Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 23 – Polls show that
almost two-thirds of Russians want tighter restrictions on immigration and
naturalization of workers from Central Asia and support Kremlin plans to impose
greater controls on them (ritmeurasia.org/news--2020-08-23--dve-treti-naselenia-rossii-za-ogranichenie-trudovoj-migracii-50526).
As a result, ever more of these
people are trying to return to their own countries but in the last several
months, their governments have stopped providing them with much assistance,
leaving them trapped in a hostile environment, without employment, and
uncertain about their futures (stanradar.com/news/full/40962-chto-zhdet-migrantov-v-rossii-zavtra.html).
Despite Russian media hype which is
behind much of the new xenophobia, immigrant workers have not turned to crime –
their crime rates are far below those of indigenous Russians – the difficulties
these workers face represent a potential threat to both Russia if they remain
there and their own countries if they are able to return by can’t find work
there elsewhere.
Earlier this month, Dmitry Medvedev,
deputy head of the Russian Security Council, proposed tightening restrictions
on immigrant workers from Central Asia in order to ensure that Russians will
not see their jobs disappear once the economy resumes its growth after the
pandemic (tass.ru/ekonomika/9110679).
The new SuperJob poll and the
comments of Russian politicians about it show that Russians support his
proposals and want to go even further, limiting the numbers of immigrants by as
much as 80 percent and making it all but impossible for any but ethnic Russians
from these countries to have any chance of becoming citizens of the Russian
Federation.
At the start of the pandemic, the
Central Asian countries organized charter flights to bring their workers home;
but such programs are now either oversubscribed or have ended, landing many
Central Asian workers in the Russian Federation in a situation where they have
no work and no chance of going home.
Some have sought to go on their own,
but many of these are waiting at the Russian-Kazakhstan border. And Central
Asian air carriers have boosted prices to the point that few of these people
have any chance of paying for tickets. Moreover, the hard-pressed Central Asian
governments have few resources to help those who do manage to return.
No one seems prepared to help these
people, and they have been left to their own devices, a situation that experience
suggests will breed anger and even extremism, in Russia if these people cannot
get work for long periods and in the countries of Central Asia if they return
there and are unable to move abroad to Russia or elsewhere for jobs.
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