From the end of the year, foreigners working in Russia must be tested regularly for syphilis, leprosy and drugs.
Foreigners living in Moscow will have to go to the migration center in Zakharovo, which is in the southwestern part of the capital, about 60 kilometers outside the city center. |
The amendment states that foreign professionals, their family members living in Russia and any foreigner who wants to stay in the country for an extended period of time have to be tested every three months for infectious diseases, including syphilis, HIV, leprosy, tuberculosis, and Covid-19. They are also required to take a drug test and must submit their fingerprints and a biometric photo to the authorities.
Children over 6 to be tested for drugs and syphilis
The new rules will also apply to all children over the age of 6. If someone tests positive for any of the specified diseases, they will not be granted a visa, and any existing visa will be revoked. They will be designated “undesirable,” and ordered to leave the country. Foreigners are already required to present a negative HIV test when applying for a work visa or a residence permit to stay in Russia for longer than 90 days.
The Russian government has not explained what it intends to achieve with the new regulations. However, a letter accompanying the draft law states that the 2.5 million citizens of Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova and Uzbekistan in Russia constitute the majority of foreigners in the country and that they are only randomly subjected to medical tests. This, the letter pointed out, means there is a risk of the “infiltration and spread of dangerous infectious diseases in Russia.”
Belarusian citizens are explicitly exempted from the new rules — probably because Belarus and Russia are formally a “Union State.” Belarusians do not need a visa to go to Russia, and if they seek employment there, the rules and requirements that apply to them are much simpler.
Little success modifying the new rules
According to Thorsten Gutmann, the spokesperson of the German-Russian Chamber of Commerce (AHK Russia), his organization has been working behind the scenes for months to try to get the new regulations dropped. They have, however, had only minimal success.
“Originally, people were going to be required to take the tests every time they entered the country, but now they will have to do them every three months,” Gutmann told DW.
The Russian authorities will decide where and how the tests are done. Foreigners living in Moscow will have to go to the migration center in Zakharovo, which is in the southwestern part of the capital, about 60 kilometers outside the city center.
A German businessman wrote a letter to the AHK after going to Zakharovo to try to complete the medical checks, in which he described what went on there as “pure harassment.” The procedure took at least four whole working days, he reported. On the first day, he had to stand in line for hours in each of the four areas of the migration center, in order to undergo the required medical examinations — with several hundred migrant workers all in the same room.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if I caught COVID there — hardly anyone was wearing a mask correctly, and there was no social distancing,” he said.
New rules described as “unacceptable”
On his second visit, the German businessman said, he spent the majority of a full working day in Zakharovo, “acting as ‘courier’ for the immigration service: collecting medical certificates and handing them in at the counter for highly skilled workers.” The regulations state that you have to do everything yourself, in person. He then had to spend a third day there for the drug tests. By January at the latest, he will have to make another day trip to the migration center to complete a formal identification process and submit his fingerprints and a biometric photo.
The businessman described this whole procedure as “unacceptable,” especially if it has to be repeated every three months, requiring a full lung X-ray each time. “If that’s the case, I’m more likely to look for a different job in Germany. A lot of people probably feel the same,” he wrote.
Appeal by ten foreign business associations
Germany’s Committee on Eastern European Economic Relations (OA) also reported a wave of indignation among German businesspeople in Russia. It said they “feel harassed — with reason.” Both the OA and AHK Russia warned that these new changes in the law will significantly diminish Russia’s attractiveness to foreign investment, and will also result in an exodus of skilled foreign workers. This, they pointed out, would put Russia’s economic development at risk, as foreign specialists and executives make a significant contribution.
This week, in an initiative led by AHK Russia and the OA, 10 foreign business associations, including the Association of European Businesses and the American Chamber of Commerce, wrote to the Russian government to make clear that the new law would have serious consequences.
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