Prosperity never arrived in Russian-held Crimea, despite promises

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Dmitry Medvedev tells Crimeans: "There is no money. But you hang on!"
Dmitry Medvedev tells Crimeans: “There is no money. But you hang on!”
By Maria Tsvetkova

More than two years after Russia annexed Crimea and promised its 2 million people a better life, residents say prices have soared, wages and pensions have stagnated and tourists have fled.

The sunny and mountainous Black Sea peninsula is back in the news, with Russian President Vladimir Putin accusing Kiev of sending infiltrators across the border to wreck its industry. But locals say the damage has already been done by Moscow’s neglect.

“We joined Russia and they stopped giving a damn about us,” Yevgeny, a worker at a titanium plant in the town of Armyansk told Reuters.

“People are naive. They thought that if we were part of Russia, everything would be Russian. Prices have now jumped to the Russian level, but wages have stayed the same. That’s the main problem.”

Fearing reprisals from his boss, Yevgeny declined to give his surname, as did other workers who spoke to Reuters.

Armyansk, a sleepy Crimean town near the newly-established border with Ukraine, is not far from where Russia says it fought armed clashes with Ukrainian infiltrators last week. Kiev says the clashes never took place and Moscow fabricated the incident as a possible pretext for new military action against Ukraine.

The alleged plot has dominated headlines in Crimea, distracting attention away from the region’s own problems. But according to some residents of Armyansk, a long way from Crimea’s Tsarist-era palaces and its picturesque mountainous sea coast, those problems urgently need addressing.

CHEMICAL PLANT

FIRST Vladimir Putin mauled Georgia, but the world forgave him—because Russia was too important to be cut adrift. Then he gobbled up Crimea, but the world accepted it.  Now he has infiltrated eastern Ukraine, but the world is hesitating—because infiltration is not quite invasion. But  the Baltic states are now scared because they think they are next in line to be gobbled
FIRST Vladimir Putin mauled Georgia, but the world forgave him—because Russia was too important to be cut adrift. Then he gobbled up Crimea, but the world accepted it. Now he has infiltrated eastern Ukraine, but the world is hesitating—because infiltration is not quite invasion. But the Baltic states are now scared because they think they are next in line to be gobbled
Armyansk has never been prosperous. A quarter of the town’s 20,000 people work at the Crimea Titanium chemical plant, riding in dozens of identical green passenger buses to the factory from the town each morning, and back again in the afternoon.

When Crimea was controlled by Ukraine, goods and services were affordable, and the plant’s workers were able to treat themselves now and then, they say. But after Kiev blocked freight supplies last year prices soared.

“I can only buy food and it’s hard to buy clothes,” said Pavel, a technician, who said he was paid 17,000 rubles ($265) a month. That is only around half the average monthly income in Russia.

“It would be enough in Ukraine because prices were lower. I’m shocked. My wage is stuck and everything grows in price.”

Three other workers who spoke to Reuters described monthly salaries ranging from just 10,000 rubles for a laboratory assistant to 21,000 for a man who runs an engineering department.

The Crimea Titanium plant is controlled by Ukrainian tycoon Dmytro Firtash. His spokesman and the plant’s management did not reply to for requests for comment.

Russia is building a bridge to link Crimea to southern Russia it hopes will establish a new supply route and reduce consumer prices. However the first trucks are not expected to be able to use it until 2018 at the earliest.

‘WE HAVE NO MONEY’

Moscow is aware of Armyansk’s woes. It put it on a list of more than 300 Russian towns identified as needing state-backed investment to diversify their economies. When contacted by Reuters, Crimea’s economy ministry said no projects in the town had yet been developed.

Russia announced plans to invest 680 billion rubles (around $10 bln) in Crimea between now and 2020. That is on top of the billions of rubles it spends each month on pensions and payments to teachers, doctors and government employees.

Pensioners, state employees and people working in the tourist industry were expected to enjoy a significant financial uplift after annexation. Instead, the ruble has lost about half of its value against the dollar since 2014 due to lower oil prices and Western sanctions.

In May, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev was filmed during a visit to Crimea being confronted by a woman who complained about low living standards for Crimea’s half million pensioners.

