Third Reich?
History does not repeat but it does rhyme.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]
Russia's Recession Squeezes MigrantsMillions of Foreigners, Lured by Oil Boom, Now Face Bias in Ethnic Backlash
By Sarah Schafer
Special to The Washington Post
Sunday, February 8, 2009; Page A17
MOSCOW -- A few years ago, Alisher Azizov traveled by train to Moscow from Tajikistan in search of a better life, and he found it.
Working as a security guard and stock boy for a flower shop, the 32-year-old son of peasants earned about $1,000 a month, 15 times the average salary in his impoverished homeland and enough to support the extended family he left behind -- his wife, five sons, parents and seven siblings.
But a few weeks ago, his boss slashed his salary by two-thirds, blaming the global economic crisis that has battered Russia. At those wages, Azizov couldn't afford the rent for the cramped apartment he shares with several other migrant workers. So he found himself at the train station again, contemplating the long journey back to his home village.
Azizov is one of millions of migrant workers who were lured to Russia over the past eight years by its long oil boom -- and who are now struggling to get by as the country grapples with its worst recession in a decade. As the downturn deepens and companies cut costs, these workers have been among the first to be refused their wages and lose their jobs.
The plight of the estimated 12 million foreign workers in Russia -- the largest immigrant population in the world outside the United States -- will be felt in their home countries, primarily the former Soviet republics of Central Asia, where remittances account for as much as half of gross domestic product.
But it also poses a stark challenge for the Russian government, which must contend with a huge pool of alienated and unemployed immigrants in a society that has already seen a troubling increase in racially motivated violence.Russia needs immigrants because its working-age population is shrinking drastically. But nationalist political rhetoric and rising unemployment are fueling a popular backlash against them. If the furor results in tighter immigration policies or an exodus of workers, activists warn, the Russian economy could suffer further damage.
... snip ...
Jews aren't the only form that scapegoats come in.