Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 5 – Some 200
refugees from Ukraine have been “disinformed” and now find themselves in Sakha “without
documents, practically without money, without work and without clear prospects
in advance of a severe winter,” according to Yana Lantratova, a member of the
Russian Presidential Council for the Development of Civil Society and Human
Rights.
Yesterday, Lantratova published a
report on her September 1 visit to the refugees in Sakha on the website of the council.
Her findings are truly damning about the gap between what Moscow promised and
what it has delivered and suggest that refugees from Ukraine are suffering not only
there but elsewhere as well (regnum.ru/news/polit/1844185.html).
The first group of 185 refugees was
brought to Sakha from Crimea by a charter flight, she reports. Before getting
on the plane, Russian migration officials took away their Ukrainian passports,
which have not yet been returned to them.
And these officials told them they were being sent to Sakha rather than
a nearby region only two hours before the flight.
Moreover, Lantratova reports, the
Russian officials gave the refugees “false information” that Sakha was one of the
regions where the Russian program for the resettlement of compatriots is
operating. That is not true, and the
falseness of the Russian statements about that was confirmed by Sakha officials
who say they have been unsuccessful in getting help from Moscow.
The refugees from Ukraine were also
told by Russian officials that they could get jobs paying 120-140,000 rubles
(3000-3500 US dollars) a month. What they were not told is that these jobs
would not be available to them and that the best they could hope for would be
20-30,000 rubles (500-750 US dollars).
The refugees were
not told that there are major problems with kindergartens and schools in Sakha
and with housing, and when they arrived in that northeastern republic and not
given their documents back, they have not been able to open bank accounts which
would allow friends and relatives to send them money.
“Ukrainian bank
cards do not work on the territory of Russia” now, Lantratova points out, and
consequently, the refugees in many cases have no money at all.
Those refugees from Ukraine in Sakha who have asked to be
moved to places where they can get assistance have been told that there is no
money for that because they have already “used up their right to a free flight”
having been transported by the Russian state from Crimea to the Republic of
Sakha.
Many
of them are fearful of what awaits them when the temperature in Sakha drops
this winter to 60 degrees of frost. And it seems clear from what Lantratova
reports that the refugee situation in Sakha is about to get worse: 400 more are
scheduled to arrive in the near future, and another 1043 in a few months.
She concludes her
report by saying that Sakha officials have adopted “an active and constructive”
approach but that the refugees are suffering because of “the initial
disinformation” provided by Moscow officials and by the fact that under current
conditions, the Sakha officials can do little if Moscow does not act.
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