Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 16 – The deaths of
villages have long attracted the attention of Russians most of whom trace their
ancestry back to them, but the consequence of the death of so many of these
rural settlements at once has largely been ignored and it is truly disturbing:
large swaths of the Russian Federation now have no people on them at all.
In Kostroma Oblast, Andrey
Pavlichenkov, a restoration specialist says, an area 100 by 300 kilometers without
people is rapidly emerging. That means that three million hectares of the predominantly
ethnic Russian region have no people resident in them at all (nakanune.ru/news/2020/1/16/22562900/).
Over the last decade, he continues,
the population of the oblast has contracted by 15 to 20 percent. In many cases,
people are fleeing rural areas for the entirely “banal” reason that there are
no high-speed Internet connections or cellphone towers. This emptying out is certain to lead to the
amalgamation of districts in some places.
According to Pavlichenko, “one of
the results of Chernobyl” was that scientists could study what happens when
human beings depart from an area. In
Kostroma, he suggests, there will soon be such a region without people “ten
times larger” than the nuclear exclusion zone around the Soviet atomic power
plant.
The Nakanune news agency says
that the population of Kostroma Oblast has fallen from 805,000 in 1990 to
631,000 now, and it points out that this withering away is “taking place more
rapidly precisely in ‘ethnic Russian’ regions where the number of deaths
exceeds the number of births by 1.5 to 2 times.”
No comments:
Post a Comment