Yahoo – AFP,
Maxime Popov, Olga Rotenberg, 23 July 2014
Eastern
Ukraine's residents crowd at a temporary facility for refugees in the
southern
Russian Rostov region on July 2, 2014 (AFP Photo/Andrey Kronberg)
|
Moscow
(AFP) - Russia is struggling with a flood of refugees as more than half a
million flee the fighting in eastern Ukraine and it seems many are increasingly
likely to stay, officials and activists said.
Widely
viewed by the West as having fomented the conflict by providing support to
pro-Russian separatists -- a charge Moscow denies -- Russia now faces the
growing challenge of caring for the refugees.
"Since
April 1, over 515,000 people have arrived from southeastern Ukraine," the
head of Russia's migration service (FMS) Konstantin Romodanovsky said this
week.
Children
aboard a bus leave for Russia
on July 16, 2014 in Donetsk, Ukraine
(AFP Photo/Dominique Faget)
|
Russian
authorities have organised some 400 refugee camps to offer temporary
accommodation, and so far running the facilities has been up to the local
authorities, stretching their capacities to the limit.
Since June
4, more than 220,000 refugees have crossed the border from Ukraine to the
Rostov region, and currently the flow continues at about 2,000 people per day,
Governor Vassily Golubev said Tuesday.
"Rostov
and other frontline regions are working at maximum capacity," said Ella
Pamfilova, who heads President Vladimir Putin's human rights council.
"They
do everything possible -- both the authorities and the volunteers... but the
problems will only get worse," she said.
"There
is growing fatigue, and when winter arrives everything will be much more
difficult," she told AFP, adding that the biggest problem was uncertainty.
'They
lived through shock'
The Russian
government said Tuesday it would step up its contribution to support refugees
in border areas, taking the total amount to nearly five billion rubles ($141
million, 104 million euros).
A baby at a
temporary facility for Ukrainian
refugees in the southern Russian Rostov
region
on July 2, 2014 (AFP Photo/Andrey
Kronberg)
|
"It is
our task to give them our utmost attention and necessary help."
Romodanovsky
said that over 80 percent of the refugees remain in border areas, but the
government has begun to move some camps to other areas, particularly in the
centre of the country, with the hope that this may help the refugees if they
choose to settle in Russia.
"The
flow of refugees is not abating. Many want to return to their homes when the
conflict ends, but increasingly these families want closure, and intend to stay
in Russia," said Pamfilova.
Many may
stay
More than
144,000 have turned to Russian authorities for special refugee status, and of
those, 38,000 people have demanded asylum, recent FMS figures show.
The Russian
government ordered late Tuesday simplified measures for reviewing requests for
refugee status.
"We do not rule out that most of them want to eventually demand Russian citizenship," Romodanovsky said.
"We do not rule out that most of them want to eventually demand Russian citizenship," Romodanovsky said.
People wait
for a bus before leaving for Russia on July 16, 2014 in
Donetsk, Ukraine (AFP
Photo/Dominique Faget)
|
Anna
Serdyukova of the Civil Assistance NGO which is helping refugees in the Rostov
region, said there has been a change of attitude among refugees.
"In
June, many of them said: 'We'll stay here a while and then return home.' Today
many fewer of them think like that," she added.
The
authorities are also working on measures to simplify the process for Ukrainian
refugees, most of whom are Russian-speaking, to obtain Russian nationality.
Caring for
the refugees may pose short-term costs, but the migrants could bring long-term
benefits to Russia which is facing a demographics crisis, analysts said.
"Russia
is short of people and workers, and here you find tens of thousands who share
our mentality, our language and our culture," said Yevgeny Gontmakher, a
deputy director at the Institute of the World Economy and International
Relations of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.