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Eyewitness: Christian Lowe In Moscow

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  • Eyewitness: Christian Lowe In Moscow

    EYEWITNESS: CHRISTIAN LOWE IN MOSCOW

    The Scotsman
    16 January 2009

    UNTIL the financial crisis hit, Shahin Kerimov sent money home from
    his job in Russia to his family in Azerbaijan. Now his wages have
    stopped, they have to wire him cash to buy food.

    Kerimov worked a tough, dirty job building blocks of flats in
    Moscow so he could make a better life for his wife and children. His
    employer promises to pay him what he is owed soon. "I have two small
    children. They are waiting so I can earn some kind of money and
    bring it home," he said in the bare-walled flat, where he and his
    workmates are squatting. "The last time we were paid any money was
    two months ago."

    His experience illustrates how the pain of the global slowdown
    has spread beyond the world's economic powerhouses into developing
    countries far removed from the financial markets and hedge funds
    where the crisis first emerged.

    Kerimov is one of an estimated ten million migrants from former
    Soviet republics working in Russia. The cash they send to family is
    a lifeline for the economies of their home countries, in some cases
    accounting for nearly half of gross domestic product. So when workers
    are laid off from construction sites or factories in Moscow, the
    economic effects are felt thousands of kilometres away in households
    in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and elsewhere.

    Russia hosts the world's second-largest number of migrants, after
    the United States - and it is a hard life. Many do not have proper
    work permits and are regularly rounded up by police. The majority
    are dark-skinned Muslims, sometimes making them targets for attacks
    by gangs of racist skinheads.

    Until now, the money made it worthwhile. Many of the migrants went
    into construction: buildings were going up everywhere and labour
    was in short supply. Since the financial crisis froze credit lines,
    that work has almost ground to a standstill.

    In the wider economy, the global crisis has hit demand for Russia's
    commodity exports and left companies strapped for cash and cutting
    jobs. Rouble depreciations have pushed up the costs of refinancing
    foreign currency debt. The man who employed Kerimov said he would
    pay him and his colleagues the wages they are owed, but is struggling
    because the whole sector has ground to a halt.

    "Everyone is holding money up... everyone is on the alert," said
    Valery Tishchenko. "You don't know which way to turn."

    While they wait for the cash they are owed, Kerimov and about
    five workmates from all corners of the old Soviet Union live in
    a second-floor flat in the complex they had been building, in the
    Moscow suburb of Lyubertsy.

    They sleep on beds nailed together out of spare pieces of wood,
    with polystyrene insulating slabs as mattresses. Heat comes from a
    scavenged electric stove they hooked up to a wire poking out of the
    wall. There is no plumbing, so they fill buckets with cold water from
    a tap outside and wash in an alcove.

    "We live by taking out loans, or sometimes a friend will help,"
    said Kerimov, as he watched a meal of onions and tomatoes cook on
    the makeshift stove. "Sometimes I even have to ring home and ask my
    parents to help."

    He said returning home was not an option. In Azerbaijan unemployment
    is high and the average monthly wage is a little over £200 - less
    than half the figure in Russia.

    "We will wait until the end, until they pay the money," Kerimov said.

    "Something has to be done."

    --Boundary_(ID_HlD25/xh9/rLtWsvJFgSPw )--
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