Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 17 – Outmigration from
the North Caucasus is “inevitable,” Russia’s presidential plenipotentiary there
says. No “Chinese wall” is going to stop it, Aleksandr Khloponin adds, arguing
that “the entire issue is how to ensure that this process will not exacerbate
inter-ethnic and inter-confessional conflicts” across the Russian Federation.
Experts say, “Novyye izvestiya”
journalist Veronika Vorontsova reports, that the level of outmigration from the
North Caucasus is high and increasing, although they acknowledge that “exact
figures” for the entire region are not currently available (newizv.ru/society/2013-08-16/187354-smena-klimata.html).
But the partial figures that are
suggest just how large this flow is.
According to the Federal Migration Service for Stavropol kray, about
6,000 North Caucasians move to that predominantly Russian region every year.
Over the last decade, the number of Dargins has increased from 6700 to 8300 in
Rostov oblast and from 3500 to 4200 in Astrakhan oblast.
And migration experts add that “a
minimum of 100,000” Chechens have moved out of their republic and region.
Most North Caucasians move to other
parts of the Russian Federation and especially to its largest cities, but some
of them – and this appears to be especially true of Chechens and to a lesser
extent Ingushes – move abroad to Kazakhstan or even to one of the countries of
Western Europe.
To the likely
horror of some Russians, the federal North Caucasus Federal District is
actively supporting outmigration. Its Inter-Regional Resource Center provides
about 60,000 rubles (2000 US dollars) to each North Caucasian who wants to move
to central Russia, a significant sum and one that North Caucasians can apply
for more than once.
As Vorontsova points out, the North
Caucasus occupies about two percent of the land area of the Russian Federation
but has about 12 percent of the country’s population. Unemployment in the
region is “the highest in Russia,” with six of the ten “unemployment leaders”
being North Caucasus republics.
Moreover, it has high rates of
population growth – last year, in Daghestan alone, the birth rate exceed the
death rate by 300 percent – and overpopulation in particular places. But these demographic factors are not the only
drivers of outmigration, the “Novyye izvestiya” journalist says.
Others include “the absence of
elementary rights” among the population there, a region where ICG expert
Ekaterina Sokiryanskaya says, “all Russian problems are present in a
hypertrophic form,” including but not limited to official failure to enforce
laws, “total corruption,” arbitrary behavior by force structures, and “a ‘privatized’
justice system.”
Changing those things is going to be
difficult if not impossible, and consequently, outmigration from the North
Caucasus is going to continue. The best the Russian authorities can do, experts
say, is to seek to re-industrialize the region to hold workers there and to
integrate migrants from the region into Russian life rather than having them
form ghettos in Russian cities.
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