Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 14 – Because the
population of Siberia is so small and the influx of Central Asian and Caucasian
workers there for the extraction industries so large, a Moscow commentator
suggests, Russia is at risk of “losing Siberia” not to China as many Russian
nationalists have long feared but to Islamist groups instead.
And while outcomes are highly
improbable – Chinese citizens now form fewer than five percent of the population
of the Russian Federation of the Urals, and Muslims from Central Asia and the Caucasus
likely form an even smaller share – they are exactly the kind of apocalypticism
which increasingly infects the Russian media and Russian society.
In a commentary on KM.ru yesterday,
Aleksandr Romanov says that recent events in Surgut are neither normal everyday
conflicts or “inter-ethnic” clashes but quite possibly an effort by “radical
Islamists” to make Siberia into “a base” or even “a khalifate” for Wahhabis against Russia (km.ru/v-rossii/2013/05/13/migratsionnaya-politika-v-rossii/710589-rossiya-teryaet-sibir-i-zakhvatyat-ee-ne).
Three
automobile columns organized by Central Asians and Caucasians in Siberian
cities in the last week have sparked precisely this speculation, Romanov says,
noting that the claims of the participants that they were only bringing gifts
to children in orphanages are dubious and that officials have refused to
provide explanations of what took place.
In this situation, the KM.ru
journalist says, other journalists “began to compose their own versions and
came to the conclusion that behind the automobile processions was concealed
preparation for an inter-ethnic conflict” or even “an effort by local Wahhabis
to establish their control over a wealth oil region and create on that basis a
so-called ‘Tyumen khalifate’” (kp.ru/daily/26073.5/2980217/).
According to the account in “Komsomolskaya
pravda,” local residents are fed up with the behavior of the Central Asian and
Caucasian gastarbeiters in their region and have concluded that the Wahhabis
have targeted it after Moscow and St. Petersburg for the creation of what they
hope will become “a rear base of the Wahhabis.”
In what the author of that account says is a
summary of homilies in local mosques, Muslim groups there see “Khanty-Mansiisk,
Yamalo-Nenets, the Komi republic and part of Tyumen as a beautiful foundation
for an Islamic state which sooner or later all the countries of the world will
recognize. This state will be called
Tyumenia.”
Such suggestions not only further
exacerbate relations between ethnic Russians and the Muslim gastarbeiters, but
they also provide yet another charge that Moscow officials can deploy against
Siberian regionalists. After all, few ethnic Russians will support that
movement if it can be presented as a kind of cover for an Islamist agenda.
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