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YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    As Putin plans to stay, many Russians want out

    MOSCOW (AP) — Natalia Lepleiskaya is just the sort of person today's Russia needs — a successful young IT manager who does charity work in her free time.

    But frustrated by what she describes as the corruption and stagnation around her, she and her husband are packing their bags to start a new life in Canada.

    "I don't see how I can change things ... and I don't want to waste my youth on it," said the 29-year-old, who moved to Moscow from a provincial city several years ago and rose to a senior position at a top technological company.

    As Vladimir Putin's party prepares to dominate weekend parliamentary elections in a prelude to his planned return to the presidency in spring, an increasing number of Russians are contemplating leaving their homeland in search of a brighter future abroad. A March presidential election victory for Putin — all but taken for granted — raises the prospect of his being in the top job for 12 years.

    Disenchantment with life in Russia was growing even before Prime Minister Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev agreed in September to swap jobs,

    In a May poll by the respected Levada Center, 22 percent of respondents said they wanted to move abroad for good, compared to 13 percent in April 2009. The poll among 1,600 Russian adults across the country had a margin of error of 3.4 percentage points.

    Emigration statistics are hard to come by because few of those who leave for lengthy periods renounce Russian citizenship, while getting foreign residency may take years.

    But demographer Mikhail Denisenko at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow estimates that at least a half million Russians moved abroad in 2002-2009 and more are on the way in what he describes as the fifth wave of emigration since the beginning of the 20th century.

    "The level of frustration is higher ... it's a feeling of discomfort, an aversion to life in Russia," said Lev Gudkov, the head of the Levada Center.

    "The prospect of another 12 years of stagnation or even a worsening of the situation is frightening them and they are beginning to think about moving to a different country or at least providing a future for their children" abroad.

    Numerous recent websites and blogs offer advice on how to emigrate. One of them, "Time to Shove Off," offers commentaries and videos exposing alleged crime and corruption among top Russian officials. "Yet another governor buys himself yet another Mercedes for 7 million rubles ($233,000 or euro175,000)," reads one posting. "Corruption as a lifestyle," a headline says.

    "The news that Putin is staying has spoiled people's mood and this talk (of emigration) started resonating more," said Anton Nossik, a popular blogger and Internet expert, who holds seminars on emigration.

    The democratic reforms ushered in by the 1991 Soviet collapse generated hope that Russia could finally become a free and progressive nation. But Putin's 11 years in power, first as president and now as prime minister, have left many people disillusioned and gloomy about the future.

    While an expanding economy has boosted living standards for many, corruption has become systemic and political competition has virtually disappeared. On a more day-to-day level, many Russians complain that education and health care continue to lag far behind. The draft-based army is plagued by vicious hazing, leaving many parents fearful for their sons. Few have faith that they can count on either the police or the courts to protect them or their property.

    Russian emigration is by no means a new phenomenon. The 20th century alone witnessed waves of emigration, beginning with those who fled after the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution and during World War II. Over 290,000 Jews emigrated from the Soviet Union 1971 to 1988, and up to 1.6 million people left Russia in 1989-2002 as the Soviet Union disintegrated, according to demographers.

    Today's departures are not nearly as traumatic as during the Soviet era, when would-be emigres spent years fighting to be allowed to leave, often losing jobs and friends in the process — then bade farewell to their families forever, certain they would never return.

    But the decision to leave Russia is still often painful. Many emigres leave behind elderly parents, a familiar culture and the ability to communicate in their native tongue.

    Fifteen years ago, a teenage Lepleiskaya branded her cousin a traitor for moving to the United States rather than staying and working to change life in Russia for the better. As an adult, along with building a successful career, she volunteered at an orphanage and collected money and clothes for those in need.

    In the early 2000s, she voted for Putin and his party, but as the years went by she became increasingly angered by what is happening in the country. Social inequality has worsened, corruption runs amok, opposition protests are violently dispersed and the television news often resembles Soviet propaganda.

    "There came a moment when I stopped caring ... nothing will change substantially," Lepleiskaya said.

    She said the final straw was when a singer she knew spent 10 days in jail in a southern Russian city after performing a song critical of the police. She came to the conclusion that citizens have no power to hold the government accountable or push for change, either through competitive elections or street protests.

    "Have you seen what those protests look like? It's 50 people and 150 riot police and these young men and women are dragged into those detention trucks," Lepleiskaya said.

