Alexander Koloskov was forced to urgently leave Russia due to threats from the side ... Whom do you think? Of course, state authorities, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the special services. Who else can threaten the security of a person in our country who takes an active civil and political position? ..
____________________________________________________
ROZHDESTVENO, Russia -- Nazim Soliev is confident that he's good for Russia.
Or more specifically, the 35-year-old native of Tajikistan, the most impoverished of Central Asia's five former Soviet republics, says his presence here, 200 kilometers northwest of Moscow, is good for his adopted homeland.
"'Better you than the Chinese,' that's what my ex-boss told me," the small-framed Soliev says between double shifts as a stoker at the village school, earning him around $250 a month, nearly twice the average Tajik wage.
The "you" is a reference to Soliev, who speaks fluent Russian and also routinely quotes ancient Persian thinker Omar Khayyam's poems in Farsi, a linguistic sibling of his mother tongue, and 46 other families whose resettlement from Tajikistan over the past decade almost doubled Rozhdestveno's aging population of about 200.
Half of the students in Soliev's school are their raven-haired children, and their wives, in long skirts and head scarves, shop for groceries at a store next to the Orthodox church.
The arrival to urban centers and the countryside of Soliev and millions of other mostly Muslim labor migrants from Central Asia is at the center of what could emerge as Russia's most radical ethnic makeover in centuries.
And some residents of Rozhdestveno and nearby villages speak caustically of the immigrants and forebodingly of an uncertain future.
"In 10 years, the village will either disappear or become foreign," says retiree Viktor Yerofoeyevich, declining to give his last name. He is a resident of the neighboring village of Bortnikovo, where a paltry 12 houses have full-time residents.
PIC BY Sanjeev Nijhawan / Caters News The perfectly-timed optical illusion photo shows the camel standing still while his head was turned the other way. Sanjeev said: “I saw a herd of camels crossing the road. It was a sight I couldn’t resist clicking. PIC BY Sanjeev Nijhawan / Caters News “I stopped and went towards the herd and suddenly at a distance I saw this camel with his head turned around which looked like a headless camel. “I had around five seconds to get the photo before he pulled his head up again.”
Comments
Post a Comment