Post-poisoning, Russian expats feel London heat
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| London
In leafy west London, Olga Ivanova is spending her lunch break in a park near the recruitment agency where she works, but her mind is elsewhere.
She says it's hard not to dwell on the spy poisoning case that has dominated the headlines in her adopted country for the past three weeks and sparked worldwide diplomatic fallout; she can鈥檛 help but wonder what it all might mean for Russians like her who live in Britain.
Blaming Russia for poisoning Sergei Skripal and his daughter with a banned nerve agent, the British government has hinted it might retaliate by targeting the assets of wealthy Russians in Britain.
Ms. Ivanova is one of an estimated 150,000 Russians resident in London, sometimes known as 鈥淢oscow-on-the-Thames,鈥 which is now home to Europe鈥檚 largest Russian expatriate community.
The mega-rich, flashing their cash at Harrods department store or eating calf's liver in Mari Vanna, a 鈥渘ostalgic themed鈥 Russian restaurant, attract all the attention. But Ivanova is not an oligarch, nor a dissident, nor a dissident oligarch; she is one of the tens of thousands of Russians who live a much more normal life in the British capital, but who fear blowback from the Skripal affair.
She is only too aware of the rich oligarch stereotype 鈥 and of the anti-Russian hostility that has heightened in the aftermath of the poisoning of Mr. Skripal 鈥 a former Russian intelligence officer who spied for Britain 鈥 and his daughter Yulia on March 4.
And she resents that stereotype. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of frustrating, because it鈥檚 such a minority of Russians and they are absolutely not what most Russians are like,鈥 she complains. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have loads of money and I still have debts to pay back, so the realities for most people are very different.鈥
鈥淭here are people here for a lot of different reasons and from a lot of different generations,鈥 explains Samuel Greene, director of the Russia Institute at King鈥檚 College, London. 鈥淭he population is diverse.鈥
Ivanova has never been to Knightsbridge 鈥 the swanky district that is the indisputable heart of 鈥淟ondongrad鈥 鈥 and with her Australian husband she prefers to steer clear of the Russian community.
鈥淲ith other Russians in London, I鈥檓 always cautious because you don鈥檛 know what their political views are,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey could be on a completely different end of the spectrum to you.鈥
A shifting mood?
Wealthy Russians have been flooding into London since the fall of the Soviet Union, and in the last 15 years the diaspora has snowballed as the city has become an increasingly fashionable destination, even for middle-class Russians. Their rising numbers have led to an explosion of Russian cultural events, balls, theatrical productions, restaurants, and niche shops, which all reinforce London鈥檚 appeal to expatriates.
Owning property and living in London, even part-time, lends status to the Russian elite, who under the "golden visa" scheme are granted聽British residency when they invest 拢2 million ($2.8 million) in the country.聽Many wealthy Russians have invested in London's booming property market as a way of protecting their assets, and those who find themselves on the wrong side of the authorities in Moscow feel safe: Britain has given political asylum to every businessman Russia has tried to extradite.
But British Prime Minister Theresa May has suggested her government may become less tolerant 鈥 and start paying closer attention to the expatriates鈥 financial affairs, as Russian opposition activist Alexei Navalny has proposed as a way to punish Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The prospect of a backlash against Russians is creating 鈥減sychological tension鈥 for wealthy members of the Russian community, says Alexey Firsov, who runs a social affairs think tank in Moscow. 鈥淭here are rumors of possible checks by British authorities as to the origin of their property. Some are transparent but others are not, so there are risks,鈥 he points out.
鈥淭hese people have nothing to do with the Skripal story, [but] they might become a kind of bargaining chip,鈥 he adds.
If they are targeted, says Roman Borisovich, the co-founder of political advocacy group ClampK.org, which campaigns against money laundering in Britain, they will have only themselves to blame.
Most of the wealthier Russians, surrounded by their personal entourages, 鈥渄on鈥檛 want to assimilate or mix with Londoners,鈥 he says. They have also antagonized locals by buying up trophy homes and leaving them empty, worsening London鈥檚 housing crisis.
鈥淭he fact that they don鈥檛 integrate makes them vulnerable because the Brits don鈥檛 see any need for them,鈥 Mr. Borisovich says. 鈥淭hey are not anybody鈥檚 friends. When there are calls for the country to get rid of rich Russians, there will be no tears shed by Londoners. It will be completely self-inflicted if there is a real anti-Russian mood growing in London.鈥
But would a crackdown serve the government鈥檚 purpose, to hurt President Putin? Alexey Makarkin, deputy head of the Center for Political Technologies, an independent think tank in Moscow, thinks not.
On the contrary, 鈥渢he Russian government will be happy if rich Russians are squeezed out of Britain,鈥 he argues. 鈥淲hen (officials鈥) money and families are abroad, that is unpleasant鈥 for the Kremlin. 鈥淏ritish authorities may doubt their loyalty to Britain, but authorities in Moscow also doubt their loyalty to Russia.鈥
Ignore the news
In north London, another Russian expat, Tasha Nova, 31, who is from Siberia, has just got back from work. She came to London in 2009 to study Industrial Design and has built her career here since then. She says many Russian expats have a difficult relationship with their country.
鈥淚 was raised in the Soviet Union, then we had the wild '90s, and Russia only started to really form its identity in the 2000s and then I left, so I鈥檝e never been very patriotic,鈥 she says. "But I am disappointed with my homeland," she adds, saying she pays little attention to news from home.
That apathy about Russian domestic politics appears to be widespread. Fewer than 3,700 people cast their ballots at the Russian embassy in this month鈥檚 presidential elections 鈥 less than ten percent of the estimated number of Russian adults living in London.
鈥淭his month I have seen there is a big political turmoil, but nothing has changed in my little bubble,鈥 because of the Skripal poisoning, Ms. Nova says. 鈥淩ussia has been in so many conflicts on a global scale and there is always a big scandal in the news, but then everything carries on the same. Nothing is going to change.鈥
Back in west London, Ivanova says she loves her country and feels very much 鈥渓ike an outsider鈥 in Britain. However, as a former activist for LGBT rights 鈥 鈥渢he worst kind of activist you can be in Russia,鈥 she says 鈥 she wonders where her future lies.
"I don鈥檛 feel threatened over here, but I am worried about where politics in Russia is going and whether it will still be a safe place for me to return to and be open about my political views,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 wonder how far the Russian government will go. It鈥檚 frustrating, it鈥檚 depressing, and it鈥檚 a bit scary.鈥
Like Ms. Nova, she is trying to avoid the news. There is an old Soviet joke, roughly translated, which she says has become her watchword: 鈥淒on鈥檛 read the news before lunch, it will ruin your digestion.鈥