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I have commented, several times, on the China/Russia border issue and on China's near insatiable appetite for resources - many of which are found nearby, in Russia.
In this article, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Ottawa Citizen, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev warns about the issues:
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/Russian+issues+warning+Chinese+threat+East/7068335/story.html
The main problem facing Prime Minister Medvedev is Russian: the Russian people in the North-East (Siberia) are abandoning their jobs there and returning to the European region. The Chinese are, as far as I know, moving in, but in a very transient manner. They want, indeed need the resources but they want to buy them; they are trying to keep production and distribution lines (distribution lines to Chinese border crossings, anyway) open.
I have seen only one border place and there the Chinese hospital was serving both sides of the border and the Chinese fire department was prepared to respond to, indeed had responded to, fires on the Russian side. The Russian border post was not manned but the Chinese border police refused to allow me to pass into Russia as I did not have a visa. I am told that similar situations exist in many border places.
The Russia-China border is long and, in most places, only lightly fenced and patrolled - parts of it are on rivers which makes control a bit easier.
While I am pretty sure that there have been some (unauthorized?) Chinese incursions into Russia I seriously doubt that it is anything like the invasion about which Medvedev warns.
In this article, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Ottawa Citizen, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev warns about the issues:
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/Russian+issues+warning+Chinese+threat+East/7068335/story.html
Russian PM issues warning of Chinese threat to Far East
Kremlin suspicious steady immigration could affect resource-rich area
By Thomas Grove, Reuters
August 10, 2012
Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev on Thursday issued a veiled warning about China's rising influence in Russia's resource-rich Far East, saying it was essential to defend the area against "excessive expansion by bordering states."
Speaking days after Russia's first deputy defence minister said two new nuclear submarines would be sent to the Pacific Fleet, Medvedev also said it was "important not to al-low negative manifestations ... including the formation of enclaves made up of foreign citizens."
His comments, some of the strongest on the subject yet, underlined the Kremlin's suspicions that a steady influx of Chinese migrants may ultimately pose a threat to Russian hegemony in the remote and sparsely populated territories of Siberia and the Far East.
Russia and China enjoy strong diplomatic and trade relations and have joined forces in the United Nations Security Council to block proposed sanctions on President Bashar Assad of Syria. But growing Chinese influence in Russia's Far East - where street signs are often in both Russian and Chinese - has long been a source of tension.
Resource-rich Russia is the world's largest country by territory, but has seen its population of 143 million people fall in recent years, while re-source-hungry China, situated immediately to the south, has a rising population of over 1.3 billion people.
Medvedev, who was president from 2008 until May, raised the sensitive subject at a government meeting during a broader discussion of migration.
"Not many people live there, unfortunately, and the task of protecting our Far Eastern territories from excessive expansion by bordering states remains in place," he said.
Russia has tried to counter-balance China's growing influence in its Far East by boosting its own political and military presence in the region, where it has seen its own influence weaken.
Medvedev's new government, formed in May, included for the first time a Ministry of the Far East to underpin other state programs al-ready in place. One such program has brought 400 families from other former Soviet republics to the area to reinforce its Russian-speaking population.
Medvedev said new migration policies had been drawn up by President Vladimir Putin and told ministers to draft an action plan aimed at turning the policies into reality.
© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen
The main problem facing Prime Minister Medvedev is Russian: the Russian people in the North-East (Siberia) are abandoning their jobs there and returning to the European region. The Chinese are, as far as I know, moving in, but in a very transient manner. They want, indeed need the resources but they want to buy them; they are trying to keep production and distribution lines (distribution lines to Chinese border crossings, anyway) open.
I have seen only one border place and there the Chinese hospital was serving both sides of the border and the Chinese fire department was prepared to respond to, indeed had responded to, fires on the Russian side. The Russian border post was not manned but the Chinese border police refused to allow me to pass into Russia as I did not have a visa. I am told that similar situations exist in many border places.
The Russia-China border is long and, in most places, only lightly fenced and patrolled - parts of it are on rivers which makes control a bit easier.
While I am pretty sure that there have been some (unauthorized?) Chinese incursions into Russia I seriously doubt that it is anything like the invasion about which Medvedev warns.