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Chinese people in Kazakhstan

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Chinese people in Kazakhstan
Regions with significant populations
Almaty[1]
Related ethnic groups
Overseas Chinese

The number of Chinese people in Kazakhstan is not very clear. There have been various migrations of ethnic minorities from China to Kazakhstan in the 19th and early 20th centuries, such as that of the Dungan people fleeing Qing Dynasty forces after a failed 1862–1877 rebellion in northwest China, or the Uyghur and Kazakh exodus from Xinjiang during the 1950s Great Leap Forward; however, their descendants do not consider themselves to be "Chinese people".[2][3] The modern wave of migration from China only dates back to the early 1990s.[4]

Migration history

During the Mongol Empire, Han Chinese were moved to Central Asian areas like Besh Baliq, Almaliq, and Samarqand by the Mongols where they worked as artisans and farmers.[5] The Daoist Chinese master Qiu Chuji travelled through Kazakhstan to meet Genghis Khan in Afghanistan.

China and Kazakhstan agreed on visa-free travel in early 1992, which led to 150 to 200 Chinese citizens entering Kazakhstan each day and not returning to China. Most are believed to have simply used Kazakhstan as a transit point to Europe. Visa-free travel was terminated in 1993.[6] The border between the two countries remained strictly controlled and highly militarised until the 1995 China–Kazakhstan Joint Declaration, following which People's Liberation Army units in the region were redeployed to the borders with Tajikistan and Afghanistan in southern Xinjiang.[7] Starting from them, many Chinese traders began flowing into Kazakhstan.[8] When the Kazakhstani government first opened a consulate in Ürümqi in 1997, it did not even issue visas to local people, but by 2004 it was possible for Chinese people to obtain business visas with an invitation from an organisation in Kazakhstan.[9] Chinese citizens of Kazakh ethnicity do not require visas at all.[10]

Some Kazakhstan popular media reports claimed there were as many as 300,000 Chinese people in Kazakhstan by the year 2000.[8] An article from China's official Xinhua News Agency repeated this same number in 2009.[11] However, official entrance statistics showed only 28,000 in 2004, 34,000 in 2005, and 29,000 in 2006. Furthermore, surveys show that among migrants from China, non-Han ethnicities form the majority. 67% of Kazakhstanis expect that migration from China will increase in the future.[12]

Business and employment

Entry of migrant workers from China, largely entering the country as employees of Chinese companies, dates back to 1993, when 559 workers from China entered the country. This grew to 1,457 by 2004 and 5,008 by 2006. Initially, most were concentrated in Almaty, but more are spreading out to southern and western Kazakhstan as well. They are commonly employed in energy and construction companies.[1] Some Chinese who have officially entered the country on short-term business visas for the purpose of trade are also in reality employed as labourers by Chinese companies.[13]

In the 2000s, independent entrepreneurs running import-export businesses, as well as larger investors, began to become more active.[14] Most of the products which Chinese traders sell are purchased in the special economic zones in the Xinjiang border regions.[15] Over 4,000 Chinese firms or Kazakhstani firms with some Chinese investors are officially registered with the government; however, as of 2006, only 213 were active.[16]

There is a Chinese bazaar in Almaty, the Barakholka Bazaar, which in addition to selling general Chinese-made products such as electronics or foodstuffs to local people, also sells products aimed at Chinese people such as Chinese pop music or Chinese-language newspapers. These are not in evidence in other urban areas.[17] It came to be dominated by Uyghur and Dungan traders in the 1990s; it is actually located near the site of a former Dungan kolkhoz.[18] The Dungan have often played an intermediary role in business ventures between migrants from China and local people.[19]

Media

A Xinjiang-based free newspaper aimed at Chinese people in Kazakhstan, the Hāsàkèsītǎn Huáqiáo Bào (哈萨克斯坦华侨报, literally "Kazakhstan Chinese Emigrant Newspaper"), received permission from the Kazakhstan government in April 2009 to begin publication. The editors plan to publish it bilingually in both Russian and Chinese, with two issues of eight pages each per month. It is printed by the same department responsible for the Xinjiang Economic Daily.[11]

