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Russia's Future Depends On Streamlined Immigration

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  • Russia's Future Depends On Streamlined Immigration

    RUSSIA'S FUTURE DEPENDS ON STREAMLINED IMMIGRATION

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    Oct 24 2006

    MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Yury Filippov).The lower
    house of Russia's parliament has adopted harsh amendments to the
    immigration legislation in a majority vote.

    The ruling is expected to be approved in the upper house and by the
    president, and to come into force by the end of this year.

    Foreigners and stateless persons who violate the rules of entry into
    Russia, the registration and immigration regime will be fined $200,
    and may be also ordered to leave the country.

    Western tourists who come to Russia for a couple of weeks to do some
    sightseeing and book their trips through reputable travel agencies
    have nothing to fear. The law is aimed primarily at curbing the
    uncontrolled illegal immigration from the former Soviet republics in
    the South Caucasus and Central Asia.

    Russia, as the main legal successor of the Soviet Union, has inherited
    from it the informal status of the "common home" for its former
    citizens. Ethnic purges in neighboring republics, some of them soft
    and other quite ruthless (as the anti-Armenian movement in Baku,
    the capital of Azerbaijan, in 1990), forced millions of non-titular
    people to leave their homes. Russia welcomed everyone who wanted to
    live, work and do business on its territory.

    It was a deliberate policy designed to turn Russia into the pivotal
    point for post-Soviet republics. Judging by the number of immigrants,
    which is estimated at 8-12 million, it has succeeded.

    However, that policy was not fully consistent, and its drawbacks
    have recently become apparent. The Kremlin willingly helped its
    neighbors cope with unemployment and raise living standards with the
    incomes their immigrants earned in Russia, without any reciprocal
    requirements. The liberal immigration legislation, and its even more
    liberal implementation, did not help Russia to become a political
    center or at least a country whose opinion is respected without fail,
    the way the Untied States is for its North American neighbors.

    The Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), which incorporated
    nearly all post-Soviet countries, is a feeble organization, a kind
    of "presidents' club" whose meetings are increasingly neglected by
    club members.

    Georgia, Ukraine and Moldova are working hard to create a political
    alternative to the CIS. Ukraine is hindering economic integration on
    the basis of a customs union, and Azerbaijan and Georgia did their
    best to promote the Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline via Georgia, although
    its economic expediency is questionable and Russia had proposed its
    territory for oil transit.

    Russian-Georgian relations seem to be breathing their last, with
    arguments ranging from NATO and the European Union to Georgia's
    conflicts with the former Soviet autonomous republics of Abkhazia
    and South Ossetia, and the low quality of Georgian wines exported to
    Russia. Taken together, this shows that truly neighborly relations and
    a border open to uncontrollable immigration are two different things.

    It has been believed until recently that Russia had political
    and economic reasons for keeping its southern and eastern borders
    open. A demographic crisis is reducing the Russian population by
    about 700,000 annually, and the Kremlin firmly believes that it needs
    labor immigrants to accelerate economic growth. President Vladimir
    Putin spoke about this in this year's state of the nation address
    to parliament.

    But the absence of immigration control is a drawback, not an
    advantage. Immigrants are flocking to big and rapidly developing
    cities, where they mostly trade (and also work in construction,
    transport and utilities), avoiding the provinces, which direly need
    them to overcome the consequences of an economic depression.

    Unregistered immigrants do not pay taxes, and the employers' desire
    to use cheap labor bypassing the law creates fertile ground for
    corruption.

    Russia does not intend to erect a new Iron Curtain, but it must
    streamline its immigration legislation to prevent chaos and
    uncontrollable developments. The time is ripe for this, as proved
    by the fact that Putin has addressed the issue. At a recent meeting
    with the government, he asked for detailed reports from the ministers
    of the economy, labor, the interior and agriculture. The problem
    is hugely complicated and needs a comprehensive solution using all
    available possibilities of the state.

    This may take several years, but the objective is worth the hard
    work. Fifteen years after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Russia
    is still trying to draft the optimal principles of relations with its
    sovereign neighbors, from which the majority of immigrants come. It
    is still trying to form a comprehensive strategy for its economic
    development, with due regard for the resources it may receive from
    the former Soviet countries.

    Russia must advance firmly along this path to resolve its problems
    without keeping borders wide open.
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