Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 31 – Russian women
are moving to China in increasing numbers in order to have greater economic
chances, live in a country where their rights are protected by law, and where
they are viewed by the male half of the population as the epitome of female
beauty, Beijing’s Baijiahoo journal says.
It has long been known that one of the
reasons Chinese men travel to Russia is in the hopes of finding a wife among
Russians whom they view as especially beautiful and that some Russian women do
marry them and move to China, a trend that many Russians find troubling (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/08/chinas-new-weapon-against-russia.html).
But now this Chinese magazine has
asked some of the Russian women who have moved to China married and unmarried
why they have (baijiahao.baidu.com/s?id=1643075170322320359), and not
surprisingly there has been a Russian translation of the article that has been
republished many times (inosmi.ru/social/20190831/245728399.html).
It turns out, Baijiahoo reports,
Russian women view China as a country of unlimited economic opportunity and
also one with a legal system in which the laws are enforced and their rights
protected and where they can count on personal security and equal treatment in
terms of property in case of divorce.
In northern China, the magazine continues,
the number of Russian women on the streets is now impressive; and those with
whom the Chinese journalists spoke said that they came to work in order to earn
higher salaries and thus “live better.”
Many work as models or on the Internet and make high salaries even by
Chinese standards.
In the past, most Russian women
arriving in China came with husbands. Now, Baijiahoo says, they are
coming on their own as well, although it suggests that in the future it is entirely
possible that they will find a Chinese man to marry “and live a beautiful life
in China” rather than returning home to Russia.
The Chinese outlet gives no numbers,
but its discussion of this new flow will only intensify Russian fears about the
future of their own nation and the risk that many of them see that their people
and its current territory will be swallowed up by the larger and more dynamic
Chinese population.
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