    She realizes that Russia's emerging market provides opportunities for high profits and quick career advancement in some spheres, but she doesn't trust the government to protect her savings against inflation and economic turmoil. Her father, a college instructor for 40 years, recently retired and receives a pension equivalent to $270 (euro200) per month.

    "I don't want to sit on top of a tinderbox. I would rather build my career slowly, step by step, work and know that eventually when I am 60 the government will not let me down," she said.

    She and her husband, Alexander, a 27-year-old IT specialist are set to receive their Canadian entry visas in the coming days and plan to fly to Montreal in the spring. Lepleiskaya now has to vaccinate her cat, who has the French name Xavier, sell off their belongings and begin saying goodbye to loved ones.

    They have never even visited Canada and know it will take a while to find jobs as interesting and well-paid as those they are leaving behind in Moscow, but they are looking to the future with hope for a better life for themselves and their children.

    Denisenko, the demographer, said the departure of enterprising, educated Russians bodes ill for the country.

    "Compensating for them will be hard," he said. "Russia would be better off if they stayed."

     

    702 comments

    • GOPPIGERS  •  Lincoln Park, United States  •  5 mths ago
      "When the government fears the people there is freedom, when the people fear the government there is only tyranny".

      I forgot who wrote it but very true.
      • Vlad 5 mths ago
        Have you been to Russia ?
      • GOPPIGERS 5 mths ago
        No, I haven't Vlad but have friends from college who have and they did not like it. They even brought me videos. There are nice places, nice museums, good and bad people like everywhere else, but there is a lot more missery than a few years ago when the companies where hopeful about Russian getting off its poverty and corruption has gotten bigger too. Even cops are more corrupt than a few years ago. Russia has a history of bloody Czars, Stalin, Communists and Putin. I understand what suicide is so high there and alcoholism too and also why so many Russians what to leave. I don't blame them. Everyone has the right to a better future and to be free.
      • Melissa 5 mths ago
        I think our own government is finally (maybe) getting the message. At least we actually have free elections, even if our process is sometimes messy. Everyone says Washington is broken, and I believe that to be true, but the only way it can get fixed is if the American electorate actually has a brain and votes out the corrupt and greedy people we elected to be there. Sure, there are some that actually want to serve the PEOPLE, but most, especially the Republicans, only want to serve the wealthy who will put money in their own pockets. If you don't like what you see in Washington these days, VOTE NEXT ELECTION and get them out. And for curruption? I understand that insider trading among the Congress is OK but not for the rest of the country? How currupt is that? That's why being in Congress makes you rich. It's pitiful!
    • Thinker  •  5 mths ago
      Leaders should only serve two terms to give others the experience of leading and to help democracy develop.
      • Bruce 5 mths ago
        There should be term limits for Congress to!!!!!!!
      • Peanut Noir 5 mths ago
        On the other hand, isn't the learning curve involved with powerful leadership steep? In other words, wouldn't your suggestion mean having to constantly re-invent the wheel?
      • Maggoty John 5 mths ago
        And when a really good leader came along (it does happen occasionally) he/she would have to make way for an idiot--again!
    • poorwhiteboyfroms.e.d.c.  •  Washington, United States  •  5 mths ago
      They need a george washington who refuses to be king. We need another george washington who only wanted to serve. The addiction to power to alive and well in the world. Power corupts and absolute power corupts abosutely.
      • Abercrombie 5 mths ago
        Your spelling is abosutely awful.
      • Ken 5 mths ago
        Yes but his ideas are good
      • Leon 5 mths ago
        Actually George Washington did NOT want to serve. After the war was over he wanted to be left alone, but he was the only person they thought could unite our nation. Anyway we get what youre saying 8 )
    • GreatLakeState  •  Muskegon, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Russia looks and sounds a lot like Detroit. Corruption everywhere, a shell of former greatness, and a people who are fleeing because they are tired of a broken system.
      • RH 5 mths ago
        Russia has looked like modern-day Detroit for almost 100 years. Even when they built beautiful buildings back in the days of the Czars, they were only for the rich. The poor lived in shacks.

        Unfortunately they have a long history of corruption and poor leadership and they really lack people with the mindset and ability to change that. It is a pity because Russia has the natural resources to become a great nation without raiding the resources of other countries.