“It’s impossible to get by on a pension in Crimea,” she said. “Prices are crazy … What is 8,000 (rubles) ($125) ? It’s a paltry sum.”

Medvedev’s reply went viral online: “We simply have no money … Bear up.”

EMPTY RESTAURANTS

With its spas and Black Sea coast, Crimea has been a popular tourist resort since the Tsarist era, when Anton Chekhov wrote about illicit liaisons among the fashionable gentry vacationing on the Yalta promenade.

Putin said last year that tourism in Crimea should be profitable and Moscow would consider measures to attract foreign visitors. But annexation has cut the peninsula off from Ukrainian holidaymakers who mainly arrived by train, and their numbers have not been made up by Russian tourists, who must travel by air to get there.

When Crimea was controlled by Ukraine, 6 million tourists a year visited, according to official data. Post-annexation, the number of tourists dropped sharply and has yet not recovered.

“When we were in Ukraine, there were more people. You could hardly make your way through the crowd,” said a bored-looking waiter on the smart terrace of a nearly empty restaurant called Europe, close to the sea in Yevpatoriya, a popular resort.

Natalya, a waitress at Dulber, another restaurant in the town, said the customers that do come spend much less money than they used to when the peninsula was part of Ukraine.

“People now are reluctant to spend money, they make minimal orders and we are tipped less,” she said. “We have a ruble crisis now, prices are high. People come from Russia and they are shocked by the high prices in Crimea. We’re shocked by them ourselves.”

REUTERS

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27 responses to “Prosperity never arrived in Russian-held Crimea, despite promises”

  1. Neither did “Democracy” anywhere in the myriad of countries the criminal USA invaded since WWII.

    1. Rudy1947 Avatar

      Japan and Germany come to mind.

      1. Japan? After deliberatly dropping two nuclear bombs that killed hundreds of thousands?

        Germany? After financing and supporting the Third Reich?

        That being said, what comes to my mind is F off.

        1. Rudy1947 Avatar

          Japan just wouldn’t give up. Besides the the bombing of Tokyo with non nuclear devices was just as effective.

          Don’t remember the US supporting the Third Reich after the Third Reich made their intentions quite clear. In fact I remember the USA and allies destroying the Third Reich.

          1. Get your fact straight about both Japan and Germany.

          2. Rudy1947 Avatar

            I did.

          3. Great. Now, F off.

          4. Rudy1947 Avatar

            No.

          5. Get your facts straight then instead of parroting the American bs narrative like a top class idiot. The US did not have to nuke Japan and it did finance Nazis.

          6. Rudy1947 Avatar

            I did. No need to go over it again.

          7. I hope you realize tables do turn in life.

          8. Rudy1947 Avatar

            Don’t see any turning now. Besides, my beer is on the table.

          9. Hope it’s some good microbrewery stuff. 🙂

        2. MekensehParty Avatar
          MekensehParty

          the king of garbage has spoken, it cant be but the truth, wallaw, Irna said it

          1. And the new American whore as squealed again.

            Not my fault if you’re not aware that the two nuclear bombs were dropped deliberately on japan or that American corporations had business dealing with the Nazis.

          2. MekensehParty Avatar
            MekensehParty

            the Japanese and the nazis at least know the meaning of accepting defeat and moving on into building civilized country. When are you Lebanese going to learn the same? When there’s electricity 24/7?

          3. You know very well what the problem is in Lebanon and that it is not related in any shape or form with Japan and/or Germany. They don’t have 5 different factions sharing the government’s power. Electricity is a result of that division.

