Back under Putin's eye
Toronto Star|May 12, 2024
Returning Russians provide boost for Moscow’s war economy
Back under Putin's eye

Russian tourists pose for photos with inbound planes on Mai Khao Beach on March 24 in Phuket, Thailand. Although some Russians left their country for Europe, many went to places such as the United Arab Emirates, Thailand and Indonesia, countries that didn’t follow the U.S. and its allies in sanctioning Russia, as well as to neighbouring former Soviet countries.

As many as a million Russians fled abroad in the first year of the Kremlin’s invasion of Ukraine. Now thousands are returning home, delivering a propaganda victory to President Vladimir Putin and a boost to his war economy.

With the war still raging, and the man who started it about to assume another six-year term in power, many Russians are confronting a difficult choice. Facing rejections when renewing residence permits, difficulties with transferring work and money abroad, and limited destinations that still welcome them, they’re opting to end their self-exile.

“The business didn’t work out, no one is really waiting for us” abroad, said Alexey, a 50-year-old former political consultant from Moscow, who moved to Georgia to work as an entrepreneur after being detained at an antiwar rally in the Russian capital. He returned when his business’s finances ran out, Alexey said. He and others interviewed by Bloomberg asked not to disclose their last names for security reasons.

The February 2022 invasion provoked a mass exodus from Russia on a scale not seen since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Many left to register dissent against the war, and also out of fear of mobilization. When Putin ordered a call-up of 300,000 reservists in September 2022, it triggered a new wave of departures by hundreds of thousands of people.

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