Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 18 – In the wake of
this weekend’s violence, all 900 Roma from there have now left Chemodanovka for
locations beyond the border of Penza oblast. But there is now a debate as to
how “voluntary” their departure was or whether as a result of official
pressure, it rose to the level at which it could be described as “a deportation.”
Roma leader Artur Gorbatov said the
Roma had moved on their own volition, desirous of avoiding further conflicts (rusmonitor.com/vsjo-cyganskoe-naselenie-pokinulo-chemodanovku-28-cygan-arestovano.html). But the Russias Newsru agency said their departure
was “forced-voluntary” because officials made it clear they wanted them to
leave and helped them to go by provi ding
buses (newsru.com/russia/18jun2019/gypsy_penz.html).
The After Empire portal,
based abroad, however, described what has happened as the return to Russia of “ethnic
deportations” (afterempire.info/2019/06/18/deportacija/). It cited
the words of Sergey Fadeyev, a leader of a rural soviet, that all the Roma had
been compelled to go and that they will not be returning anytime soon.
The Roma were
supplied with buses and all Roma were put on them to go tot Volgograd Oblast
where the local Roma diaspora agreed to receive them, Fadeyev said. He
continued that they were “forced” to get on the buses, although apparently some
went of their own volition out of fear of further violence.
Fadeyev
then told journalists that the property the Roma had left behind would be
disposed of once officials figured out who really owned it, implying that it probably
doesn’t belong to them at least any longer.
“How does
this differ from the total deportations in Stalin’s time of the Chechens,
Kalmyks, Meskhetian Turks, Crimean Tatars and others, when the entire ethnic
community is held responsible for the actions of some of its members?” the
editors of After Empire ask. The only difference is tin these “more humane
times,” they are carried off in buses, not cattle cars.
Very
shortly after Fadyev made his statement to the media, his immediate boss, Vyacheslav
Fomichyov, the head of the Bessonovsky district, declared that there had been
no deportation. Indeed, according to him, there had been no buses at all. Fadeyev
for his part quickly backpedaled taking back everything he had said earlier.
The only
question, one the answer to which is likely to emerge in the coming days, is
when he was telling the truth: before Fomichyov intervened or afterwards?
In fact,
the deportation of ethnic groups did not end with the death of Stalin as many
imagine. In March 1970, 17 years after
Stalin’s death, the Soviet regime deported the entire Yagnob people, more than
10,000 in all, from their homeland in highland Daghestan to the lowlands to
ensure better control of the border.
They were
moved by helicopter but just as those before and after them, they were
compelled to leave and many who left suffered and even died as a result (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2015/10/yagnobs-last-nation-soviets-deported.html).
It now appears that post-Soviet Russia has continued this horrific tradition
with the Roma.
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