Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 17 – Interethnic
issues in Kazakhstan attract far more attention, but the chief problems of that
country lie elsewhere, Nurtaye Mustafayev says, “in a social system which is
polarizing the population in terms of income, impoverishing people in villages,
and sparking “a mass exodus of rural people to major cities in search of a
better life.”
The three largest cities in Kazakhstan
are currently growing at the rate of almost 100,000 residents each every year,
almost all of whom are people who have come into the cities from the villages,
the historian and political scientist says (camonitor.kz/33769-begstvo-iz-aula-chto-delat-s-massovoy-migraciey-selchan-v-goroda.html).
It is no easy task to provide hundreds
of thousands of new urbanites “work and educational, medical and other
services,” Mustafayev says. And s it is no surprise that President Kasym-Jomart
Tokayev convened a meeting last week to address this problem, one which has
serious political consequences but no easy answers.
Rapid urbanization has already triggered
violence, the historian continues. In the December 1986 clashes, “one of the
causes,” although seldom discussed, was the absence of any chance that those Kazakhs
who had come into Almaty from the villages would be able to obtain housing
anytime soon.
And violence between city residents and
recent arrivals in the Kazakhstan capital in May-June 2006 led many of the former
to
demand that the city be “closed to refugees’ from the villages,” even though the right to move freely is a
basic constitutional and human
right, Mustafayev says.
In the 1990s, the Kazakhstan authorities
did little to bring
internal migration
under control, but over the last 15
years they have tried to
do so, not by restricting
the rights of
villagers to
move
if they want to
but by improving conditions in the villages
so
that fewer of
them will decide to
leave the places of
their birth for
major
urban areas.
Ambitious programs have been announced,
but despite them, the urbanization of Kazakhstan continues. It now stands at 57.3
percent, less than in Russia and the West but more than in the neighboring countries of Central Asia. But
even the Kazakhstan government assumes the share of urban residents
will reach 70 percent by mid-century.
A major reason for that, Mustafayev
says, is that it is “impossible
by definition” to
raise the standard of
living in the villages to
that of
cities. There are simply more opportunities for those living in cites,
and so
the danger of
social
explosions from Kazakhs moving into them will likely continue
to grow as well.
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