Thursday, March 02, 2023

Argentina

Pregnant Russians stream into Argentina. Officials are suspicious. - The Washington Post
The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

Pregnant Russians are streaming into Argentina. Officials are suspicious.

Alex Slepenkov, an engineer, and Natasha Slepenkova, a sociologist from Russia, at their home in Buenos Aires. (Anita Pouchard Serra for The Washington Post)

BUENOS AIRES — The young couple was determined to leave Russia.

Alex Slepenkov, 36, knew he could be forced to join the military and fight in a war he had tried to protest. He and his wife, Natasha Slepenkova, 30, feared the country would turn into North Korea, closing its borders to the world.

After they learned in September they were expecting their first child, they began looking up alternatives. The couple settled on a destination about as far from Moscow as possible, with a culture and language vastly different from their own.

Argentina, unlike many countries, still allowed Russians to enter. And it’s a country that grants citizenship to children born on its soil — allowing the baby’s parents to apply, too. For Russians, an Argentine passport is something of a golden ticket, granting visa-free access to more than 170 countries.

“We wanted to give our baby the option to go wherever he wants, to do whatever he wants,” said Slepenkov, an engineer. “To grow like a free person.”

But within days of the couple’s arrival in Buenos Aires in January, the Argentine government began sounding alarms.

Immigration authorities in this South American country barred six pregnant Russian women from entering in February, alleging they had claimed falsely to be tourists. The headlines about the women followed reports that two suspected Russian spies who were detained in Slovenia recently were citizens of Argentina.

Authorities here say Russian women are taking advantage of its comparatively open immigration policy by arriving, giving birth, applying for passports and leaving. Such parents aren’t necessarily breaking rules. But authorities are claiming, without providing evidence, that organized criminals might be luring them here by overstating how easy the process is. And that it could be a way for spies to gain legitimate citizenship.

Russians abandon wartime Russia in historic exodus

More than 22,200 Russians have arrived in Argentina in the past 14 months. In January alone, 4,523 entered, more than four times the number in January 2o22, before Russia invaded Ukraine. Authorities say they don’t know how many were pregnant when they entered because they don’t ask.

“It’s grown exponentially,” Argentina’s immigration chief, Florencia Carignano, told reporters in February. “You can see it in the number of flights arriving, the number of pregnant women, and that on each flight there are more people of Russian nationality.”

The new parents are part of a historic exodus of Russians. As many as 1 million are estimated to have fled Russia in the year since the start of the invasion, a migration similar to those during the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917 and the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

The largest numbers have gone to Russia’s neighbors, including Georgia, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Serbia and Turkey. But Argentina has emerged as a much sought destination. The phenomenon has spawned an industry of agencies that charge thousands of dollars for help finding maternity hospitals and filling out paperwork.

Only 2,400 of the arrivals have begun applying for residency, leading immigration authorities to believe most do not intend to stay in the long term. Expectant parents are welcome to come and establish their lives in Argentina, Carignano said, “but we also don’t want to turn the country into a maternity ward.”

She said “mafias” might be behind the phenomenon. “The problem is, they’re not coming here to live,” she said. “They take the passport, and then we find Russian spies in Slovenia with Argentine passports. That’s our fear.”

It’s not clear whether the newcomers will get passports. Authorities say none has been granted to Russian arrivals since the start of 2022. They would not say how many had applied.

Still, growing concerns about the Russians’ motives have cast a shadow on families genuinely hoping to build a life in Argentina.

“We don’t want Argentines to think of us as parasites,” Alex Slepenkov said.

Separated by war, a Ukrainian family balances safety, duty and love

Judicial authorities are investigating whether a criminal organization is behind the wave of arrivals. They’re focusing on a Russian citizen who they allege helped immigrants speed the citizenship process and secure fake residence certificates, according to a person in the judiciary familiar with the investigation who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case.

Officials with Homeland Security Investigations, part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, have asked the court for information about the case, the judicial employee said.

