Young Guard of United Russia will rally tomorrow under the “Our Money to Our People” slogan, demanding to ban labor migration, expel migrants from the country and patrol streets in search of the Gastarbeiters.
Photo: Svetlana Privalova
| Other Photos |
 |
|
 |
Impatience & Labor
Young Guard of United Russia has invented a new method to oppose financial crisis in the country. Pro-Kremlin activities will rally tomorrow under the “Our Money to Our People” slogan, demanding to ban labor migration, expel migrants from the country and patrol streets in search of the Gastarbeiters. The comrades from United Russia backed up the undertaking, and radical nationalists spotted their favorite slogan, “Russia for the Russians,” in the calls of pro-Kremlin youth.
The action of United Russia’s Molodaya Gvardia (Young Guard), “Our money to Our People,” is scheduled for November 1. “We demand to expel all labor migrants from Russia and close borders for them for the nearest year, giving all jobs to the Russians and passing respective legislative acts,” says the advance advisement made out for the event.
Moscow will have three pickets Saturday, near headquarters of Federal Migration Service and close to offices of two big construction companies, PIK and Mirax Group. In addition to Russia’s capital, the Young Guard activists will rally in some other cities, including St. Petersburg, Nizhni Novgorod, Chelyabinsk, Novosibirsk and Khabarovsk.
So far, only the comrades from United Russia and nationalists have backed up that initiative of pro-Kremlin youth. “The workers are getting idle in a number of construction sites and it irritates the people, as the unemployed man could be dangerous,” explained State Duma’s member Andrei Vorobiev, who heads United Russia’s Executive Committee. Vorobiev advocates material reduction in migration quota but yet opposes complete shutting of borders. “The youth is more cardinal, but if they come up with definite proposals, we will certainly discuss them,” the lawmaker added.
www.kommersant.com
All the Article in Russian as of Oct. 31, 2008
|
 |
|