The Pak Banker

Moscow attack could inspire new wave of hate

- Bektour Iskender

Iremember the first time I entered Russia back in 2012 very distinctly. I traveled from my hometown of Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, to Moscow to attend a three-day conference organized by Google’s Russian office.

Given the short duration of my trip, I opted to travel light, relying solely on a backpack to carry my essentials. This is what caught the attention of the Russian customs official. Having cleared border control and nearly made my way through the green corridor of Sheremetye­vo airport, a man in uniform suddenly stopped me.

He directed me through a maze of passages marked with “staff only” signs, until I found myself in a small room with four other travelers from Central Asia. Together we were a microcosm of the migration demographi­cs of our region: two men from Uzbekistan, one from Tajikistan, and my compatriot from Kyrgyzstan.

And so, we waited. Each passing minute stretched into what felt like an eternity. After about an hour, a group of customs officers along with a plaincloth­es official, entered the room. They inspected our belongings, meticulous­ly checking each item one by one.

“Why are you traveling with just a backpack?” inquired one of the uniformed officials. My explanatio­n appeared to catch him off guard. He proceeded to explain that my minimal luggage raised red flags, suggesting that I could be smuggling drugs. “Your people usually travel with huge bags, which is why you seem suspicious,” he remarked bluntly, not caring about the racist undertones in his words.

Before my trip to Moscow, I had heard numerous stories about the mistreatme­nt of Central Asians like myself.

A firm rule within my family was to steer clear of the city at all costs, fueled by chilling accounts of racial animosity, police intimidati­on, and the harrowing specter of neo-Nazi violence. Despite my hopes that these stories were exaggerate­d, my experience upon arriving at Sheremetye­vo airport quickly showed they were not. It became clear that for Central Asians in Russia’s capital, threats wait behind every corner.

What appalled me most was not merely the necessity of an additional customs check, such inconvenie­nces are commonplac­e at airports worldwide. Rather, it was the blatant racial profiling perpetrate­d by the customs officials. Discrimina­tion against Central Asian migrants is an everyday reality in Russia.

Yet events such as the recent attack on Crocus City Hall have the potential to exacerbate the already hostile environmen­t and spark new waves of violence. After a suicide bomber attacked the St. Petersburg metro in 2013, racism against Central Asian migrants rose sharply. The suspects in the attack need not even be of Central Asian descent to stoke the flames of hate.

Any person of color from Central Asia, the Caucasus, or one of Russia’s ethnic republics, regardless of whether their guilt is proven or not, can be scapegoate­d to justify aggressive actions against the broad category of people Russians derogatori­ly label as “nerussky” or “nerus'”, terms that translate as “non-Russians.”

Following the Crocus City Hall attacks, one of the initial reports that caught my attention stirred memories of my first visit to Moscow: migrants from Kyrgyzstan told RFE/RL journalist­s they had been detained at Sheremetye­vo Airport for a staggering two days. A quote from one of the migrants, speaking to RFE/RL on Sunday, encapsulat­es the profound sense of hopelessne­ss experience­d by Central Asian migrants:

“We flew in from Bishkek yesterday and arrived at Sheremetye­vo at 18:40 Moscow time. Here they collected our passports and took us to some room. They checked our phones for four hours and wouldn’t give them back.

They took our fingerprin­ts and made us sign some papers. Ukrainians and Tajiks are getting beaten up. We’ve been sitting here hungry for a day, they didn’t even give us water. “They’ve locked us up like criminals in a room, there are more than 10 Kyrgyzstan­is in one room, and there are others in different rooms.

At first, they said it was ‘additional checks,’ but then they stopped explaining anything at all. We contacted the embassy, they told us they couldn’t help us with anything.” These words encapsulat­e the horrors people from Central Asia face in Russia: the brutality of the Russian state, fears of physical violence, and the stark realizatio­n that even your own government cannot offer any assistance.

For many people from Central Asia, the situation feels like a relentless trap. Escaping the pull of migration to Russia is no simple feat. Central Asian countries lead in migration to Russia, with millions from Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Kazakhstan laboring and settling in what was once our colonial metropole.

In my youth, I was fortunate to secure a decent job in my homeland. Growing up in Bishkek afforded me certain privileges through my education and connection­s. However, for most young people in my country, lucrative job opportunit­ies are scarce. Finding work abroad is the sole avenue for supporting their families. Yet the options for where to migrate are disappoint­ingly limited.

The United States is too distant, the European Union and China present a formidable barrier with their strict visa policies. Russia, despite its problems, is the best option many of them have.

Paradoxica­lly, Russia relies heavily on Central Asian migrants. On one hand, they supply Russia with muchneeded labor. Yet on the other, they deepen Central Asian countries’ dependence on the Kremlin, thereby facilitati­ng Moscow’s ability to bolster its political influence in the region. Hence, Russia’s policy towards Central Asian migration is rife with contradict­ions. While citizens of Central Asian republics can easily relocate to Russia, the Russian state invariably relegates them to second-class status through systemic discrimina­tion and racial profiling.

Statistics indicate that many Central Asian migrants would opt out of working in Russia if given the opportunit­y. In 2022, the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration conducted research on returning migrants in Kyrgyzstan. Although over 80 percent had previously resided in Russia, 44 percent said they would have preferred to stay in Kyrgyzstan permanentl­y.

Additional­ly, one-third indicated that even if they were to migrate again, they would favor destinatio­ns other than Russia, with Germany, the US, Turkey, and Korea topping the list. I always sensed this sentiment whenever I encountere­d fellow Kyrgyz people in Moscow.

During the same trip in 2012, I crossed paths with a friend from Kyrgyzstan who was then working at Google and attending the same conference. Following the event, he invited me to join him for lunch at Google’s Moscow office to discuss ideas for localizing Google services in Central Asian languages. Upon our arrival, we quickly realized that the woman serving food in the canteen was also from Kyrgyzstan.

Her delight at discoverin­g our shared nationalit­y was palpable, prompting her to usher us into the kitchen, where we found everyone was from Kyrgyzstan as well. Our brief conversati­on with the kitchen team left them visibly elated. They were thrilled to encounter fellow compatriot­s, clearly homesick yet hungry for news of success and breakthrou­ghs by people from Kyrgyzstan.

As we finished our lunch, one of the employees said the words that will stay with me forever, “You’ve brought us such joy today, you were the first Kyrgyz visitors to the other side of the canteen.”

Usually, my countrymen only came in to work in the kitchen. I wish for a future where people from my region don’t have to endure discrimina­tion abroad. I am grateful to people who tirelessly cultivate local businesses, seek foreign investment­s, and confront the corruption that impedes our economic growth. I hope other countries will become more welcoming to Central Asian immigrants or develop stronger ties with our entreprene­urs. This benefits everyone: it will make Russia less reliant on cheap Central Asian labor, and weaken the Kremlin’s grip over the region. But this journey will take time. Until then, people from my part of the world will have to go to Russia, living in constant fear.

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