          4. Maybe he prefers PressTV? 🙂

        3. 5thDrawer Avatar
          5thDrawer

          Let’s assume we’re back before WW1 … and some ‘power-hungry’ tin-pots are bumping their gums about ‘nationalistic pride’ … and then one terrorist takes out Wilhelm – A Kaiser – which is not meaning something to eat at that moment in history.
          Almost immediately one bunch collects to mourn that ‘incident’ .. and another bunch laugh, but then figure they better band together in case the laughing was too much.
          WAR of a type which had never happened before was formed, and quite soon after was ‘declared’ by ‘sides’. It became a long-term mess in the mud.
          When one side ‘won’ … they then proceeded to ‘TAX HEAVILY’ the side which had lost.
          Which impoverished a whole pile of people … even those who were not even in a war, either because they were too young, or had not even been born – and of course all the old folks who had been retired from any wars before that.
          This allowed an ‘Adolf’ to rise with an idea of how to get a little money back to feed the folks, and make a saleable car … the Folks-wagon – better than all the dead horses anyway, after a war … along with tin whistles and toys, etc.
          All the folks loved the fact they could get a job and eat again – even in ‘The Far West’.
          Ideas about the ‘purity’ of those who made cars and other good machines was strung into a ‘Camp’ named MINE !! – and was promoted in the finer book-stores.
          So when Adolf began to promote his ‘exceptional’ ideas in a book, few bought it to read deeply, and just had one a table in a library for ‘show’. And his exceptional idea was. that the ‘world could be a better place’ if he controlled it and everyone had blonde hair … even if he didn’t. (neatly overlooking the same ideas others had about Black hair, of course … or even seeing that some felt the same about Red.) And then with all the money, he made a WW2 – because he hadn’t gotten ‘consensus’ on the Camp Concept.
          After that campy idea was dashed to the dust and Adolf at least disappeared, the ‘New Allies’ saw the error of their ways from the first debacle, and actually boosted The Folks who had been considered ‘losers’, by supplying food at the least. (except to Allies with Red hair who had collected some Camp Thoughts of their own, and didn’t even want to vacate a Capital City.) Various ‘changes’ of Allies happened then, and some were left in the ‘Cold’ for a long time – at least until A PIle of Folks decided food could be shared and a wall just wasn’t worth not being able to visit a cousin – and they said so.
          After which, again, a time of ‘Constructive Development’ happened, without any Adolf getting on a hight horse … too often … although again ‘some’ who were starving had been ignored by the ‘Supply-side’ economics, and began to make noises while others yap about ‘prides’ – not necessarily even with nationalistic ‘manners’.
          And as a #3 approaches, it might also be stated that #1 WW had never quite been left
          yet – even if Kaisers have become very popular lunch-buns – and that more than bagels in some areas.

          1. Where do you put Ernst Hanfstaengl in all this?

          2. 5thDrawer Avatar
            5thDrawer

            Upper-crust ‘Debating-team’ type of guy, who played piano seemingly well, and knocked himself out of the ‘upper crust’ on 2 sides of the ocean because he had never really played a game, but loved the attention in debates. :-))
            Undoubtably a good German .. up to a point.

          3. Hind Abyad Avatar
            Hind Abyad

            😉

          4. 5thDrawer Avatar
            5thDrawer

            Probably more interesting was his wife …
            http://www.theglobalist.com/the-woman-who-prevented-hitlers-suicide/
            Eventually Ernst was out-propagandized by Goebbels.

          5. No doubt that ‘Putzi’ played the piano well (he composed Brownshirt and Hitler Youth marches) but he was more than that – close friend with Roosevelt and linked the the White House. He also introduced Hitler to the business elite in Germany.

          6. 5thDrawer Avatar
            5thDrawer

            Actually a lot of us strange folks enjoy music. What more can I say?

          7. The “Kaiser” part of your comment flew by above my head. I recalled something I read a while back …

            Note: Since the Bildebergers, according to former British Intelligence agent John Coleman, serve as a BINDING force between the three major ’one world government’ forces – the Wicca-Masons (i.e. Communism); the Black Nobility descendants of the early Roman emperors; and the Maltese Jesuits… each of which have 13 respective representatives on the 39-member Bildeberger board – and since a Nazi SS stormtrooper was responsible for developing this “New World Order” coordination council, and since Adolph Hitler’s second book was titled [believe it or not] “The New World Order.” No wonder Adolph Hitler’s dream – and that of his predecessors the “Kaisers”, a German translation of “Caesars” – was the revival of the Roman empire.

  2. 5thDrawer Avatar
    5thDrawer

    “I can only buy food and it’s hard to buy clothes,” ….. Hmmm … You mean you didn’t really know about the Russian System in the first place?? Tsk …

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