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“政策有没有变?我们还能在这里干吗?4月份到了是不是真的就让我们走人啊?”一见面,这位北方汉子一股脑地抛出了一大堆问题。2007年3月2日,在莫斯科东部的切尔佐夫斯基市场,也就是当地中国人俗称的“大市场”,昔日熙熙攘攘、摩肩接踵的街道已经门可罗雀,好多商铺“铁将军把门”。就在中国人比较集中的货区,记者邂逅了“老五”。“老五”本名赵春发,四十开外的年纪,老家在吉林省通榆县农村,家里兄弟姐妹五人,因为他排行老末,认识的人都叫他“老五”。
“Has the policy changed yet? Can we still be here? Did we really leave April when we arrived?” As soon as he met, the north man jostled a whole host of questions. March 2, 2007 in the eastern part of Moscow’s Chertzovsky market, which is commonly known as the local Chinese “big market”, the former bustling, crowded streets have been glorified, a lot of shops, “General Iron Gate.” In the more concentrated Chinese goods area, the reporter met the “fifth”. “Lao Wu,” whose real name is Zhao Chunfa, was forty years old. His hometown is in the rural areas of Tongyu County in Jilin Province. Five brothers and sisters at home because he ranks the very end of the world and people he knows call him “Lao Wu.”