Kazakhstan ends unlimited stay for Russians

Authored by reuters.com and submitted by Lionel54321
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ALMATY, Jan 17 (Reuters) - Kazakhstan will no longer allow Russian citizens to stay in the Central Asian country indefinitely by doing so-called visa runs every three months, according to a government directive published this week.

The Astana government will disallow the practice from Jan. 26, requiring Russians and citizens of other members of the Eurasian Economic Union, a post-Soviet bloc, to leave the country for at least 90 days after the permitted three-month stay.

The Interior Ministry, which proposed the reform, has said it would give the state greater control over immigration.

Tens of thousands of Russians, mostly young and middle-aged men, relocated to Kazakhstan last year as Moscow, embroiled in the Ukraine conflict, launched its first conscription campaign since World War Two.

The Russian language is widely spoken in Kazakhstan and the two countries share the world's longest continuous land border, making Kazakhstan a popular choice among Russians fleeing the draft.

The ability to stay in the country de facto indefinitely - by leaving it and reentering every 90 days - has been another important factor.

However, the country has struggled to cope with the influx of Russians. Authorities in Kazakhstan have said the unusually large inflows contributed to inflation, which soared to more than 20% last year, its highest since the 1990s.

The war in Ukraine has also strained ties between Moscow and Astana as the latter has refused to support its former Soviet overlord and called for peace.

Reporting by Olzhas Auyezov. Editing by Sharon Singleton

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Fugitiveofkarma on January 18th, 2023 at 05:48 UTC »

I live in Thailand. My city is getting weekly influxes of Russian tourists.

So so so many 18-45yr olds are just staying here and hoping to not get caught on an overstay for long enough that when they inevitable do get sent home the war will be over.

Lots of couples and families. Very few single men.

AaroPajari on January 17th, 2023 at 23:10 UTC »

Not sure how to feel about this. One would think the vast majority of these folks want nothing to do with this war and vehemently reject it. I feel bad for this cohort.

But there’s also gotta be sizeable proportion who are pro-Putin and pro-war but are using their privilege and cash to avoid active participation.

aridiculousmess on January 17th, 2023 at 21:57 UTC »

Hopefully nothing about this is a mutually agreed upon tactic for to round up & mobilize a portion of those who evaded mobilization.