Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 27 – More than
23,000 citizens of the Russian Federation, a large percentage of them
non-Russians from the North Caucasus, sought political asylum in Europe in
2012, a number that ranks Russia just behind Afghanistan and Syria and ahead of
Iraq, Somalia and China, according to Eurostat, the European Statistics Bureau.
In a report
about this on the Word Without Borders portal yesterday, Yekaterina Trofimova
reported that 332,000 people requested asylum in EU countries last year, of
whom 26,250 were from Afghanistan, 23,510 from Syria, and 23,360 from the
Russian Federation (wordyou.ru/v-rossii/beg-iz-ussr.html).
Svetlana
Gannushkina, a Moscow human rights activist, said that it was entirely “logical”
that Russia was now in third place: “After the Chechen war, Russia was in first
place in terms of the number of political refugees; during the war in
Afghanistan, it fell to third. [And] now as a result of the armed conflict in
Syria, it is in third place.”
She suggested that most of those
from the Russian Federation seeking asylum in Europe were from the North
Caucasus where, as she put it, “there are no authorities except bandits” and
where instability and the ineffectiveness of the regional authorities are
driving ever more people to seek refuge elsewhere.
“All the systems of the country are in
a stupor,” she continued, and “don’t work. The executive powers work but only
when they are given orders ‘from above’ to arrest this person or to put that
one in jail. But people need stability,
and it is no surprise that they are trying to find it in other, more civilized
states.”
Many of the latter are in Europe,
the Eurostat report suggests, with many refugees from the Russian Federation
going to Germany, Sweden, Great Britain, and Belgium. But those fleeing from
violence and oppression do not always get the asylum they seek. Last year only
14 percent of them received asylum, while 73 percent were turned away.
Polina Zherebtsova, the author of a
widely-read “Diary” on the wars in the North Caucasus who recently received
asylum in Finland, put a more human face on these already disturbing
statistics.
She told Trofimova that “the
incorrect policy of the last 20 years in the Russian Federation is forcing many
people to seek a haven beyond the borders of the country. The bloody and unending
wars in the Caucasus and in Chechnya have finally split peoples apart who
earlier had felt themselves part of a community.”
“Before the Chechen war, [members of
non-Russian nationalities] were proud that their grandmother or mother was an
ethnic Russian, but after ‘the second Chechen’ conflict, they began to hide
this as something shameful,” the Grozny native said. And that has been matched
by the hatred of ethnic Russians elsewhere to people from the North Caucasus,
including their fellow ethnic Russians from that region.
Such hostility and antagonism, Zherbtsova
continued, “has been artificially supported from above,” from Moscow officials
who are interested in keeping the conflicts from which they profit going and
who see the old imperial divide and rule strategy as their best chance to do
that and to maintain themselves in power.
In Russia today, she noted, “there
is no unity and no sense that all these people live in a single country: they
have been divide up” as a result of the arbitrariness and illegal actions of
the powers that be, the police and the military. Anyone who opposes them and
remains there puts his life at risk.
“Corruption is flourishing, while
health care and education are dying,” the writer added. And the standard of
living in the region for the vast majority is so low that “many old people and
their children in the villages are simply starving. Pension and pay are too
small” for them to pay for housing or even for food.
Anyone who stands up and complains
about any of these things because of what he has experienced “often must flee
from the country in order not to be killed” by the powers that be. Russia, she concluded,
“has become a country unsuitable for normal human life.” Thus, the countries of
Europe have become a magnet.
Europeans can be proud that they are
viewed in this way and that victims of oppression elsewhere now view the
continent as the place where they believe they can hope for protection. But at the
same time, they should be ashamed that their governments are giving asylum to
so few of those who seek it and sending many seekers back to a terrible fate in
the Russian Federation.
In recent months, in actions that
have attracted relatively little attention beyond the communities directly
affected, Austria has send groups of Chechens back as has Belgium, actions that
have their analogues elsewhere and that are tarnishing Europe’s reputation as a
defender of human rights and a protector of those whose rights have been
violated.
If such people who have fled
official arbitrariness of official arbitrariness in Russia find that they
cannot count on protections from those in the West on whom they had placed
their hopes, it should come as no surprise that at least some of them will be
more prepared to listen to the radicals in their homeland, an outcome that
helps neither the West, nor Russia, nor people who have only wanted to have a
normal life.
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