Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 18 – “Russian
Cyprus,” the term that has been used to describe the 50,000-strong
Russian-speaking population of that Mediterranean island has experienced a
remarkable rise since the end of Soviet times but now may be declining in
importance given that Cyprus is now a member of the European Union, according
to a Russian journalist.
In an article on Rosbalt.ru, Tatyana
Khrulyeva surveys the rise and what she sees as the potential fall of this
community. According to the 2011 Cyprus
census, there were only 8164 Russian citizens living on the island, but in
reality, there are far more Russians there and they play a variety of roles (rosbalt.ru/main/2014/02/15/1233278.html).
“Not all Russians allowed themselves
to be counted,” she says, given that many of them are involved in activities they
do not want to call attention to. Moreover, not all of the members of Russian
Cyprus are ethnic Russians or citizens of the Russian Federation. Many have
other backgrounds and it is thus more appropriate to speak of the
Russian-speaking community.”
Using that measure, unofficial
calculations suggest that there are some 50,000 Russian speakers on Cyprus,
approximately six percent of the island’s total population. Most are in the
major cities, and there are so many in Limassol that some there jokingly refer
to it as “Limassolograd.”
The Russian speakers are not
involved in local politics, but they are very much part of the social and
economic scene. There are various Russian-language newspapers and journals and
a Russian-language radio station, there are four Russian schools, and there are
Russian churches and festivals. As a result, few of those who speak Russian
there have learned Greek: English and Russia are sufficient.
According to Khrulyeva, there are
four basic sub-groups of the Russian-language community of Cyprus. First, there
are the Pontic Greeks who in Soviet times lived on the shore of the Black Sea.
Most of this community left Russia in the early 1990s, many went to Greece
proper, but 10,000 settled in Cyprus, mostly around Pafos.
But this community is now declining,
she continues. The economic crisis has left 30 to 40 percent of its members
without work – a figure that in the off-season rises to 70 percent -- and
because few of them own property on the island, ever more of them are leaving to find employment elsewhere.
Second are the group Khrulyeva calls
“the Russian wives.” According to Cyprus
media, “almost 50 percent of the marriages” on the island involve Russian
women. In the 1970s and 1980s, Cypriots
often went to the USSR for higher educations and returned “not just with
diplomas but also with spouses.” Many of these women, despite their degrees,
now work as domestics.
The third group consists of “Russians
who are able to live in Cyprus for an extended time during the course of the year.”
Most of these people have good incomes and are from Russia or Ukraine. They
came to Cyprus not only because of the good weather and good schools but because
until the island joined the EU, it was just about the best place in the world for
Russian companies to register and operate as offshores.
And the fourth, Khrulyeva continues,
are those who came to find work. Getting a visa to Cyprus is easy but getting
work permits is much less so. Consequently, those who came in pursuit of jobs
have often found that while they like the weather and the schools, they are
forced to work in service jobs far beneath those they were trained to do.
It is entirely appropriate to speak
of “Russian Cyprus” now, Khrulyeva says, but “will it be significant some 20
years from now?” The answer is unclear.
Cyprus’ membership in the EU has “put an end to the offshore paradise” it
represented in the past, and the government is collecting taxes more
rigorously. As a result, wealthy Russians are leaving.
But so too are younger ones.
Difficulties with finding a job mean that ever more of them and their parents are
looking abroad as the place to study or find a job. Some of those who study in the Czech
Republic, Belgium or England may come back to Cyprus, “but most are unlikely to
do so.” That pattern, she says, also affects children of mixed marriages who
speak Russian.
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