Zürcher Nachrichten - Surveillance, harassment and bribes: everyday life for migrants in Russia

EUR -
AED 4.292856
AFN 74.811013
ALL 95.758004
AMD 439.584403
AOA 1071.899958
ARS 1615.399361
AUD 1.65382
AWG 2.105518
AZN 2.052807
BAM 1.956344
BBD 2.351384
BDT 143.419901
BHD 0.440959
BIF 3471.693024
BMD 1.16892
BND 1.489127
BOB 8.067279
BRL 5.958571
BSD 1.16744
BTN 108.113854
BWP 15.725577
BYN 3.39093
BYR 22910.83612
BZD 2.348014
CAD 1.616324
CDF 2688.516258
CHF 0.924049
CLF 0.026465
CLP 1041.578414
CNY 7.985887
CNH 7.984561
COP 4272.239719
CRC 542.755646
CUC 1.16892
CUP 30.976386
CVE 110.478184
CZK 24.375844
DJF 207.740664
DKK 7.472498
DOP 70.57353
DZD 154.700132
EGP 62.058327
ERN 17.533803
ETB 182.994654
FJD 2.583902
FKP 0.869768
GBP 0.871109
GEL 3.144048
GGP 0.869768
GHS 12.875695
GIP 0.869768
GMD 86.499858
GNF 10257.274577
GTQ 8.931523
GYD 244.248998
HKD 9.158197
HNL 31.128258
HRK 7.533805
HTG 153.113908
HUF 377.188921
IDR 19997.594726
ILS 3.572448
IMP 0.869768
INR 108.282946
IQD 1531.285475
IRR 1538298.996652
ISK 143.403564
JEP 0.869768
JMD 184.583722
JOD 0.828765
JPY 186.171615
KES 150.966141
KGS 102.220317
KHR 4690.288808
KMF 492.115113
KPW 1051.974571
KRW 1731.059719
KWD 0.361091
KYD 0.972883
KZT 556.712029
LAK 25675.332478
LBP 104620.483213
LKR 368.367212
LRD 215.373677
LSL 19.088267
LTL 3.451517
LVL 0.707068
LYD 7.428482
MAD 10.836555
MDL 20.162127
MGA 4851.019228
MKD 61.629212
MMK 2454.475424
MNT 4179.182492
MOP 9.420942
MRU 46.768658
MUR 54.378586
MVR 18.060309
MWK 2030.414798
MXN 20.320043
MYR 4.634758
MZN 74.752294
NAD 19.088101
NGN 1591.777358
NIO 42.922942
NOK 11.118535
NPR 172.980345
NZD 1.998479
OMR 0.449448
PAB 1.16743
PEN 3.94218
PGK 5.039507
PHP 69.930678
PKR 326.157928
PLN 4.250153
PYG 7542.19513
QAR 4.262
RON 5.091462
RSD 117.37248
RUB 90.731993
RWF 1708.376887
SAR 4.386329
SBD 9.408151
SCR 16.899377
SDG 702.520794
SEK 10.873878
SGD 1.489894
SLE 28.7552
SOS 668.039996
SRD 43.922762
STD 24194.28831
STN 24.90969
SVC 10.214973
SYP 129.228602
SZL 19.088686
THB 37.607722
TJS 11.108433
TMT 4.097065
TND 3.370873
TRY 52.231832
TTD 7.919305
TWD 37.128178
TZS 3045.036993
UAH 50.709959
UGX 4302.21534
USD 1.16892
UYU 47.383385
UZS 14284.205282
VES 555.311151
VND 30780.591435
VUV 139.726541
WST 3.237081
XAF 656.14797
XAG 0.01541
XAU 0.000245
XCD 3.159065
XCG 2.104112
XDR 0.816038
XOF 656.347347
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.846329
ZAR 19.188936
ZMK 10521.677406
ZMW 22.269481
ZWL 376.391831
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • AZN

