By Valery Dzutsev
On March 22, the current Prime
Minister of Russia and the next President of the country, Vladimir Putin, held
a government meeting dedicated to his campaign promises. One of the responding
ministers, Minister for Regional Development Viktor Basargin, said that his
agency was preparing a plan for a massive return of ethnic Russians to the North Caucasus that would be ready in “3-4 months” (http://premier.gov.ru/events/news/18490/,
March 22). Basargin quoted Putin’s article on ethnic issues that was published
on January 23, 2012 in the run up to presidential elections in Russia. In the
article for the first time the top Russian official agreed with the Russian
nationalists’ long-held claim that [ethnic] Russian people are the “core”
people of Russia that hold the country’s “matrix” together (http://www.ng.ru/politics/2012-01-23/1_national.html,
January 23).
Now the Russian government
seems to be intent on implementing this idea in practice and the North Caucasus should become the “pilot project” in this
regard, according to minister Basargin (http://premier.gov.ru/events/news/18490/,
March 22). According to the Russian observer Alexander Podrabinek, Moscow plans to dispatch 50,000 families to the North Caucasus per year. Podrabinek wonders where these
people would come from (http://www.ekhokavkaza.com/content/article/24525457.html,
March 22). The government in Moscow appears to
be especially concerned about ethnic homogeneity of Ingushetia and Chechnya, where
only negligibly small ethnic Russian populations are left in place.
If Putin,plans on displacing 50,000 ethnic Russians in Kavkaz it's going to backfire on him. He should recognition of the Circassian genocides and have 50,000 circassians return instead.In reality it will never happen.
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