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#8 - JRL 7243
Los Angeles Times
June 28, 2003
Bad Days for Russians in Turkmenistan
They've been given an ultimatum to forfeit their dual citizenship. Critics say
it's an effort by President Niyazov to quash discontent.
By David Holley, Times Staff Writer
Fearful Russians are lining up at Moscow's embassy in Turkmenistan, apartment
prices in that country's capital are plunging and a war of words has broken out
as politicians here denounce Turkmen President Saparmurad A. Niyazov.
Steadily worsening conditions for the ethnic Russian minority living in
Turkmenistan since Soviet times deteriorated further in April when Niyazov gave
dual citizens two months to choose which country's passport to hold. Those
picking Russia lose the right to own their homes, while those choosing
Turkmenistan could end up trapped in the Central Asian country, according to
Russian media reports.
Niyazov — an eccentric leader who in recent years has promoted a
personality cult around himself — appears motivated by a desire to solidify
his dominance and boost the country's Turkmen character, observers say. Critics
charge that under Niyazov, Turkmenistan has become one of the most totalitarian
countries.
An estimated 300,000 ethnic Russians live in Turkmenistan, and about 100,000
of them have registered for Russian as well as Turkmen citizenship under a 1993
dual-citizenship treaty, Konstantin F. Zatulin, head of the CIS Countries
Institute, said at a Moscow news conference this week. Some Turkmens also hold
dual citizenship.
Thousands of Russians have scrambled in recent weeks to get Moscow's embassy
to stamp visas into their Turkmen passports, in case that proves to be the only
way they can get out of the country, according to Russian media reports. Some
have left, and competition to sell apartments has pushed prices to half or
one-quarter their previous levels, reports say.
Those who fail to choose a country will be considered Turkmen citizens only,
according to Niyazov's decree, which Moscow has refused to recognize.
"Turkmens have been brought to such a level of submission that they no
longer open their mouths," a reporter in Turkmenistan for the Russian
newspaper Moskovsky Komsomolets said in a telephone interview, speaking on
condition that he not be identified by name for fear of reprisal.
"But Russians, who traditionally were able to read a lot and get
information from various sources, are constantly complaining about
something," he said. "So the way out for Niyazov is either to fully
control these unruly Russians by making them Turkmenistan's nationals or,
preferably, kick them all out of the country."
Even though the deadline imposed by Niyazov expired Sunday, it remains
unclear how rigorously the decree will be enforced.
Ethnic Russians who retained Turkmen citizenship will now be allowed to
travel between the countries only on a Turkmen passport with an exit visa issued
by the Turkmen Foreign Ministry and an entry visa from Russia, Interfax reported
this week from Ashgabat, the capital.
"Niyazov has always feared and disliked Russians," said Avdy
Kuliyev, a former Turkmen foreign minister who now heads the country's
Moscow-based opposition. "The entire official policy was aimed at ousting
the Russian-speaking population from Turkmenistan, which Niyazov thought was
instrumental to consolidating Turkmenistan's sovereignty and independence."
But Niyazov's greater goal has been "to consolidate his own
dictatorship," Kuliyev said. "If dual citizenship is abolished, people
will no longer be able to enter or leave Turkmenistan without Niyazov's control.
He sees this as a pledge of trouble-free rule, where he will not need to explain
anything to anyone."
During a visit by Niyazov to Moscow in April, he and Russian President
Vladimir V. Putin signed a natural gas deal and agreed to end the
dual-citizenship treaty. Since then the two sides have been disputing what that
means in practice.
Putin insists that despite Niyazov's decree, dual citizens will retain that
status. The only change agreed to so far is that people living in Turkmenistan
can no longer obtain dual citizenship if they do not already have it, Putin
says.
Some Russian media and politicians, as well as Russians in Turkmenistan,
charge that Putin has taken a softer line on the citizenship issue because of
Niyazov's agreement to the gas deal. "Putin has sold us for gas," is a
common refrain of Russians in Ashgabat, according to a report in Moskovsky
Komsomolets.
Niyazov predicted in April that the 25-year gas contract would be worth about
$200 billion to Turkmenistan and $300 billion to Russia, Interfax reported.
Niyazov was the Communist boss of Turkmenistan in the final years of the
Soviet Union. He has ruled the country of 4.7 million people since 1990, the
year before it became independent.
On Thursday, 550 people crowded Moscow's embassy in Ashgabat, Russian news
agency Itar-Tass reported. Sixty registered to move to Russia; the rest received
consultations and forms. It summarized the views of those seeking help this way:
"There is no future for our children here. Schools offering instruction in
the Russian language are few. All classes in Turkmen colleges have been
conducted in the Turkmen language for a long time."
Russia's Union of Right Forces Party, in a statement Friday, compared
Niyazov's treatment of ethnic Russians to "Stalin-era deportations."
Niyazov, responding to the growing uproar, declared in comments reported by
Interfax that Moscow could send a delegation to investigate, and "if you
find a single Russian who has been insulted or is under persecution, we will
apologize to him."
Times staff writer Sergei L. Loiko and Alexei V. Kuznetsov of The Times'
Moscow Bureau contributed to this report.
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