Paul Goble
Staunton,
September 29 – At their closest place, between the two Diomede Islands, Russian
and American territories are separated by only 3.7 kilometers, allowing residents
on each side to catch sight of those on the other. But “in fact,” Russian
journalist Elena Lipova points out, “it’s easier to go from Moscow to the US
than from Chukotka to Alaska.”
There
is a visa-free regime for border region residents, she says, but “up to the
summer of 2018, no one, including residents of Russia was allowed to go to
Chukotka without the permission of the FSB.” To compensate, she offers a “virtual”
tour with 49 photos from both sides (anews.com/p/98127911-chukotka-protiv-alyaski-kak-zhivut-na-granice-rossii-i-ssha-49-foto/).
The residents of
Little Diomede Island and adjoining Alaska, which are part of the United States,
and those of Big Diomede Island and the Chukchi region of the Russian
Federation live in completely different worlds, whether they can see each other
or not, the Russian journalist says and her photographs demonstrate.
On the American
island, there is a town of approximately 120 people who are entirely supplied
by air from the mainland. Residents joke, Lipova says, that when planes are
delayed, they can run out of toilet paper.
They have electricity from diesel generators and water from a spring,
supplemented during the winter by melted snow.
The American
island, she continues, has a good school with running water and indoor
plumbing. It has its own web page (diomedeschool.blogspot.com/), and
its students are flown to mainland towns to take part in athletic competitions.
The situation on the Russian island
is entirely different. There used to be two Inuit settlements there, but even
before World War II, most chose to resettle on the mainland. After 1945, the
Soviet government forcibly removed the remaining 30. The only people there now are 12 border
guards.
No tourists, from abroad or even from
Russia, are allowed in without special permission; and when they are given
that, they are accompanied throughout their stay by a military escort, Lipova
says. What products and fuel the
residents have are brought in by military plane or naval vessel. There is no Russian radio or television,
and residents don’t have access to the Internet.
The contrast between the two sides
of the Bering Strait is even clearer if one compares not these two islands but
the two mainlands they are linked to. There are no railroads in Chukotka and
only a few kilometers of paved roads. Alaska
has 760 kilometers of rail line and far more paved roads, although many areas
are still served only by air or water.
Russian officials claim that
residents of Chukotka receive “a little less than 100,000 rubles” (1400 US dollars)
a month, but residents say the actual figure is half that or about 700 US
dollars a month. In Alaska, residents
earn on average 6700 US dollars a month – or using current exchange rates,
about 450,000 rubles.
In
addition, Alaska residents receive 1150 US dollars every month from the amount the
state earns from the export and sale of oil. Chukotka residents receive nothing
for the natural resources Moscow takes out, Lipova says.
This difference in incomes is even
worse than it seems, she suggests, because unlike what some might expect, the
cost of living on the Russian side is approximately the same as it is on the
American; but incomes are “incomparably less,” resulting in massive poverty in
the Chukotka region.
The pictures Lipova offers confirm
her words.
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