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Russia sees rights of compatriots abroad as a matter of prestige

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  • Russia sees rights of compatriots abroad as a matter of prestige

    Russia sees protecting rights of compatriots abroad as a matter of prestige

    RIA Novosti
    9 Mar 06



    Moscow, 9 March: The Russian Foreign Ministry regards the protection
    of compatriots abroad as a matter of the prestige and vital interests
    of the Russian Federation.

    "The Russian position is that it cannot keep out of the concerns and
    the problems facing the Russian diaspora in one country or another,
    particularly when it is a question of the violation of human rights
    and freedoms. It is also our moral duty to fellow-countrymen, and a
    matter of prestige and vital interests for the state," Aleksandr
    Chepurin, director of the Russian Foreign Ministry department for work
    with compatriots abroad, has said in an interview with RIA-Novosti.

    The Russian diaspora, according to the ministry, is one of the biggest
    in the world and numbers between 25m and 30m people. Almost half of
    them live in the CIS and Baltic countries.

    "On the whole the situation in the CIS space is considerably better
    than in the Baltic countries," he said.

    At the same time, the diplomat said, the continuing migration of the
    able-bodied and socially-active part of the diaspora leads to a
    situation whereby the 'specific weight' in the diaspora of the
    representatives of the population on low income (pensioners, invalids,
    single-parent families or families with many children) is increasing.

    "What strikes one is the fact that Russians are not properly
    represented in power: they, as a rule, are not represented among heads
    of local administrations, in judicial or law-enforcement
    structures. There have been incidents when compatriots were 'pushed
    out' from prestigious places in the field of culture, science,
    education and health care. In some countries the sore point is the
    narrowing of the Russian space. I mean reduction in the number of
    Russian schools and the number of TV and radio stations broadcasting
    in Russian, as well as limiting access to periodical media in
    Russian," Chepurin said.

    According to him, in most CIS countries the Russian-speaking
    population is an important factor of domestic and foreign policy, and
    bilateral relations with Russia.

    "The Russian language dominates the sociopolitical and cultural life
    in Belarus and is widely spread in Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Kirgizia,
    Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Moldova," he said.

    Receiving education in Russian still remains prestigious in many CIS
    countries, he added.

    "It is clear that reaction to violation of the rights of our
    compatriots should be appropriate and be part of the general fabric of
    bilateral relations," Chepurin said.
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