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Russia's First Illegal Alien Deportation Camp Opens in Krasnodar

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  • Russia's First Illegal Alien Deportation Camp Opens in Krasnodar

    Window on Eurasia: Russia's First Illegal Alien Deportation Camp Opens in
    Krasnodar

    29 December 2004



    Paul Goble



    Tartu, December 29 - A camp intended to confine illegal
    immigrants until they can be speedily deported from the Russian Federation
    opened today in Krasnodar krai, the first such camp to be opened in
    post-Soviet Russia and one organized in such a way that it seems certain to
    exacerbate ethnic tensions not only there but elsewhere as well.

    Krasnodar Governor Aleksandr Tkachev, who has long pushed this
    idea, said at the opening that "we have begun the struggle with univited
    guests, and we will continue this work to find, detain, and expell those who
    do not wish to obey" Russian laws, Radio Mayak Kubani reported earlier
    today. (http://www.radioportal.ru/mayak/index.shtml?news )

    Tkachev added that people living in his territory "ought to be
    able to live a peaceful life and not be afraid of going out to work or to
    rest. And as experience shows, among these illegal [migrants], there are
    criminals."

    In the near future, Krasnoyarsk officials have indicated that
    they plan to open three additional camps elsewhere in that southern Russian
    region. Each of these four tent cities will hold up to 150 people pending
    deportation and will be heavily guarded, according to "Novyyze izvestiya."
    (See http://www.newizv.ru/news/?id_news=1367304-10-21 .)

    This action comes following a significant increase in the
    reported number of illegal aliens coming into the region from the Caucasus
    and Central Asia and the apparent inability of officials there to control
    the situation, even though in the last year alone they had increased the
    number of militia officers solely responsible for dealing with this issue to
    400.

    Officials both in Moscow and the regions are attempting to deal
    with the anger many Russians feel toward illegal immigrants, especially
    those from the Caucasus and Central Asia. But so far, most of the measures
    they have tried have proved ineffective often because of the corruption of
    militia officers who often are willing to allow illegal aliens to remain for
    a price.

    That has led to calls for more radical measures like those now
    being introduced in Krasnodar. But there are three reasons for thinking
    that these steps are likely to exacerbate ethnic tensions there even if they
    succeed in reducing the influx of illegal aliens from the Caucasus or
    further afield.

    First, Tkachev has played upon popular prejudice by suggesting
    that illegal immigrants are responsible for a rise in crime. Research by
    the Interior Ministry in Moscow and by the noted ethnosociologist Emil Pain
    have disproved that contention, but many Russians are inclined to believe
    it. Tkachev's remarks will only reinforce such attitudes.

    Second, the Krasnodar authorities say that they will organize
    the camps on ethnic lines. That is, they will put people from Ukraine and
    Moldova in one of the camps, people from Armenia in another, and those from
    Central Asian countries in a third. Intended to make the management of these
    camps easier, this step could easily have just the opposite effect.

    (Other Russian regional governments which have thought about
    setting up such filtration camps in the past have concluded that it would be
    a mistake to organize them along ethnic lines, lest that provoke an
    explosion. (http://www.rosbalt.ru/2004/10/19/181922.html ).)

    And third, Tkachev and his staff say that they want to do all
    this without putting undue burdens on Krasnodar taxpayers. To that end,
    they have created tent cities with few amenities. And they plan to force
    the illegal migrants to pay for their own deportations either on their own
    or by getting money from their co-ethnics who are living in the krai
    legally.

    The logic behind that approach seems to be that this will make
    the local non-Russian communities less willing to help their co-ethnics come
    to Krasnodar, but it is entirely likely that in at least some cases, this
    tactic will provoke anti-government and even anti-Russian feelings among
    both those confined and those who are told to help them.

    Tkachev's policies may nonetheless be popular with ethnic
    Russians there who are angry about illegal immigration. Consequently and
    especially in the absence of serious criticism from outside, what he does
    may very well be copied by others in other region's of the country where the
    influx of illegal migrants is large.

    But even such draconian measures may not reduce the number of illegal aliens
    any time soon. Economic and demographic pressures are simply too great. What
    such steps almost certainly will do, however, is to further divide the
    Russian Federation's ethnic communities and thus make the achievement of
    interethnic accord there that much more difficult.
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