Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 30 – Turkmenistan, one
of the most repressive countries in the world that seldom reveals much
information about itself, has seen a third of its population flee abroad over
the last ten years, anonymous but well-connected sources have told Radio
Liberty’s Turkmen Service (rus.azathabar.com/a/29969698.html).
Their flight, Moscow’s Novyye izvestiya says, represents “the price
of dictatorship” and an indictment of a regime that has so oppressed its own
people that so many of them have concluded they have no hope except to flee
abroad (newizv.ru/news/world/30-05-2019/tsena-diktatury-za-10-let-turkmeniyu-pokinula-tret-naseleniya).
According to three sources with good
access, 1,879,413 Turkmens left Turkmenistan between 2008 and 2018. A sizeable portion of this number are working
age adults, reducing the ability of the Turkmenistan economy to function or to
pay for the large number of children and growing number pensioners.
The sources say that the size of the
exodus was far greater than the Turkmenistan regime expected. When it was
presented with them earlier this year, it immediately classified them lest
anyone would find out just how bad things are and detained some of the statistical
administration officers who had prepared the study.
Turkmenistan has been chary about
collecting data – it had a census only in 2012 and has said it will only have
another one in 2022 – and even more reluctant to release the data it has
gathered. The Turkmenistan media almost never provide any reporting about the
issue, although one thing that tends to confirm the exodus: housing prices are
collapsing in the republic (rus.azathabar.com/a/29944031.html).
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