I don't really see how the situation in Crimea compares in any sense to that comment about Nigeria. In that case, you have people being viciously persecuted and denied fundamental human rights, so obviously they'd have everything to gain by escaping that situation if there was any way to do so. In Crimea, you have...what, exactly? All else being equal, daily life for ethnic Russians in Crimea would be functionally no different than daily life in Russia itself. Obviously not everyone is able to move out, but it's not as though they're facing the threat of death on a daily basis, despite what Putin's blowhard rhetoric may suggest. My only point in my initial statement is that a particular group of people in one part of a country shouldn't be able to slough off and attach to another country just because they feel like it. And as Luis put it, even if this is all a result of Kruschev's goofy border-redrawing some 50 years ago, Ukraine has been an independent country for more than two decades...and it's just NOW that people up and decide to swap countries?
The thing is, Crimea is mostly inhabited by ethnic Russians, who might feel connected to country they come from. Just see how Russian forces were received in Crimea by the majority of people there - generally as a welcome sight. It's not about that Russians got their hands on Crimea. It's about
how they did it. If there was a proper Crimean independence referendum, and people voted "yes", there would be no problem. However, Putin took over that place by force, and without first consulting the UN, or the Crimean people.
Oh, and in peaceful times, secessionists like this are generally not taken very seriously. It's very hard to get a government to give up a good chunk of it's land. First, people have to want it really badly, second, the government has to care. Swapping countries is hard, and I suppose the ethnic Russians were able to live in Ukraine, even if they felt connected to Russia. In light of recent events, though, the western Ukraine was swept by huge anti-Russian protests, and at the same time, Putin offered them both protection and a chance to actually live in "their" country. It's no surprise Russians want to live in Russia, rather than in increasingly pro-western Ukraine. Of course, that's not to say what he really did was right by any means, but from the perspective of an average Crimean Russian, the situation is probably rather good. Remember, there were anti-Yanukhovich protesters, but a whole lot of protests were also strongly anti-Russian, and I can understand that they might have been afraid of ethnic discrimination.
If you believe that, I have a bridge I'd love to sell you.
Be careful when telling that to a Russian, it might turn out he's
already got one. Or that he might take you up on the offer just because he's recently lost one...
