BATUMI/Georgia, MAY 27 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — With its palm tree-lined boulevards, this city on the Black Sea coast is Georgia’s best known tourist destination.
It has boomed over the past decade and will soon host the world’s sixth largest hotel in the form of the 45-storey Twin Tower.
But there is a darker side.
On the outskirts of Batumi, several thousand people live in dilapidated barracks. Since October 2012, migrants and socially deprived people have been living in an abandoned Russian military base, now one of the biggest shantytowns in Georgia.
Its dwellers call it Ocnebis Kalaki. In English, this means Dream Town. It is a joke, a dark joke.
Water is available for only a few hours a day, there are frequent power cuts, gas is not provided and a rudimental sewage system increases the risk of infections and diseases.
Most of the families live in very small, poorly-built rooms. A family of eight share a two-room shack made out of wood, cement-asbestos, metal sheets and cardboard.
These people live on the fringe of Georgian society.
ENDS
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(News report from Issue No. 282, published on May 27 2016)