Seasonal workers should be barred from bringing their families to Russia altogether, former president Dmitry Medvedev has said
Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has floated a handful of ideas to tackle migration-related problems, including preventing seasonal workers from bringing their families into the country.
Medvedev, who currently serves as deputy chairman of Russia’s Security Council, made the remarks on Thursday as he spoke to journalists with the TASS news agency. The ex-president said he was a proponent of tougher measures to control migration, including preventing migrants from bringing in “nine children and several wives” to the country.
“I am a proponent of this, as applied to schools, migrant families, enclaves. Of course, we won’t be able to overcome every tendency there, but what can be done: if a person comes to us for seasonal work – why the hell does he drag his family along with him?” Medvedev said.
The ex-president admitted there are a “few obstacles” on the way to enacting tougher migration control measures, including bilateral agreements with several “friendly countries” among Russia’s neighbors. While the former leader did not elaborate, he was apparently referring primarily to the Central Asian ex-Soviet states.
However, Medvedev expressed confidence that such states would ultimately accept the proposed shifts in Russia’s policies, since the problem of excess labor in those countries would otherwise not be alleviated.
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The former president also urged tougher control on the process of integrating the children of migrants into Russian society, namely “making” them learn Russian at school while taking measures against those unwilling to learn it.