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According to the report, around a million Russians moved to Crimea after its annexation by Russia in 2014, according to Ukrainian authorities and human rights activists. Many Russian citizens saw the prospect of a life by the sea and the opportunity to earn money from the federal resources that Russian authorities were pouring into the peninsula. But the reality of Crimea proved such that many were soon forced to return to Russia from Crimea.
The report also stated that the military factor is increasingly visible in the region due to regular strikes by the Ukrainian Defense Forces on local Russian military installations. But according to Russian realtors and bloggers, this is far from the main reason for Russians leaving; many began leaving the peninsula long before the war. According to statistics cited by Russian Crimean real estate consultant Ksenia Schwartz, out of 10 Russians who have arrived in recent years, only two remain on the peninsula.
The report also said that their families moved to Crimea in the hope that they would be welcomed, promised a middle ground, and that everything would be fine. A pleasant climate, a pleasant life, and plenty of work. They begin to notice the downsides: poorly developed infrastructure, low wages, expensive groceries, and generally the high cost of living there, and their salaries aren't enough. It is not yet known for certain how many Russian citizens left Crimea for economic reasons. There are no statistics.
The report also stated that the military factor is increasingly visible in the region due to regular strikes by the Ukrainian Defense Forces on local Russian military installations. But according to Russian realtors and bloggers, this is far from the main reason for Russians leaving; many began leaving the peninsula long before the war. According to statistics cited by Russian Crimean real estate consultant Ksenia Schwartz, out of 10 Russians who have arrived in recent years, only two remain on the peninsula.
The report also said that their families moved to Crimea in the hope that they would be welcomed, promised a middle ground, and that everything would be fine. A pleasant climate, a pleasant life, and plenty of work. They begin to notice the downsides: poorly developed infrastructure, low wages, expensive groceries, and generally the high cost of living there, and their salaries aren't enough. It is not yet known for certain how many Russian citizens left Crimea for economic reasons. There are no statistics.