Giving birth to a child in Argentina doesn’t guarantee citizenship for the parents — that’s up to a judge. It’s possible for an applicant to start the process and then leave the country. But Paula Carello, president of the Migration and Asylum Law Institute at the Rosario Bar Association, says it’s “doubtful that a judge will award the citizenship to someone who does not live or intend to live here.”

Yet many of the companies and travel agencies that help coordinate birth trips to Argentina promote their services with the promise of a passport — “the fastest in the world!” according to one firm.

Elena, a 26-year-old Russian woman, founded Argentina Family after giving birth to two children here. She spoke on the condition that her last name be withheld to avoid attracting the attention of Argentine authorities.

She charges $3,000 for help planning a birth trip, finding an apartment, choosing a hospital and applying for residence. She said in an interview that she doesn’t help clients apply for citizenship or a passport. Nevertheless, her website begins by telling potential clients: “Get the fastest second passport in the world.” It advertises childbirth in Argentina as “the best alternative to giving birth in the USA.”

None of her approximately 60 clients has been able to get an Argentine passport, Elena said. She applied for her own passport in April, she said, but has not received it.

Christian Rubilar, the lawyer for three of the six women held at the Buenos Aires airport in February, said the women did not hire an agency. He accused such companies of falsely convincing women they can get passports remotely.

A judge ruled that the women did not follow proper procedure but should be allowed entrance because of the risk to their lives and those of their babies.

One of them, Maria Konovalova, 25, told The Washington Post she plans to stay here a few years at least. She joined a protest at the Russian Embassy in Buenos Aires last week wearing a sticker on her pregnant belly with the words “F--- Putin,” the Russian president.

Angry families say Russian conscripts thrown to front line unprepared

Georgy Polin, the head of consular services at the Russian Embassy, criticized companies that “promise things that are totally illusory.” He attributed the influx of Russians to Argentina reopening its borders after a long pandemic quarantine. He declined to say whether the war in Ukraine was a factor.

Polin said the government’s numbers seemed greater than the reality, but he has noted a large increase in Russians arriving. “Translators have months-long waiting lists,” he said. “This is like a California gold rush.”

People in Buenos Aires have grown accustomed to hearing Russian spoken in the street. In Palermo, a trendy neighborhood popular among foreign tourists, Russian mothers can often be seen pushing strollers or shopping for baby clothes. Maternity hospitals are putting up signs and posters in Russian. In two of the hospitals most popular with Russian parents, Russian babies represent almost a third of monthly births, according to Argentine newspaper La Nación.

Some Russian families fear the government’s comments could stoke a backlash — or exacerbate existing anti-Russian sentiment here.

“When I was looking for an apartment, there were some real estate agencies that refused to talk with me when I told them I was Russian,” said Mary Yufit, a 35-year-old film producer. She arrived in Buenos Aires in June and gave birth to a son in August.

She hasn’t yet applied for citizenship, but she’s planning on living here indefinitely. In interviews with around a dozen Russian families, none said they planned to leave anytime soon.

That’s also true of Alex Slepenkov and Natasha Slepenkova. They’re expecting a boy by the end of May.

The couple were on vacation in the Dominican Republic a year ago when Russia invaded Ukraine. Afraid to return home, they stayed in the Caribbean nation for months. She quit her job as a flight attendant. He returned to Russia briefly to sell his car, pack up his business and take his money out of his bank accounts. They arrived in Argentina on Jan. 31.

They felt comfortable here immediately, they said. Slepenkova says she feels at home in Buenos Aires, a large city that reminds her of Moscow. Slepenkov hopes to reestablish his marketing business here. He’s now chugging mate every day, brewing the South American herbal drink in a French press and drinking it all at once like a cup of coffee.

Like many Russians here, they say they can’t predict whether they’ll eventually want to return to Russia. Or go somewhere else. For now, they say, they’re staying put.

Schmidt reported from Bogotá, Colombia. Abbakumova reported from Riga, Latvia. Ana Vanessa Herrero in Caracas and Diana Durán in Bogotá contributed to this report.

Loading...

No comments:

Twitter Updates

Search This Blog

Total Pageviews