        Even worse, we are headed in the same direction as our population is becoming increasingly manipulated by propaganda and oppressed by our own government. Most people want that to change but are unwilling to make the sacrifices needed to achieve it so they sit back and whine about it like I am doing here.
      • Markymark 5 mths ago
        Russia NEVER looked as good as Detroit!
      • preferred user 5 mths ago
        "Russia has looked like modern-day Detroit for almost 100 years. Even when they built beautiful buildings back in the days of the Czars, they were only for the rich. The poor lived in shacks".
    • nhz  •  Sunnyvale, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Putin is an old school KGB spook, and he knows all the tricks of the trade. Getting rid of him won't be easy.
      • Adam 5 mths ago
        It would only th\ake one martyr with a good aim.
      • thomas 5 mths ago
        a 50 cal. between the eyes
    • David  •  Fresno, United States  •  5 mths ago
      A vast country filled with natural resources, some of the best minds on the planet, and a government ruled by too many thugs and buffoons lusting for money and power. Vlad has a decision: share the wealth or wind up sharing the misery.
    • Jim  •  5 mths ago
      Well, at least they're allowed to speak their mind now and leave. 40 years ago, they would have been put in a prison or mysteriously disappear into thin air.
    • Chris-Delon  •  Kingman, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Corruption is the greatest enemy of any great Country. And Canada doing a better job than us on recruiting skilled people. We like the broke cheap low skilled labor types.
    • Ace Helbsy  •  Lancaster, United States  •  5 mths ago
      My heart goes out to all the every day average Joe citizens of Russia.
    • David  •  5 mths ago
      If this is true... Then the average Russian has my pity.
    • Gilbert  •  5 mths ago
      IT'S HIGHTIME people vote 4 change..not only in russia BUT ALL OVER THE WORLD...
    • Steve  •  Sunnyvale, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Sad. The people had a fleeting chance at real freedom but not the means to keep it. They are still largely an unarmed populace and cannot place even implied limits on their government's authority or corruption. You Second Amendment haters need to think about that.
    • III Hairs  •  Bismarck, United States  •  5 mths ago
      We are moving in this direction, coruption at every level of Government, Pay for play, has been around for years, Congress, insider trading ( they made legal for themselves ) but arrest anyone else who does it. The new defence bill should be a sign to everyone, it has reached a new level. Then we have people in positions of power who have studied Hitlers dirty trick book, and are practicing it, every day on our tv and radio stations, talk radio. The People in this Country need to wake up!!!!!! If these people are spuing hatred, be waery, they they are fufilling an aganda.!!!!!
    • Jacky Chan  •  5 mths ago
      Just curious, do most people in Russia really vote for that jerk or are the polling station all rigged and the election is a fraud and good old Putin is a dictator? Which is it?
    • IneedaNickName  •  5 mths ago
      Notice that they're moving to Canada and not the U.S.A. There must be some real problems with America these days if even despondent Russians don't want to move here to escape Russia.
    • Anonymous  •  5 mths ago
      Happy Holidays & Merry Christmas to all of Russia, from the USA:)
    • Robert  •  Orlando, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Have you ever stopped to think, that our constitution could not be written today. Am not sure that it could ever make it out of committee so so speak, what with all of those folks that want something for nothing, and all of those folks that crave power, and all of the elitists, and most of all those that just don't care as long as they can watch the ball games on the weekend. Bread and circuses all over again.
    • Roy K  •  5 mths ago
      sad to have to leave your home,i wish them well.
    • Karl  •  5 mths ago
      All I could think of as I read this article is how much the USA is becoming more and more like the Soviet USSR. Corrupt officials and big corporations, all untouchable, unaccountable, doing each other favors and passing laws in the name of "public safety" that strip away rights and resources from the helpless citizen so the elite can consolidate their wealth and power. We are told that we are better off than dictatorships because we have "the power of the vote".... oh sure, we can vote for a crooked, favor-selling Democrat or a crooked, favor-selling Republican. How bloody marvelous "representative government" is. The trouble is that there is really no place on the planet to escape; the explosion of spying/tracking/recording technology has given all governments oppressive powers that were previously only dreamt of in science-fiction stories. All we have left is the dim prospect of choosing the lesser of evils.
    • jes  •  5 mths ago
      Putin's goal is absolute power. He's no better than Stalin.
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