Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 16 – Transbaikal officials
are working on a deal with China that would allow Chinese firms to rent more
than 300,000 acres of land in that Russian region, but a Beijing official says
that the deal won’t go through unless Moscow agrees to a massive influx of
Chinese workers because there are no Russians available for work there.
According to “Nezavisimaya gazeta,” the
Transbaikal kray government is ready to sign a letter of intent that would
allow a Chinese company to rent the land for 49 years, but “in Beijing, they
consider that such a transfer of land is insufficient” and that Moscow must
allow for the entrance of Chinese citizens to work it (ng.ru/economics/2015-06-15/1_china.html).
This new
Chinese demand was presented by a senior official of the Chinese Institute of
International Strategic Research last week in a Chinese newspaper. Moscow has
traditionally viewed that institute as expressing the official position of
China. (For a Russian translation of the article, see inosmi.ru/fareast/20150613/228536555.html%20-%20ixzz3cu20ziwj).
According
to the Chinese writer, Beijing believes that Moscow not the Transbaikal
authorities is being Russia’s new willingness to rent land to China but insists
that this “progress” will not be complete until the Russian authorities agree
to simplify procedures for Chinese workers to come there in large numbers.
“So far,
he wrote, “the countries have signed only an agreement on intentions, and time
is needed to conclude a real contract which will have real force.” For that to
happen, Moscow will have to agree to the “large scale” resettlement of Chinese
citizens in the Russian Federation, something that will inevitably disturb many
Russians.
As
Mikhail Sergeyev, the head of the economics section of “Nezavisimaya gazeta,”
observes, the Beijing writer “considers the transfer of land in the Transbaikal
kray to be only the first swallow after which must follow others” and that such
transfers are not “only” about an economic profit.
Beijing
has already identified nine territories in Siberia and the Russian Far East
which it would like to rent and then introduce a Chinese workforce, Sergeyev
writes. And it is clear that economics is far from the most important
consideration, something that will be even more of a red flag to Russians.
He
quotes Natalya Zubarevich, a specialist on Russia’s regions at Moscow’s Higher
School of Economics, on this point. Much of the land the Chinese want to rent,
she says, is hardly good for agricultural exploitation. The fact that Beijing
wants to rent so much of it thus raises questions of its intentions.
Sergeyev does not address
it, but this Chinese move is certain to provoke not only Russian nationalists
in Moscow but also Siberian regionalists who may welcome Chinese investment but
are unlikely to be happy about any massive influx of ethnic Chinese which would
radically change the ethnic balance in a region from which Russians continue to
leave.
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