Ethnic Kazakhs among the migrants

The Kazakh government has sought to promote permanent settlement of ethnic Kazakhs from abroad in Kazakhstan by providing them with financial assistance and land grants in border areas. However, this eventually requires them to give up their Chinese nationality and right of residence; according to Xinjiang media, many later come to regret this move.[10] They experience difficulty in integration because they are more used to the Perso-Arabic orthography for the Kazakh language rather than the Cyrillic one used in Kazakhstan, and also only speak Russian as a second language, if at all.[4][20] They tend to find jobs at Chinese companies or joint ventures.[4]

As of 2005, oralman (the term for ethnic Kazakhs who settle in Kazakhstan under such government assistance) formed 1,109 out of 1,116 Chinese citizens with permanent official residency in Kazakhstan, and 3,907 out of 3,916 former Chinese citizens who acquired Kazakhstani nationality that year.[12] Most are concentrated around Almaty and East Kazakhstan Province.[13] They form the majority of teachers of the Chinese language at Kazakhstani universities.[21]

Inter-ethnic relations

Kazakhstanis generally express negative sentiments about the presence of the Chinese in their country. There is even some opposition to the presence or further migration of Uyghurs or Kazakhs from Xinjiang, because of the perception that their presence may draw more Chinese influence into the country as well.[22] A 2009 proposal by the Chinese government to lease one million hectares of steppe for cultivation of soybeans sparked a series of protests in Almaty in December and January over the possibility that Chinese labourers would be brought to the country to work the land.[23][24]

According to a 2009 survey, national minorities, people between 18 and 29 years of age, and people in Almaty show the most tolerant attitudes towards Chinese.[25] There is a popular perception that a large and rapidly growing number of Chinese people marry Kazakhstani citizens to obtain permanent residency in the country, but in fact, there were only 74 such marriages between 1991 and 2007.[26]

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b Sadovskaya 2007, p. 156
  2. ^ Laruelle & Peyrouse 2009, p. 104
  3. ^ Parham 2004, p. 39
  4. ^ a b c Sadovskaya 2007, p. 159
  5. ^ Michal Biran (15 September 2005). The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian History: Between China and the Islamic World. Cambridge University Press. pp. 96–. ISBN 978-0-521-84226-6.
  6. ^ Sadovskaya 2007, p. 151
  7. ^ Parham 2004, pp. 58–59
  8. ^ a b Parham 2004, p. 61
  9. ^ Parham 2004, p. 89
  10. ^ a b Parham 2004, p. 93
  11. ^ a b 马敏/Ma Min (2009-04-01), "新疆《哈萨克斯坦华侨报》通过哈方注册 4月底创刊/Xinjiang 'Kazakhstan Overseas Chinese Newspaper' Passes Kazakhstan Registration; To Begin Publishing at Month's end", Xinhua News, retrieved 2009-04-17
  12. ^ a b Syroezhkin 2009, p. 41
  13. ^ a b Sadovskaya 2007, p. 157
  14. ^ Sadovskaya 2007, p. 155
  15. ^ Parham 2004, p. 90
  16. ^ Syroezhkin 2009, p. 43
  17. ^ Parham 2004, pp. 79–80
  18. ^ Laruelle & Peyrouse 2009, p. 98
  19. ^ Laruelle & Peyrouse 2009, p. 110
  20. ^ Parham 2004, p. 92
  21. ^ Laruelle & Peyrouse 2009, pp. 116–117
  22. ^ Parham 2004, p. 81
  23. ^ Pannier, Bruce (2009-12-17), "Prospect of Chinese Farmers Brings Controversy to Kazakh Soil", Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, retrieved 2010-01-03
  24. ^ Demytrie, Rayhan (2010-01-31), "Kazakhs protest against China farmland lease", BBC News, retrieved 2010-02-01
  25. ^ Syroezhkin 2009, p. 34
  26. ^ Sadovskaya 2007, p. 160

Sources

Further reading