    0.7200

    204.99

    +0.35%

  • RIO

    -1.3200

    97.13

    -1.36%

  • CMSC

    0.1000

    22.39

    +0.45%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    23.89

    -0.96%

  • BTI

    -1.1000

    58.85

    -1.87%

  • NGG

    0.3600

    90.32

    +0.4%

  • RYCEF

    1.9800

    17.23

    +11.49%

  • GSK

    0.9900

    58.36

    +1.7%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    22.59

    +0.4%

  • RELX

    -0.5900

    33.34

    -1.77%

  • BCC

    1.3500

    80.58

    +1.68%

  • BP

    0.0100

    45.9

    +0.02%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    12.98

    +1%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    15.85

    +0.5%

Surveillance, harassment and bribes: everyday life for migrants in Russia
Surveillance, harassment and bribes: everyday life for migrants in Russia / Photo: Alexander NEMENOV - AFP/File

Surveillance, harassment and bribes: everyday life for migrants in Russia

Facing digital surveillance, bribes, humiliation and street harassment, Kyrgyz taxi driver Alym never has an easy life in Russia.

Text size:

"We have to pay, pay, pay for everything," the 38-year-old father of two told AFP near Moscow.

"The police are constantly demanding bribes for every document, every stamp: registration, a patent, a work permit," he said, adding some documents can cost as much as $300 off-the-books.

Pressure on the estimated 6.5 million foreign citizens in Russia -- mostly labour migrants from Central Asia who work in low-skilled jobs and send wages to family back home -- is ramping up from all sides.

Officials try to block their access to work and schools with tighter immigration rules, while xenophobia in the country -- always high -- is rising further still.

Every day Alym must send his location to authorities via the state-run Amina surveillance app, which he has to keep installed on his phone.

"If you don't do it for three days in a row, you're put on a blacklist that's hard to get off," he explained.

Being added to what is officially called the "register of monitored persons" means having bank accounts frozen and raises the risk of losing a job, being expelled from university or even deportation.

- 'Nuts' -

The toughening of rules was codified last year when Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a new policy designed to "limit the presence of migrants' family members in Russia."

According to the document, the new measures should "reduce the burden on the social and healthcare services."

Among some of the requirements rolled out are ultra-tough language tests for the children of migrants looking to enter Russian schools.

Anna Orlova, a Russian language teacher at the Migratory Children project, has criticised both the tests and the overall policy.

"We should, on the contrary, be glad that migrants come to us. It means the Russian economy is growing," she said.

The complicated tests, combined with other bureaucratic hurdles, led to 87 percent of migrant children being blocked from entering school in 2025, according to a federal regulator.

"The education ministry has set the goal of no longer accepting non-Russian pupils in schools. It's nuts," said Orlova.

Alym's daughter, now in kindergarten, will soon have to take the test.

There are signs that high levels of societal xenophobia are seeping into the classroom.

Alym's son, already in school, was recently beaten up by his Russian classmates.

In December, a teenager with neo-Nazi views stabbed a 10-year-old Tajik boy to death at a school near Moscow.

"A migrant's life in Russia is difficult. The migrant becomes an enemy on whom the discontent in society is funnelled," said Svetlana Gannushkina from Civic Assistance, a migrant rights group, which has been labelled a "foreign agent" by the authorities.

"We're being told that they steal our jobs and undercut wages," she added.

Those kinds of anti-immigration narratives -- prevalent in many countries -- have taken on an extra edge in Russia, where inflation is high and the Kremlin has hiked taxes to fund its military as the war in Ukraine enters its fifth year.

- Draft fears -

Gannushkina said the policy response has been "full of fear," ushered in following a March 2024 massacre at a concert hall near Moscow, which killed 149 people.

The four alleged assailants, currently on trial, are from Tajikistan.

The anti-migrant sentiment has also boosted the popularity of some political groups, like the LDPR, an ultra-nationalist party allied with the Kremlin.

"I'm constantly travelling around the regions, and illegal immigration is often the top issue raised by our fellow citizens. We're fed up with this situation," party leader Leonid Slutsky said in a YouTube broadcast.

Slutsky accused migrants of "undermining the principles and traditions" of Russian society.

He declined to comment when contacted by AFP.

Alym wants to leave Russia by 2030, when he expects to have paid off his mortgage in Kyrgyzstan.

"Many of my compatriots have already returned, because their children weren't admitted to school," he said.

After four years in Russia, Alym no longer wants a Russian passport, as he once did, because of Moscow's offensive in Ukraine.

"I don't want to be drafted," he said.

F.Schneider--NZN