By Rayhan Demytrie

BBC News, Karaganda, Kazakhstan

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. "Do you remember Tsar Nikolai's era? When the Red Army came and when Vladimir Lenin died? Well I do. So take a guess how old I am." Meet Sohan Dosova - the newly found treasure of Kazakhstan. She is 130 years old, at least she is according to her documents. The Soviet passport issued in the early 1980s states that Sohan Dosova was born in the Karaganda region on 27 March 1879. Now after a new national census in Kazakhstan, she has been "rediscovered". "This is a truly unique case," says Ludmila Kolesova, the head of Karaganda region statistics agency. "According to international standards we do not usually seek proof of ID when collecting census data, but when it came to Sohan Dosova we had to check her documents and verify this information with the social services department. They confirmed her date of birth." Tea with butter Sohan Dosova can still walk, albeit with great care, assisted by a walking stick. She eats slowly, and her favourite snack is bread soaked in tea. Sohan chews her food with a single remaining tooth. Sohan says she can no longer dance, but she enjoys singing "My secret is to add butter to my cup of tea; this is how Kazakhs like their tea," says Sohan, speaking a mixture of Kazakh and Russian. She can still see, but has hearing problems, so most of the communication is done via her granddaughters - and there is no shortage of them. Sohan had 10 children, and three of them are still alive. Her son had seven children. One of two daughters had six children, and the other, 22. "There is a small tribe of great-grandchildren," says 53-year-old Gulgoim, her eldest granddaughter. But when pressed, Gulgoim was unable to say just how many. Sohan Dosova has lived her entire life in Aul, a village in the central Karaganda region, the industrial heart of the country. Most of the population work in the coal mining industry. Semipalatinsk, the first Soviet nuclear test site, is nearby. Some of Sohan's grandchildren are mentally ill. They are among thousands believed to have been victims of Soviet nuclear experiments. But Sohan has stayed healthy. "She is in good shape, alert and active," says Valentina Shamardina, a family doctor with 40 years experience. "In my whole career I never came across cases like this. When I first arrived to do a check-up I demanded to see her passport and it all looked correct. "I've never heard of anyone living that long." Frequent visitors If Mrs Dosova really is 130 years old, that would make her the oldest person in the world. But if she ever had a birth certificate, it no longer exists. A Soviet passport issued in the early 1980s makes Sohan Dosova 130 In fact few rural Kazakhs born in those days are likely to have been registered. It was common for people to make up their date of birth. Her true age is simply impossible to establish. But the local media is satisfied she's the oldest woman in Kazakhstan. Since the results of the census were made public, journalists have become frequent visitors to Sohan's fifth floor apartment. "This place is small, I need a bigger flat," says Sohan. "There are too many people living in this crowded apartment, there is not enough room." Certainly her family appear to be hopeful that all the media attention might result in an improvement to Sohan's living conditions. But up to now, no benefactor has been forthcoming. So Sohan continues to live a simple existence in her old age, watching television, laughing and smiling. Her granddaughter Nuken claims she loves dancing, but Sohan says she is too old for that now. "I can't dance, my knees hurt... But I can sing." And so she gives a gruff rendition of her favourite Kazakh song.



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