Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 26 – There are 5.1
million immigrant workers, mostly from Central Asia, in Moscow and Moscow
oblast, where they form roughly one-quarter of the population, and 3.3 million
of them in St. Petersburg and Leningrad Oblast, where they form nearly half,
Russian government statistics show.
But because such numbers are
explosive in the current economic and political situation, the Moscow
authorities have claimed that the number of new immigrant workers from Central
Asia is falling when in fact it is going up, Aleksandr Shustov says (ritmeurasia.org/news--2019-06-26--migracija-iz-srednej-azii-priobretaet-ugrozhajuschie-masshtaby-43461).
A major reason why
the regime is able to make such claims, the commentator says, is that
statistics about immigration are maintained not by one agency but by two. Rosstat maintains the figures for permanent
immigrants, while the interior ministry’s chief administration for migration does
so for temporary ones.
Rosstat thus
counts all migrants who have come to Russia and remained there for nine months
or more while the interior ministry counts only those who have been there less
than nine months. In the last year, the figure for the first of these
categories has fallen from 211,900 to 124,900 while that for the second has
shot up by 800,000 to 12.7 million.
Over the last year, there has always
been a shift in the most important donor countries. The number of immigrant workers from Moldova,
Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan, Armenia and Georgia has fallen by 96,200; while the number
from Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Belarus, Azerbaijan and the Baltic
countries has gone up by a total of 864,300.
The greatest increases between 2017
and 2018 came from Uzbekistan, up 416,800, and Tajikistan, up, 224,200. As a
result, the face of immigration in Russia is increasingly Central Asian, with
people from those countries amounting to 8.5 million, a number far larger than
the entire population of St. Petersburg.
Indeed, the total number of migrant
workers from Kyrgyzstan – 877,000 – is greater than the population of Karelia,
Nizhny Novgorod, Pskov, or Murmansk oblast.
Theoretically,
those registered as being in Russia for nine months or less leave, but that is
not always the case, Shustov continues. Many remain but are not counted by
either service. And interior ministry
officials say there are approximately two million “illegal migrants” who have
stayed longer (rg.ru/2018/12/21/v-mvd-nazvali-chislo-nelegalnyh-migrantov-v-rossii.html).
Most
of these “illegals” are Central Asians, and that means that people from Central
Asia in Russia now number as many as 10 million, twice the population of St. Petersburg
and a figure comparable to that of Moscow. Adding to them are about 1.3 million
new arrivals from the Transcaucasus.
Almost
a third of all these migrants are in Moscow and Moscow oblast and a fifth are
in St. Petersburg and Leningrad oblast, while in most other parts of the
country, the number of Central Asians is extremely small. Thus, in the current climate of intensifying ethnic
conflicts and economic stringency, their presence is becoming a serious
problem.
And
that explains why officials prefer to talk about the decline of one kind of immigrant
– those seeking permanent residence – and to ignore the other and more numerous
kind – those who at least in terms of registration are short timers and will be
going back to their homelands soon.
Unfortunately,
Shustov concludes, “if migration policy is not changed, new political and economic
cataclysms, connected with the growing influx of labor migrants from the Asian
countries of the CIS are practically inevitable,” given that population in
those countries is growing while that in the Russian Federation is falling.
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