Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 30 – Until recently, no one beyond its closest neighbors had ever heard
of the village of Klishina in Tula Oblast, but in 2016, it became a media
sensation when journalists said “the first Kyrgyz village of Russia” was being
built there and Moscow officials warned that this was a threat to inter-ethnic
peace and even the territorial integrity of the country.
At that
time, the Russian realtor who owned the land sold an allotment to Baarikan
Aiylchiyeva, an ethnic Kyrgyz whose late husband was an ethnic Russian. Having
lived in Russia for more than 30 years, she and three of her children have
Russian citizenship and some of her children and grandchildren have been
baptized as Russian Orthodox Christians.
“Nevertheless,”
Tatyana Zverintseva of the Fergana News Agency, “the Kyrgyz lady did not forget
about her roots and continued to be in contact with her compatriots.” Soon her
relatives and acquaintances began to purchase land in the same place. And then
“acquaintances of those acquaintances” (fergananews.com/articles/10150).
Soon it became
obvious to the landlord that he was selling mostly to Kyrgyz, “although there
were exceptions – some of the plots were acquired by Russians, Moldovans and
Armenians.”
But unfortunately for what happened
next, the Kyrgyz residents didn’t conceal what was occurring but instead began
to call their village unofficially Ala-Too, launched a Facebook page (facebook.com/groups/581697675345803/about/)
and even created their own Ala-Too web page (alatoo71.ru/).
Construction of housing in the
village went slowly, far slower than the media attention the villagers soon
received. On May 16, 2018, the Kyrgyz
news service covered the appearance of “the first Kyrgyz village in Russia” in
a celebratory way (24.kg/obschestvo/84664_migrantyi_vrossii_nachali_stroit_pervoe_kyirgyizskoe_selo_/).
Within days, Russian outlets covered
the same story but in a far more negative way, openly speculating as to what
the appearance of a Kyrgyz village within the borders of Russia could mean (lenta.ru/news/2018/05/16/wtf/
and tsn24.ru/postoronnim-vxod-nezhelatelen-v-tulskoj-oblasti-stroitsya-monoetnicheskaya-derevnya.html).
But it became a country-wide issue
when Komsomolskaya pravda published
an article about the village shortly thereafter (https://www.kp.ru/daily/26836.4/3876719/).
The paper’s journalist interviewed both Kyrgyz and Russian residents, both of
whom stressed that there were no problems between them and that the whole thing
was being blown out of proportion.
Howvever, Sverintseva says, this was
too little and too late, because the Moscow paper featured a caricature “on
which an individual of obvious Asiatic appearance sets up on his wooden house
the Kyrgyz flag and a tablet reading ‘Pasolstva” thus misspelling the Russian
word for embassy.
That article in turn article was
followed by a comment from Nikolay Patrushev, secretary of the Russian Security
Council, that “the authorities of Russia were very nervous about the growth in
the number of mono-ethnic settlements around Moscow. He didn’t mention Ala-Too
by name but he might as well have (ria.ru/society/20180803/1525906232.html).
And at about the
same time, Rossiiskaya gazeta picked
up the story, with its reporter saying he was frightened about going into this
Kyrgyz aul, fearing that it would be
something like “the slums of Shanghai or worse Mumbai and certain the Kyrgyz residents
were violating the law by raising food (rg.ru/2018/05/30/v-rossii-poiavilsia-pervyj-nacionalnyj-anklav.html).
“The scandal in
the media continued with new force, the Fergana journalist says. “Now people
were talking not about ‘the seizure by migrants of Russian land from time immemorial’
but about ‘the violation of rights’” because of the ethnicity of the purchasers
– even though many of the ethnic Kyrgyz had Russian citizenship.
The Kyrgyz were thus being attacked “not
as citizens of another country but as representatives of a ‘non-titular’
ethnos;” and because of that, the liberal media got involved, attacking this
violation of the Russian Constitution (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2018/07/18/77196-esli-mordoy-ne-vyshli-tak-i-skazhite).
But local
officials, pressed by local media and by suggestions in Moscow that Radio
Svoboda and the BBC’s Russian Service (sm-news.ru/antirossiyskie-sily-razduvayut-pod-tuloy-mezhnatsionalnyy-konflikt/)
were behind the problem, came up with a uniquely Russian solution: they redrew
the lines of the village and gave the land back to the original owner.
Many of the villagers
suspect they are the victims of a behind the scenes struggle among various
clans; and not surprisingly both they and the Kyrgyz of Russia and the Kyrgyz
of Kyrgyzstan are upset. In sum, Zverintseva says, they were “welcomed to their
new motherland” where everything is very complicated.”
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