Border fear, and then relief, for men fleeing Russia
Send a link to a friend
[October 05, 2022]
By Olzhas Auyezov
ALMATY (Reuters) - For the men leaving
Russia after vast journeys across the world's biggest country, there is
now often a final ordeal: visceral fear at the border followed by a rush
of relief for those who reach the other side.
Hundreds of thousands of men have left Russia since President Vladimir
Putin invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24. Some feared they would be called up to
fight, others simply sought new lives after war changed Russia more
dramatically than at any time since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet
Union.
After Putin announced a partial mobilisation of reservists last month,
Russia's first since World War Two, the trickle of emigres turned into a
flood - and mundane border anxiety turned into fear for thousands of men
who rushed to the exits.
Publisher Aidar Buribayev started thinking about leaving immediately
after Putin announced the mobilisation on Sept. 21. What finally
convinced him was seeing Moscow, for centuries a crucible of raw,
bustling energy, so subdued and deserted.
"The final straw was driving through Moscow and suddenly realising there
were no traffic jams, and seeing my co-working office almost empty,"
Buribayev, the publisher of Russian online news outlet MediaLeaks.ru,
told Reuters in Kazakhstan.
Thus began a 4,300 km (2,700 mile) odyssey out of Russia, a pivotal
break with his homeland that is shaping the lives of entire generations
of urban Russians and their families.
A direct flight to Kazakhstan, where he has relatives, was impossible
due to high demand, so Buribayev flew to Kazan in southwest Russia and
then thousands of kilometres east to Barnaul in the Altai region of
Siberia.
From there, he took a bus to eastern Kazakhstan. All 50 people on the
bus, he says, were men aged between 20-35.
"They were all from big cities and looked like stereotypical nerdy IT
guys," Buribayev, 44, said.
Underscoring the complexity of the way the war is perceived in Russian
society, patriotic villagers in the places they drove through made
derogatory comments about them being draft dodgers.
"What struck me as a Muscovite was the large number of cars with Z and V
symbols," Buribayev said, referring to the letters that have come to
symbolise the Russian invasion after appearing on Russian military
vehicles.
[to top of second column]
|
Drone footage shows long queues of
vehicles on the way to exit Russia on its border with Georgia, in
Verkhny Lars, Russia, September 26, 2022, in this still image
obtained from a video. The Insider/Handout via REUTERS
BORDER FEAR
After numerous reports about men being questioned, detained and even
turned back at border posts by Russian officials, tension mounted as
they approached the border
"People were afraid of the border," Buribayev said. "But the fear
then passed."
After crossing into Kazakhstan the men turned to their phones to
update relatives that they had crossed successfully.
"The relief was momentary," he said because people on the bus
immediately turned to the more basic problems of being foreigners in
a strange land.
In dozens of interviews with Reuters, men told of the fear as they
approached the border, some physically shaking when questioned by
border guards about their reason for travel.
Some said they celebrated with a drink once making it to the other
side, though the relief soon wore off as the challenges of life
ahead sank in.
Many expressed sadness.
Kirill Ponomarev, who took a 10,000 km (6,000 mile) journey to
Armenia, said he saw younger men questioned by officials about their
travel as they sought to leave the country. Some didn't get on the
flight they were booked on.
Ponomarev said there was no immediate relief on exiting Russia -
just stress.
"It makes me feel sad and angry at the same time," he said of
leaving his country, his friends and his career. "I had to let it
go. I mean, it was actually taken away from me."
One Russian who asked for his name not to be used because of the
potential danger if he returned, said his heart stopped when border
guards took his passport and asked him to wait for additional
checks.
Shivering with fear, he waited for 15 long minutes while they
checked his documents.
"I nearly shat myself with fear," he told Reuters. "It was
terrifying."
But he made it to the other side.
(Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Philippa Fletcher)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |