Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 12 – The Russian
Federation, by focusing on the construction of “oligarchic capitalism,”
essentially “threw all the union republics” to their own fates, and as a
result, the governments and peoples have turned away from Moscow and ethnic
Russians are fleeing back to Russia, thus further undermining Russian influence.
That harsh judgment, one that
combines concerns about empire and social system, is offered by Aleksandr
Dokuchayev, the head of the diaspora and migration department of the Moscow
Institute for CIS Countries, in an interview published yesterday by Pravda.ru (pravda.ru/news/world/formerussr/other/11-06-2014/1211796-russkie-0/).
While he draws these broader
conclusions about what he clearly sees as Moscow’s failure and the results of
that failure across the entire region, Dokuchayev devotes most of his attention
to the status of ethnic Russians in the former Soviet republics in Central Asia
where Russian flight is continuing and Moscow’s influence is certainly less
than it was.
Dokuchayev considers the situation
country by country. In Turkmenistan,
Russians are leaving because of uncertainty about their ability to retain dual
citizenship, something Ashkhabad and Moscow agreed to but that each side has
taken steps that make the future of that status more problematic and that has
led to mutual acrimony.
“Unfortunately,” the CIS expert
says, “the Russian Foreign Ministry still cannot push this issue” as it should
have because of course it involves “not simply compatriots but citizens of
Russia” who should be able to expect that Moscow will defend their freedom to
move back and forth between Turkmenistan and the Russian Federation.
Moreover, while there are Russian
classes in Turkmen schools, they are few in number and Russians living there
are “threatened with assimilation.”
Ashkhabad isn’t interested in joining the Customs Union, and
consequently “those who can leave will do so from Turkmenistan.”
The situation in Uzbekistan, he
says, is “stable” with Russian schools and Russian classes, “but in general
whose children are growing up seek all the same to have them study” not in
Uzbekistan but in the Russian Federation.” Just now, Dokuchayev says, Moscow is
gathering statistics on this trend.
Asked about the pulling down of a
Soviet war memorial in Tashkent, the researcher said that like “practically all
post-Soviet states, national Uzbek statehood is being built on the rejection of
our common past -- more than that, not simply rejection but the cultivation of
a negative image” of that past.”
That pattern is to be found
elsewhere in Central Asia as well. In Kazakhstan, for instance, there are no
plans to celebrate this year’s 60th anniversary of the Virgin Lands
program which transformed much of that republic. In Kyrgystan, Russian
continues to be used in offices and businesses, but it is gradually being
driven out of day to day conversations.
And in Tajikistan, where very few
Russians remain and most of those are elderly, the ethnic Russians in the first
instance need aid to help them survive if not to rise out of their current
poverty, Dokuchayev says. That is something Moscow should be doing everywhere
but instead, it continues to neglect these people.
Ukraine should be a wake-up call for
the Russian government and the Russian people. What happened there would not
have happened had Moscow shown a greater interest in and support for
Ukrainians. But what happened happened because “Russia while building its own
oligarchic capitalism essential threw all the union republics out” to sink or
swim.
Not surprisingly, they are “swimming”
but away from Russia rather than towards it, the CIS specialist says. There has been a certain shift recently, but
it is “clearly insufficient.” As a result, “of course, we are losing.”
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