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I am a hostage of the north’: Trapped in a post-Gulag Arctic city
PRI ^ | March 11, 2020 | Alec Luhn

Posted on 03/12/2020 11:18:52 AM PDT by tlozo

Lyudmila Ivanova and her fiance came to the Arctic from a village in southern Russia in 1978 in search of a better life. Their destination was Vorkuta, a coal-mining city 90 miles north of the Arctic circle.

Vorkuta, which means “place of bears”...

Now, a better nickname may be “the fastest dying city in Russia.” The lure of higher wages and better housing is long gone, and the population has plummeted... When darkness falls, often just a handful of lights can be seen in apartment buildings of 100 units or more.

Ivanova, now 62, feels trapped. Like tens of thousands who worked at least 15 years in the far north, she has been waiting for more than two decades to be “resettled”... Of 14,000 Vorkuta residents on the list, only about 220 are resettled each year.

“I'm a hostage of the north,” Ivanova said. Despite health problems, Ivanova still works at a heating plant, earning just $440 a month — too little to afford moving without government help. “If you would have told me I'd be left high and dry … and that I wouldn't be able to move away, then I wouldn't have come here.”

Ivanova's plight clashes with Russian President Vladimir Putin's quest to conquer the warming Arctic. In April, he promised that the Northern Sea Route between Murmansk and Vladivostok would grow to rival the Suez canal as a shipping lane. Seven military bases have been built or reopened along the northern coast since 2013. Last month, the government approved huge tax breaks for oil and gas development in the Arctic.

But the paradox is that the north is emptying out even as Russia tries to develop it. Vorkuta was built during Joseph Stalin's reign on the backs of starved Gulag prisoners, 200,000 of whom died.

(Excerpt) Read more at pri.org ...


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Russia
KEYWORDS: arctic; oil; putin; russia
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1 posted on 03/12/2020 11:18:52 AM PDT by tlozo
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To: tlozo

No worries. Grrrrreta will ensure it gets warmer there too.


2 posted on 03/12/2020 11:20:59 AM PDT by rktman ( #My2ndAmend! ----- Enlisted in the Navy in '67 to protect folks rights to strip my rights. WTH?)
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To: tlozo
... Vladimir Putin's quest to conquer the warming Arctic...

They never miss a chance, do they? The author might want to be out of fist range if he puts it this way to Ms Ivanova. Just wait a while, my dear - soon this will be like Miami Beach! With bears...

3 posted on 03/12/2020 11:25:27 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: tlozo

When the Soviet Union died, so did a lot of plans such as hers.


4 posted on 03/12/2020 11:29:42 AM PDT by LouieFisk
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To: tlozo

“the fastest dying city in Russia.”

Just call it “the Russian Cleveland”

Easier to say.


5 posted on 03/12/2020 11:29:57 AM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire. Or both.)
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To: tlozo

Vorkuta !!!! A City of the future, where more people are under the ground than above it.


6 posted on 03/12/2020 11:30:24 AM PDT by Bringbackthedraft ( #ReasonableDemocratsforTrump. Where are you?)
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To: tlozo

“Lyudmila Ivanova and her fiance came to the Arctic from a village in southern Russia in 1978 in search of a better life.”

A better life in the Arctic? Geez where the hell did these people live that they believed the Arctic was a better place?


7 posted on 03/12/2020 11:30:36 AM PDT by billyboy15
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To: tlozo

Soon coming to a lot of North Dakota “boom towns”.


8 posted on 03/12/2020 11:31:26 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: tlozo

LMAO, if Putin thinks the northern route to the Pacific is going to be permanently open due to “global warming” and is actually basing investments on that, he is stupider than I thought.


9 posted on 03/12/2020 11:33:02 AM PDT by Boogieman
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To: Bringbackthedraft

They’ll have the last laugh when SMOD takes out everybody living on the surface.


10 posted on 03/12/2020 11:33:42 AM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire. Or both.)
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To: billyboy15

It was the Soviet Union. Living in the arctic might have been a better life if it paid you enough to not have to stand on the bread lines.


11 posted on 03/12/2020 11:34:56 AM PDT by Boogieman
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To: BenLurkin

Was rampant crime mentioned as a problem?


12 posted on 03/12/2020 11:35:08 AM PDT by Rurudyne (Standup Philosoper)
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To: tlozo

What sort of person would move to the Arctic in search of a better life? I suspect they might want to check into an asylum instead.


13 posted on 03/12/2020 11:42:45 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: tlozo
Lyudmila Ivanova and her fiance came to the Arctic from a village in southern Russia in 1978 in search of a better life. Their destination was Vorkuta, a coal-mining city 90 miles north of the Arctic circle.

Vorkuta, which means “place of bears”...

That should have been a red flag right there.

14 posted on 03/12/2020 11:43:17 AM PDT by Rummyfan (In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Israel.)
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To: tlozo
Vorkuta was the site of a notorious Gulag camp that was the site of a strike by inmates in 1953. Joseph Scholmer, a German Communist who fell out with the party leadership and John Noble, an American businessman swept into the Gulag describe their experiences at Vorkuta and the strike in their memoirs: Scholmer's Vorkuta (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1954) and Noble's I Was a Slave in Russia (New York: Devin-Adair, 1958).
15 posted on 03/12/2020 11:43:44 AM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: tlozo
In April, he promised that the Northern Sea Route between Murmansk and Vladivostok would grow to rival the Suez canal as a shipping lane.

Putin lives in fantasy-land.

16 posted on 03/12/2020 11:43:58 AM PDT by Rummyfan (In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Israel.)
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To: billyboy15

Russia has/had some very rough places to live.


17 posted on 03/12/2020 11:44:13 AM PDT by sport
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To: Fiji Hill

I knew John Noble and he was a lonely voice about the horrors of the Soviet slave labor/gulag systems until Solzenitsyn, then Avram Shifrin, and a few other victims of those “camps” spoke out, wrote their memoirs, and in the case of Avram (a late friend of mine, I helped him on one of his congressional testimonies on the hidden Soviet military budget within the civilian budget), testifying before Congressional committees (Shifrin’s “Slave Labor Camps in the USSR”, VOL. 1-3, 1972, Sen. Internal Security Subcommittee, Sen. Judiciary Comm).


18 posted on 03/12/2020 11:47:42 AM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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To: Boogieman

Towards the end of the Soviet Union, the big enticement to work up north was being paid in hard currency. Pounds, Deutschmarks, Dollars. With that access to the special stores.


19 posted on 03/12/2020 12:14:57 PM PDT by Fred Hayek (The Democratic Party is now the operational arm of the CPUSA)
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To: Fred Hayek

Ah yes, I heard about the “special stores” in Poland where you could buy Western goods, but only if you had real (non-Communist) currency.


20 posted on 03/12/2020 12:32:42 PM PDT by Boogieman
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