Ocnus.Net
Ethnic Brawl in Vladivostok
By Paul Goble, Russia Profile 16/4/08
Apr 17, 2008 - 10:34:30 AM
A clash between Chinese and Russian students in the far eastern
city of Vladivostok earlier today throws into high relief growing Russian
worries about China and especially Chinese immigration into that
under-populated region of the Russian Federation and also about the
inability of Russian authorities to calm them.
According
to regional media outlets and Ekho Moskvy, about 40 Chinese students at the Far
Eastern Technical University and somewhat fewer ethnic Russian students from
the Vladivostok State University of Economics and Service clashed, leaving at
least seven seriously injured..
The
local authorities quickly intervened to separate the two groups, detaining
some from both, according to these preliminary reports. And while the
precise causes of the clash are still under investigation, such a fight and
the coverage it attracted point to increased tensions between the two ethnic
groups.
Since
the collapse of the Soviet Union, ethnic Russians in Siberia, the Far East
and European Russian have been concerned that Chinese guest workers and
traders will move into Russia beyond the Urals in such numbers that Moscow
will not be able to hold the region within the borders of the Russian
Federation.
Both
politicians and commentators have played up this "threat" to the
point that the exact numbers of ethnic Chinese there are hotly
disputed. Some Russian writers insist that there are five million or
more Chinese there, but that number almost certainly includes day traders and
short-term visitors.
The
real number of Chinese living and working in the Russian Far East is
certainly far smaller, but both their distinctive physiognomy and tendency to
live in Chinese-majority neighborhoods in many cities have attracted enormous
attention and concern, especially given the continuing decline in the number
of ethnic Russians there.
Last
week, "Baikalskiye vesti" organized a roundtable on "Chinese
expansionism," noting that "rumors are circulating ever more
widely" about the rising tide of Chinese immigrants and about possible
"military moves by China" there.
One
of the participants in the roundtable, journalist Mikhail Kulekhov said that
recently there had been "a wave of almost panic-filled
publications" about Chinese immigration most of which, he pointed out,
were written in Moscow rather than in Siberia or the Far East.
For
an example of such alarmist thinking in the Russian capital, see the article
by Aleksandr Repnikov in the current issue of "Stoletiye" which
uses as its title Konstantin Leontyev's 19th century observation that
"The Chinese Are Intended to Conquer Russia" But another
participant, activist Konstantin Volkov said that even if these articles were
extreme, "no one should ignore" the threats from China, especially
since in his words, Beijing now faces several problems which a move into the
Russian Far East could help to solve.
First
of all, he said, China faces a serious demographic problem: too many men
relative to women, given Beijing's one-child policy. As a result, at
the present time, "every year in China will appear two million young men
for whom there simply won't be any brides."
Second,
Volkov continued, China faces what he called "the 'bicycle
problem'" as along as its economy is growing rapidly, it will be
stable, but if the growth rate falls, then China could quickly become
unstable, especially because much of its progress so far has depended on
extensive rather than intensive forms of development.
And
third, he said, China faces the challenge of finding new and stable markets
for its goods, something that is increasingly difficult for Beijing to do
given the rise of other Asian countries and problems in the American and European
economies at the present time.
"If
China had only one of these problems, it could solve it," Volkov argued,
but because Beijing must deal with them all together, the Chinese government
is going to have difficulties including unemployment and the resulting
social tensions and some there may see the Russian north as a kind of
solution.
That
is all true, Kulekhov agreed, but he noted that "the real number of
Chinese migrants in Siberia and Russia" is far lower than many
believe. According to him, approximately 500,000 Chinese come to Russia
each year and almost as many go home, for a net increase of only a few
thousand at most.
But
even Kulekhov noted that the Kremlin's indifference to a possible military
strike by China northward, something unlikely anytime soon but entirely
possible in the middle range future, especially because, Volkov added, the
United States might stand behind China in such an action.
And
consequently, a discussion that was clearly intended to dispel some of the
rumors about the Chinese "threat" almost certainly will feed them,
another and in many ways far more serious problem in the low-information
environment of Vladimir Putin's Russia than the possibility of a Chinese move
into Russian territory.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008