| Evicted Sochi Residents Go on Hunger Strike |
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| Written by smoc | |||
| Friday, 21 May 2010 09:38 | |||
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One member of the settlement told the Kasparov.ru online newspaper that the dozens of residents on hunger strike are demanding that Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin come to the valley to meet with them, since “nothing is being resolved on the local level.” Negotiations are currently underway between the protesters and regional official Aleksandr Zhigalko. Police officers were also on the scene of the hunger strike on Wednesday. Boris Nemtsov, a former Deputy Prime Minister and Sochi native who lost his April 2009 bid for Sochi mayor to Kremlin-backed candidate Anatoly Pakhomov amidst numerous fraud allegations, explained on his blog how the hunger strike should come as no surprise considering the travails put upon thousands of Imeretinskaya Valley residents since the region was picked to be one of the primary sites for the Olympics:
It is worth noting that in March 2010, the newspaper Gazeta reported that workers building the resettlement homes in Nekrasovka were fired after striking in response to managers withholding their pay. The workers who remained, says the newspaper, have had to resort to selling their personal items to afford bread. Others have handed their passports over to store owners as collateral for food, making it impossible for the workers, some of whom hail from parts of Siberia, to leave Sochi before paying back their debts. The Nekrasovka workers went on strike after workers at a second resettlement site went on hunger strike for the same reason.
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Russian politician and opposition, professor Boris Berezovsky, a fugitive from repression of Moscow in London, confirmed that in the poisoning of Viktor Yushchenko "the footsteps lead to the Kremlin", but the case is stalled. "It is quite obvious - and there are lots of facts that the footsteps of the crime, lead to the Kremlin to the comrade Putin" - Berezovsky said in an interview with "Segodnya".
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