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  • Russian markets suffer as new rules hit immigrants

    Russian markets suffer as new rules hit immigrants
    Reuters
    Friday, January 19, 2007; 7:46 AM
    KHABAROVSK, Russia (Reuters) - Stray dogs hunt for food among empty market
    stalls, a wheelbarrow stands idle.
    Not much was happening this week in the market at Khabarovsk, in Russia's Far
    East, a few days after new immigration rules came into effect.
    Its Chinese stall-holders had fled back across the border.
    "There is nobody here now," said one of the last Chinese traders, who called
    herself Marina. "If they want us to work we will stay. If they don't want us
    to work we will leave."
    The new rules, which came into effect on Monday, were partly designed to
    redress the balance of Russians to immigrants working in markets, whose
    stall-holders are mostly from the Caucasus, Central Asia and China.
    Under the new law, foreigners will be barred from trading in markets after
    2008.
    Marina packed torches, deflated rubber dinghies and plastic calculators into
    cardboard boxes ready for the journey back to China, just a few dozen
    kilometres away.
    Others had abandoned their stock, now being sold by Russians at a much higher
    price than the Chinese had charged.
    "I can't buy this for 1,000 roubles ($40)," said Lida, a former engineer,
    gesturing at a stall behind her run by a Russian.
    "I have a pension of 3,000 roubles a month and pay 2,000 for housing. How can
    I live?" She pulled her shawl over her shoulders and trudged on.
    The Chinese, like other immigrants, filled a gap because they were willing to
    work in markets and could supply products from China more cheaply than
    Russian equivalents.
    Many Russians rely on markets for cheap supplies because shop prices,
    especially in big cities, have reached Western levels while an average Russian
    earns only $5,000 a year.
    BUREAUCRACY
    In Khabarovsk, a town with a population of about 300,000 near the border with
    China, the Russian market manager turned and pondered his footprints in the
    snow before replying.
    "Grandmothers and women come to me and ask: 'What have you done?"' he said
    wearily. "I explain that we didn't do anything and that they should ask the
    government."
    The new laws are also designed to streamline the immigration process and give
    immigrants an incentive to work legally.
    More than 90 percent of an estimated 12 million migrants in Russia work
    illegally because bureaucracy makes it almost impossible to obtain the right
    documents.
    In Moscow this week, immigration officials swept through the Kashirsky Dvor
    market, past stacks of bricks, lino samples and rolled-up carpets,
    interrupting traders' work to check their documents.
    They detained three people in the raid -- a Moldovan woman with a fake work
    permit and two men.
    Immigrants complain there is not enough information about the new immigration
    procedures and the process takes too long.
    Mikhail Matryoshin, a senior regional immigration official, said he
    appreciated the difficulties but discouraged workers and employers from paying
    dubious agents to obtain the documents.
    "Never look for an easy way out," he said.
    Officials insist Russians will be happy to replace migrants in markets.
    "There are Russians to be hired," the deputy head of the Federal Migration
    Service, Vyacheslav Postavnin, told Rossiiskaya Gazeta daily. "Market owners
    will make sure their business continues."
    Market businessmen say this will be difficult.
    A cafe manager, a Russian citizen of Armenian origin, said he had hired
    Russians but they left after two weeks. He said they wanted to work short hours
    for high pay and few had applied for the job.
    "The best workers are from Central Asia," he said. "Our cooks are, naturally,
    from Armenia."
    © 2007 Reuters

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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