FEAR OF ANTI-MUSLIM BACKLASH AFTER RUSSIA BLAST
Agence France Presse
March 30, 2010 Tuesday 1:21 PM GMT
Her only fault was she looked different.
Nargiza, a 17-year old daughter of a half-Armenian janitor mother,
was beaten up by enraged Muscovites as their anger over Monday’s metro
bombings linked to Caucasus militants boiled over into blind prejudice.
"She was beaten up in the street, her hair torn, face injured, her
clothes torn,"said Galina Kozhevnikova of Moscow-based Sova Centre,
a rights centre that tracks hate crimes, citing an acquaintance who
witnessed the incident.
The girl — assumed to be Muslim because of her darkish skin —
became an unfortunate victim of a spike in anti-Islamic sentiments
stirred up by the twin bombings that claimed the lives of 39 people,
Kozhevnikova told AFP.
"They stood there, recorded on phones and yelled: go on, finish off
a shahid," said the account posted by the witness, who was not named,
on LiveJournal, one of Russia’s top online communities.
Many Russians refer to suicide bombers as "shahids," the word meaning
"martyrs" throughout the Muslim world.
The country’s FSB security service has linked the attacks to residents
of Russia’s volatile North Caucasus, a largely Muslim region.
Kozhevnikova said the girl has temporarily left the city and was out
of reach. "Everyone is in shock," she said.
In a similar incident, several men and women beat up two headscarved
women on the metro Monday afternoon, yanking them off their seats and
throwing them out of the train, popular radio Ekho of Moscow reported,
citing an unidentified witness.
The witness said no-one had called police and other passengers just
looked on. A spokesman for the Moscow metro police told AFP no such
incident had been registered.
In a country where anti-immigrant sentiments are already running high,
such incidents are to be feared after the attacks, the deadliest
since 2004 when similar metro blasts killed 41, say hate crime experts.
Kozhevnikova, whose centre has recorded several separate incidents
since Monday, estimated that there could have been at least 10 such
attacks in Moscow as more went unrecorded.
But they will remain isolated incidents unless authorities and media
choose to whip up anti-immigrant hysteria, analysts say.
"As I see it, the real danger is that such incidents could be used by
politicians," said Leokadia Drobizheva, head of the Research Centre
for Inter ethnic Relations at the Russian Academy of Sciences.
With around 2.5 million migrant workers, Russia has the second largest
migrant worker population after the United States.
After the blasts law enforcement officials pledged to beef up security
and President Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday urged officials to improve
anti-terror laws.
Immigrant leaders said those measures would almost inevitably make
life harder for thousands of workers living in Moscow where they can
now expect tougher immigration rules.
"I have a feeling of foreboding," Alisher Madanbekov, a leader of
Moscow’s Kyrgyz diaspora told AFP.
"When terror attacks hit before, labour migrants were the first to
suffer," added Usmon Baratov, a leader of Moscow-based Uzbek community.
Human rights activists say officials have long turned a blind eye to
nationalism and xenophobia in a country where racially-motivated acts
of vandalism and attacks have become a regular occurrence.
According to the Moscow Bureau for Human Rights, between January and
mid-March of this year there were 31 xenophobic attacks that killed
10 and injured 28 in Russia
But while diaspora leaders say the authorities will tighten the screws
they do not expect mass violent attacks from ordinary Russians.
"People of non-Slavic appearance will for the next several days be
afraid to get out on the street," said Sova’s Kozhevnikova.
"But Russians gradually realize that people from the Caucasus and
terrorists are not the same."