‘I don’t want to see your face’
Central Asian migrants living in Russia are facing growing prejudice since the Moscow terror attack

An already-well-established atmosphere of fear among Central Asian migrants living in Russia has worsened since a group of Tajik men were charged with planning and carrying out last month’s horrific attack on Crocus City Hall.
“I’ve had customers who didn’t want to get in the car with me. First they asked where I was from and when I said I was Tajik, they changed their minds. ‘If you’re from Tajikistan, cancel the booking. Don’t come. We don’t want a Tajik driver,’” Rustam explains.
The situation has become so tense that both Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan have warned their citizens in Russia not to leave their homes, and advised anyone planning to travel there to cancel their trip.
“Foreigners coming across the border are a threat, chiefly to themselves, because they are automatically of interest to Western secret services wanting to carry out terrorist acts in Russia and destabilise the country,” said Sheremet.
Rustam says that this is why the Tajik community in Russia lacks cohesion and its members feel unsafe helping each other.


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