turkmen President Saparmurat Niyazov had closed almost all non-Turkmen schools.[7]
In 1926 the Baluch of Merv Oasis numbered 9,974. Their numbers fell to 7,842 in the official statistics by 1959 but then rose to 12,582 by 1970 and 18,997 by 1979.[8][9]
Wixman, Ronald. The Peoples of the USSR: An Ethnographic Handbook. (Armonk, New York: M. E. Sharpe, Inc., 1984) p. 25-26.
MOSHKALO, Vyacheslav V. 2000: "Language and Culture of the Baloch in Turkmenistan". In: Carina JAHANI (ed.): Language in Society – Eight Sociolinguistic Essays on Balochi [Studia Iranica Upsaliensia 3]. Uppsala: Uppsala University, pp. 97–103