Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 30 – In the
pursuit of his goal of exacerbating the European refugee crisis, Vladimir Putin
has taken actions in Germany including stirring up the Russian German community
over the Liza case that have sent Russian-German relations to a new and much
lower level, according to Nikolay Mitrokhin, a Russian analyst who lives in
Bremen.
This is no small thing to have done,
the analyst says, because “Germany had been the last major state of the Western
world with which Russia had the illusion of partnership relations.” Now, Berlin
is looking at Moscow far more critically than it did and Germans are asking just
how far the Putin regime is ready to go (grani.ru/opinion/mitrokhin/m.248146.html).
The cause of all this is quite
simple, Mitrokhin says. Liza is a 13-year-old Russian German girl who went
missing for 30 hours. When she returned home, she said she had been kidnaped
and raped by several Arab-looking men, an inflammatory charge now at a time of
massive immigration to Germany from Syria and the Middle East.
The police and her parents dismissed
that version and one local newspaper suggested Liza was in love with a
19-year-old German of Turkish origin and had dreamed up the charges she made to
hide her activities from her parents.
According to Mitrokhin, “this versioin appears quite likely.”
That is because, he says, “despite
the anti-Turkish and anti-Islamic attitudes among Russian Germans, sexual
relations and marriages of Russian speakers with Turks, Kurds, and Albanians
living in Germany are no rarity.”
Had the case ended there, no one
would have paid a lot of attention, but pro-Moscow outlets using social media
whipped up the Russian German community, sparked demonstrations in a variety of
German cities, and called into question the ability of the German police to
protect Germans from Muslims and Turks.
Underlying this conflict, Mitrokhin
points out, are “the social problems of the Russian-speaking population of
Germany. It now numbers “no fewer than
four million people, the largest foreign language community in the country.” Many of those who formed its core were poorly
educated and low skilled and thus were in the same social niche as Turks in
Germany.
That led to conflicts and
suspicions, and the recent case shows that they are something that others can
play on, even if many of the Russian Germans have acculturated if not
assimilated into German life. Indeed,
sociological research shows that the Russian Germans were the most successful
large diaspora in Germany.
But precisely because they were
successful, they and their problems were largely ignored by the authorities,
Mitrokhin says. That neglect especially now when Berlin is focusing on the new
influx has rankled many, especially since they continue to view themselves as a
distinct group – they identify as Rusaks – and follow Russian media and culture
more than German ones.
Russian media have played on this,
talking about the new immigrants as being “a crisis of Europe” and about the
way in which the Russian Germans have been neglected and otherwise getting a
bad deal. Such stories “recall the
situation at the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.”
Some of Liza’s relatives turned to
neo-Nazis from the National Democratic Party of Germany, which has ties with
Moscow, or to other radical groups and a social media campaign began to
mobilize Russian Germans to engage in public protests and demand their rights
against the new migrants.
Their success in mobilizing the
Russian Germans with this story has prompted “the German authorities to
evaluate this unexpected ‘warning’ and now to guess about its causes.” That is
leading ever more of them to view the upsurge in the activity of Russian
Germans as being the product of Moscow policies and to questions about Russian
intentions.
Whatever the exact facts of the case
are – and they remain in dispute – “serious harm has been inflicted on
German-Russian relations” and that is leading Berlin to revise its “condescending
attitude toward Putin sympathizers and direct agents of the Russian special
services in the Russian-language diaspora,” Mitrokh continues.
Moreover, it is prompting
discussions about whether Germany needs to expand Russian-language media for
its Russian speakers in order to ensure that they are not mobilized against
Berlin by Moscow and to fears that “pro-Putin activity among the Russian
Germans will not disappear” but must be countered in one way or another.
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