Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 19 – Kazakhstan was
one of the first republics to promote the return of ethnic Kazakhs from abroad.
It launched a program to attract them in November 1991 even before independence
in order to change the ethnic balance in Kazakhstan and to compensate for the
flight of loss of skilled personnel with the flight of ethnic Russians.
Initially, there was widespread
support for the program. Kazakhs were barely a majority in their own country,
and ethnic Russians dominated many cities and entire regions. Having their co-ethnics
return was seen by the government and most Kazakhs as an essential step to
promote national security.
But in recent years, support for the program has
ebbed. On the one hand, Kazakhstan’s ethnic balance is now very much in Kazakhs’
favor, given the higher birthrates among the Kazakhs than among Russians, the
departure of three million Russian speakers, and the return of a million ethnic
Kazakhs from abroad.
And on the other, as Gaziz Abishev
points out, the government of Kazakhstan has spent enormous sums to get Kazakhs
to return (ia-centr.ru/experts/gaziz-abishev/dolzhny-li-kazakhstantsy-repatriantam/). (Sometimes as
well, these returnees have created problems for the government and for society (cf.
jamestown.org/program/chinese-repression-of-muslims-in-xinjiang-echoes-across-central-asia/).)
As a result, the Kazakh commentator
says, opinion about the desirability of continuing to seek the return of ethnic
Kazakhs from abroad is divided. “Some passionately support it, others are
neutral, and a third is skeptical” about the value of doing especially given
that most are relatively low-skilled and some a burden on society.
They disagree with the supports who
continue to argue that “’Kazakhs must be concerned about their brothers.’” They
are not opposed to allowing them to come back but don’t believe the government
should be spending enormous sums encouraging them to do so and supporting them
when they arrive.
The opponents raise two even more
significant issues: Why, they ask, should Kazakhstan, “which has been
proclaiming that it is building a political nation in which all ethnic groups
are equal, so clearly declare that it is inviting back ethnic Kazakhs” rather than
all people who may at some point have lived in Kazakh territory?
And why, they continue, should
Kazakhstan be trying to have them come back rather than using its diplomatic
muscle to defend the rights of Kazakhs wherever they live – and right now in
the first instance in China’s Xinjiang where they are suffering abuse?
Behind both of these questions is
another: “who for Kazakhstan is the more important – citizens regardless of
ethnicity or Kazakhs regardless of citizenship?”
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