In Russia’s remote Kamchatka, Central Asians slow population decline
BISHKEK (TCA) — In many Russian regions that suffer from population decline, labor immigrants from Central Asia are welcome guests and often indispensible workforce. We are republishing this article on the issue, written by Nicholas Muller*, originally published by Eurasianet: For some visitors, the Kamchatka Peninsula – an eight-hour flight from Moscow – doesn’t quite feel like Russia anymore. “The police greet us every morning and shake our hands. In Moscow, they grab us and take us away,” said Mansur, a brawny Tashkent native who works in the timber and fishing industries and sells fruit whenever he returns from Uzbekistan. “I can make good money out here and not deal with the stresses of Moscow.” Kamchatka – a volcano-strewn promontory the size of Montana – is the definition of remote, even in a vast country like Russia. Government subsidies dried up after the Soviet Union collapsed, driving a sharp rise in prices for basic necessities. This was especially felt in places like Kamchatka, where many goods have to be shipped in from great distances. So people left. Since 1991, over 20 percent of Kamchatka’s population has emigrated, according to a recent briefing from the Carnegie Endowment. An estimated 10,000 have departed since the 2010 census alone. The population is now just above 300,000, with about six in 10 living in the regional capital, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky. Today Central Asian labor migrants help staunch the population decline and keep critical industries afloat. Feruz, a 26-year-old from Samarkand, moved to Petropavlovsk two years ago, hoping to save enough to get married. He had been deported from Moscow for visa violations. “There is a lot of work here and less pressure than in Moscow, with nicer people who are a lot more welcoming,” he told Eurasianet. Depending on the season, Feruz splits his time working in a restaurant, in a fish factory and on construction projects. He reckons hundreds or thousands of Central Asians do the same. The number of labor migrants working in Kamchatka is anyone’s guess. Many inhabit the gray economy. According to Kamchatka’s official statistical service, international arrivals during the first five months of this year more than doubled over 2017, to 2,251 people. About 40 percent are from Central Asia, mostly Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan. One lure is the wages. According to official data, they’re almost twice the average in other Russian cities. Local government data show that more than 80 percent of budget revenues are derived from the fishing industry. There are also naval bases in Kamchatka, including Russia’s largest submarine fleet; the military plays a pivotal economic role in this strategic region jutting into the Pacific. And although infusions of cash from Moscow are nothing like they were in Soviet times, Kamchatka remains heavily subsidized. It will receive the third-largest federal grant this year, more than 39.3 billion rubles ($587 million), less only than violence-prone Dagestan and vast Yakutia, according to business outlet RBC. In recent years, the Kremlin has marketed Kamchatka as a sightseeing destination. Tourists help stoke the...
