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In Wake of Hate Murder, Students Speak Out About Racism

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  • In Wake of Hate Murder, Students Speak Out About Racism

    In Wake of Hate Murder, Students Speak Out About Racism

    St Petersburg Times, Russia,
    Aug 1, 2006

    By Ben Judah

    Special to St. Petersburg Times

    Jacques, is a 19-year old medical student from Senagal who studies
    at St. Petersburg State University. He is not somebody who makes
    enemies easily. Friendly and easy talk to, Jacques, who like other
    foreign students interviewed in the wake of the acquital last week
    of suspects in the race-hate murder of a Congolese student, asked
    for his full name to not to be published.

    Jacques will never forget his first few days in St. Petersburg.
    Traveling home late on the metro, a group of skinheads began shouting
    racial slurs as he mounted the escalator. Then they physically
    assaulted him. Jacques ran for his life. He says this is not the only
    time this has happened to him.

    Amnesty International has described racism in Russia "as out of
    control." Nineteen people have been killed in racially motivated
    attacks this year, according to the Sova Center, a group that
    monitors extremist activity, and another 166 people have suffered
    serious injuries.

    The news that a St. Petersburg jury last week cleared four suspects
    of the murder of Congolese student Roland Epassak, the second time in
    four months that a court has acquitted suspects of hate crimes, came as
    no surprise to Jacques or many other foreign students from Africa and
    Asia contacted to this article. For him, "the verdict just shows what
    we experience every day. That this is an inherently racist country."

    "Back in [the Senegalese capital] Dakar," he recalls, "I was thrilled
    when I knew I was coming to St. Petersburg. Russia had been a great
    friend to Africa in the past and the chance to study in a European
    university seemed fantastic. I had no idea that racist feeling was
    so strong here."

    Now he wishes he'd never come.

    "No black man should come to this country," he said. "They'd have
    to be crazy. I am scared to walk the streets alone, especially after
    the recent murders."

    African students at the university dormitory on Korableistratelny
    Ulitsa said that they had experienced violent aggression in St.
    Petersburg more than once.

    Samba, 20, who studies environmental management and is from also from
    Senegal puts it bluntly: "Russians look at me like dirt. They talk
    to me like a child. The police treat me as if I'm a drug dealer. And
    everyone will stab you in the back if you're black."

    Chatting to Samba in the dormitory lift, it immediately became clear
    that discrimination is a a daily occurance for balck people in St.
    Petersburg. As the doors opened on the fourth floor, and a group of
    young Russian women refused to get in, with one saying loudly "I'm
    not getting in a lift with a nigger!"

    On the sixth floor two, visibly drunk young men, got in. Turning to
    Samba, they spat on the floor before walking straight out again. "You
    see? Racism is a fact of life for us," Samba said.

    It is not only black Africans who relate such experiences of life
    in St. Petersburg. Jee Rao, 21, a South Korean exchange student and
    fluent Russian speaker, has had similar experiences.

    "They treat people who look like us differently," he said. "I have
    found it very hard to make Russian friends, though many are very
    kind. Still even some young people, look at me with disdain as
    an Asian."

    According to Hu Lee from Beijing racist feelings lurk only just below
    the surface here.

    "Russians do not like people from China. They may be polite, but they
    do not treat us with the respect and friendliness they would give us
    if we were white," he said.

    Even some Jewish and Armenian students here for a semester from North
    America have reported difficulties. Yitzhak, 20, from San Francisco
    feels nervous.

    "I don't tell people I'm Jewish. I just don't feel comfortable. The
    atmosphere here is one of intolerance and open xenophobia," Yitzhak
    said.

    Pointing at the anti-Semitic graffiti that abounds around
    Petrogradskaya metro station, Yitzhak just shrugs.

    Talking about the issue with Russian students, reveals a great deal
    of antipathy to the issues raised by xenophobia - and denial. Katya,
    18, said "racism does not exist here."

    As attacks have becoming increasingly vicious in character according
    to the Sova Center, foreign students from Asia and Africa in St.
    Petersburg are living on edge.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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