Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 27 – Although Moscow
has stopped publishing data on the national composition of the population except
in decennial censuses, more frequently issued data on population growth in
federal subjects shows something the Kremlin is not anxious to acknowledge: Russia
is becoming ever less Russian, the Guild of Inter-Ethnic Journalism says.
On the basis of an analysis of
population figures from Russia’s regions and republics, that country’s
pre-eminent organization of journalists covering ethnic issues says that
Russia’s population may again be growing albeit slowly but that it is quickly
becoming ever more non-Russian (nazaccent.ru/content/20446-kem-prirastaet-rossiya.html).
That is because the non-Russian
republics are contributing to a significant portion of the overall increase in
population while the Russian oblasts and krays continue in almost all cases to
be at zero population growth or even in decline.
For example, the Guild’s experts
say, three republics in the Caucasus – Chechnya, Daghestan and Ingushetia
“compensate for the continuing decline of population in the ‘Russian’ oblasts
of central Russia, with the North Caucasus federal district as a whole
increasing the population by 77,000, twice the decline of the Russian areas.
Ferreting out data on changes in the
ethnic composition of the Russian Federation has become more difficult in
recent years, the experts continue, because “the nationality line has
disappeared not only from the passports of the citizens of [Russia] but also
from the data reports of Rosstat.” As a result, one can reach conclusions only
by a comparative analysis.”
Thus, “if one compares the ethnic
composition of territories with decreasing and increasing population, then it
is possible to suggest that the percent of representatives of Caucasian peoples
in the European part of the country is growth while that of the Slavic peoples
is decreasing.”
The same pattern holds in other
federal districts. In the Urals federal district, just two regions, the
Khanty-Mansiisk and Yamalo-Nenets autonomous districts were responsible for
78.6 percent of the growth,” covering large losses in population in places like
the overwhelmingly Russian Kurgan oblast.
The two districts with growth have
been drawing people from Central Asia and the Caucasus, “and the ethnic
composition of these regions also is changing in the direction of the Turkic
and Caucasus peoples.” The high birthrates found in each would not have
happened without their arrival.
In the Siberian federal district,
the four national republics – Altay, Buryatia, Tuva and Khakasia – accounted
for 55.6 percent of the 22,400 increase in the population, while the
overwhelmingly Russian 90 and 93 percent respectively Kemerovo oblast and Altay
kray “showed depopulation.”
And in the Far Eastern federal
district, the growth in population Moscow has trumpeted has depended almost
exclusively on a national republic, Sakha.
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