Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 31 – Fewer than one in
three residents of Moscow consist of ethnic Russians, according to a consultant
to one of the Russian force structures cited by AsiaRussia.ru this past week (asiarussia.ru/news/7667/). That figure is at odds with those of Rosstat,
but its appearance has major consequences for Russians, non-Russians and the Kremlin.
For Russians, always distrustful of
official census figures, it is certain to be viewed as an indication that their
country is becoming ever less Russian; for non-Russians, it will be viewed as showing
just the reverse; and for the Russian regime, this figure represents a
challenge to Vladimir Putin’s increasingly Russian nationalist policies.
Because Asiarussia.ru does not
provide any background on the consultant who provided these figures or on how
they were derived and because the portal is not an entirely disinterested party
given its support for non-Russians and especially Muslims, it is impossible to
know how accurate these figures are.
At the same time, however, there
have been frequent indications that the official Rosstat numbers are inaccurate
both because of the ways in which the information is gathered – many non-Russians
in Moscow avoid enumeration – and processed –officials boost the number of
ethnic Russians by folding in other groups into that category or by outright
falsification.
Consequently, while these figures
should be treated with caution, they may be useful as a corrective to some
official claims; and they are beyond doubt important because of the ways in
which they are going to drive the thinking of all the groups involved both in
Moscow itself and in the Russian Federation more generally.
According to this source, of the
10,969,000, people in Moscow, ethnic Russians form 31 percent, Ukrainians eight
percent, and Belarusians three percent, thus giving the Slavs as a group 42
percent of the total, still less than half of a city that many view as
archetypically Russian.
Of nationalities from within the
Russian Federation, Tatars, Bashkirs, and Chuvash, three nations from the
Middle Volga, form 10 percent of the Russian capital’s population, this source
says. (It notes there are more Tatars in Moscow than in Kazan.) Chechens, Daghestanis
and Ingush form four percent; Tsygane (Roma) form three percent; and Jews form
two percent.
Azerbaijanis form 14 percent of the
total, and Armenians five percent. Georgians form three percent. Central Asians
– Tajiks, Uzbeks, Kazakhs, and Kyrgyz – form five percent. And Asians from
outside the former Soviet space – Koreans, Chinese and Vietnamese – constitute five
percent of the total. All other
nationalities make up the remaining four percent.
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