Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 25 – Between 1989
and 2010, the number of ethnic Russians living in Tuva fell from 98,900 to
49,400, with nine of 16 districts of the republic having no Russians at all or
five more having only a handful in district capitals, a trend typically
explained by Western observers as being the result of Tuvan violence against
Russians in 1989-1990.
That such violence played a role is
beyond question, but that it explains everything as many in Moscow and those
who rely on Moscow coverage of the regions and republics beyond the ring road
assume is wrong, overstating as this does Tuvan responsibility for what
happened and understating the role that Russian policies past and present has
played.
Roman Tas-ool, a Tuvan commentator
provides a useful discussion of why the latter played a far greater role than
many assume. His article originally appeared in Tuvinskaya pravda but that
source is now inaccessible. Fortunately, his article, “How Tuva Lost the
Russians,” has been reposted on the AsiaRussia
portal (asiarussia.ru/blogs/21768/).
“The impetus for the departure from
Tuva of law-abiding ethnic Russian citizens was given by perestroika,” he says.
“But not the events in Sumgait, Osh, or the Fergana valley – they occurred
later – but rather the quiet death of the system of assignments of graduates of
[Soviet universities].” Already in 1986,
there were no longer enough being sent to Tuva to fill critical jobs.
As a result, by 1988, a third of the
rural schools had vacancies among foreign language instructors. That led
Russians to decide they needed to leave because they had come to see that
studying a foreign language would be critical for their children’s future. Also driving them out was the collapse of
major industries like asbestos and cobalt.
These social and economic trends were
compounded by the new election law. Given that elections began to matter,
Russians, already a distinct minority in Tuva, could not hope to retain the top
jobs in the republic; and they didn’t. They even lost out in most of the
lower-level positions as well. As a result, Tuva looked less welcoming to them
than it had.
And when CPSU structures were
disbanded in 1991, that “in practice” put an end to the Russian presence “in
the key positions in the organs of power of the districts and the republic.”
The government became Tuvan in fact as well as in name, Tas-ool continues.
Adding to all this, he says, is the
upsurge in crime, personal crime like that which hit the USSR as a whole after
1953 rather than the economic kind which was predominant in most parts of the
Russian Federation in the 1990s. There simply wasn’t the kind of economic
infrastructure which could be criminally privatized in the republic.
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