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After corporate protest, the Russian Governor backs off on his ban on migrant workers

After Severstal, a steel giant in Russia, complained that the ban would hurt the industry and the governor lifted the restriction just a little over a week later.

In an explanation to the decree retracting this ban, signed on Thursday by Governor Georgy Filimonov, it was stated that an analysis of the employment vacancies found in the Vologda area northwest of Moscow revealed there weren't enough Russians of working age to fill the vacancies.

Severstal, the largest employer in the area, had criticized the ban. This rare clash of politicians with major business interests exposed tensions in Russia, as the economy struggles to cope with a severe labour shortage.

The unemployment rate in Russia is 2.4%, which is near a new record. Heavy recruitment by the military and defence industries have taken workers from civil enterprises. Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of Russians left the country after President Vladimir Putin sent the army to Ukraine in 2022.

Russia has relied traditionally on migrant workers, mainly from Central Asia to fill employment gaps and grow the economy.

Some of these workers, which number around 6 million people in Russia, have reported growing hostility in Russia after Islamist militants, originally from Tajikistan, killed 145 at a concert near Moscow last summer.

Filimonov has not stated the reasons for the ban on migrants, but he has publicly asked why local workers cannot be hired by businesses.

Severstal's spokesperson said that the company must hire at least 2,168 employees before 2027 to build the new iron ore plant in Cherepovets. The city is a major one, and the company plans to invest more than 120 billion roubles (1,35 billion dollars) this year.

The company advertised 600 job vacancies in Vologda after the ban came into effect. alone.

(source: Reuters)