Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 31 – Statistics issued
by Rosstat and the United Nations show that Russia now consists of 15 to 20 “national
disaster zones,” enormous regions larger than many countries and having
standards of living which are “similar to the very poorest developing
countries,” Yakov Mirkin says.
The Moscow commentator gives as an
example the Republic of Tyva. There GDP per capita is 66 percent lower than in
Russia as a whole and amounts to 2460 US dollars (in 2015, the last year for
which data are available). This puts it alongside Bhutan, Honduras, Nicaragua,
Papua New Guinea and other third world countries (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=597E2C1D3F79B).
Life expectancy in
Tyva is 63.1 years on a par with Kenya, Mauritania, and Papua New Guinea, which
rank 149th to 151st among the world’s countries. For
Tyvan men, the situation is even worse: Their life expectancy is 58 years, on
par with Benin, Burkina Faso, and Togo, Mirkin says.
At the same time, he continues, Tyva
ranks fourth among federal subjects in terms of the number of crimes per
100,000 residents, with 2682 annually, “two thirds more than the average for
the country.”
And he concludes: “we cannot fail to
direct our attention to these ‘national disaster zones.’ They very much need
our support to rise” to something closer to the all-Russian figures the Kremlin
and its supporters take so much delight in reporting. “The saving of human souls”
is at stake.
At the very least, Mirkin says,
Russians and others “need to begin to talk about this in public.”
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