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    12 Kommentare

    1. It’s a little sad when the regions designated and named specifically for an ethnic group don’t even hold a majority in population there. They are slowly losing their identity under the illusion of “autonomy”

    2. Professional_Top9835 on

      I expected Buryatia to be more buryat, seems its even more ethnically russified than Yakutia, which is already like 50%/50%

    3. 6ftToeSuckedPrincess on

      Ummm achuallltyyyy they’re called Roma, Gypsie is an offensive slur and I won’t tolerate viewing it with my pure eyes!

    4. PipecleanerFanatic on

      Where is this data from? How are Germans the second largest ethnic group in the Altai? Are you saying there are more Germans than Altai or Russians?

    5. Strange thing in west Siberia much easier to meet Ukrainian or Belarusian than tatarlar.We have tatar villages here but belorusian (like myself) much more common

    6. ElKuhnTucker on

      I think in a case with such a large data set a letter to clarify a shade of colour would be helpful

    7. toxicvegeta08 on

      Maybe if you stack them on too of eachother dargins and udmurts would be large

    8. Still_There3603 on

      I wonder how the millions of Ukrainians living in Russia within the 1991 borders (not Crimea or Eastern Ukraine controlled by Russia) feel about these past 11 years. I also read that Russia was the largest destination for Ukrainian refugees once the war began too, more than even Poland and Germany.

      On the other hand, Syrskyi is ethnically Russian and has family members in Moscow yet is the general of the AFU against Russia. Many Ukrainians have been caught as collaborators too in Eastern Ukraine since 2014.

      I know people hate to hear this but this feels like a Civil War located in Eastern Ukraine & Western Russia where the border has mentally dissipated.

    9. Staylin_Alive on

      Алга татарлар! Как говорится: „Поскреби русского – найдешь татарина“

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