Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 27 – Since 1991, 200,000
ethnic Kazakhs have moved from China to Kazakhstan, and another 500,000 may do
so in the coming years, Eldeç Orda says. But Kazakhstan would be wise not to
try to attract more back – there are two million Kazakhs in China now – but to
ensure they are treated well there and help influence Beijing on Kazakhstan.
On the Kazakh-language site,
Kerey.kz, the specialist on the Kazakhs of China who himself has lived there
and speaks Chinese says that Kazakhs talk a lot about their co-ethnics who have
returned but much less about the larger number of ethnic Kazakhs in China and
other countries who have not (kerey.kz/?p=11837).
That
is a mistake in two senses, Orda says. On the one hand, it prevents an honest
discussion of why such people choose not to come back to Kazakhstan. And on the
other, it constitutes a missed opportunity: If Astana takes up the cause of
these people in their host countries, ethnic Kazakhs will become an important foreign
policy resource.
The
ethnic Kazakhs who have come to Kazakhstan already, he continues, include “young
people, representatives of the intelligentsia, students and ordinary rural residents.” Another half million may leave largely
because they are “victims of political repression,” have relatives in
Kazakhstan, are businessmen, or are simply “patriotic” young people.
But
the other 1.5 million ethnic Kazakhs in China, Orda says, are not likely to
come back. (The same thing is true, he says, of Russia, Mongolia and Uzbekistan
where other sizeable Kazakh communities live.) To think otherwise, he
continues, is “laughable.” And their
decision to remain abroad is not a bad thing.
If
Kazakhstan shows that it is concerned about the way in which they are treated rather
than spending its time in appeals to resettle in the homeland, these people,
Orda suggests, could easily become “a guarantee of Kazakhstan’s influence in
the countries where they are located,” something more important than simply
adding to the ethnic Kazakh majority in Kazakhstan.
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