Showing posts with label Ganmukhuri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ganmukhuri. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

ARTICLE: Grand Designs on Hold in Georgia. By Nino Gerzmava

(iwpr.net) Plans for whole new city shelved, but port may yet be built.
By Nino Gerzmava - Caucasus
CRS Issue 669, 14 Dec 12

Georgia’s new government has placed all of President Mikhail Saakashvili’s ambitious infrastructure plans on hold. Thousands of people have been put out of work while the administration reviews the economic rationale for a range of projects including an all-new city. 
 
Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili’s administration argues that many projects like building a city called Lazika are too far-fetched to go ahead.

Deputy Economy Minister Dmitri Kumsishvili says the government will still push ahead with plans to develop tourism and industry, although projects in these sectors also need to be looked at.

“Tourism is one of the main priorities for the Georgian government. The projects that are on hold will be re-examined with regard to cost and effectiveness,” he said. “Our first step will be to create a council of consultants to study the tourism sector and present recommendations.”

It was just a year ago that Saakashvili unveiled plans for Lazika, which he promised would be Georgia’s second city with a population of half a million, and the major gateway on the Black Sea. Apart from the residential homes, shops and official buildings that would be required, Lazika was to get a port larger than the existing ones at Poti and Batumi. (See Georgian Leader Unveils Grand City Plan.)

Three years earlier, Saakashvili launched resort projects at Anaklia and Ganmukhuri by the sea, and at Mestia in the Caucasus mountains.

Along a two-kilometre seafront at Anaklia, workers rapidly built a promenade, hotels, swimming pools, restaurants, a concert hotel, a yacht club and a 500-metre bridge over the mouth of the River Inguri. Mestia got a ski centre, hostels, a new bridge and 130 km of road for access.

The construction boom created a lot of new jobs – 3,000 in the Samegrelo–Zemo Svaneti region, according to provincial governor Alexander Kobalia.

“For years, we sat at home with nothing to do,” Anaklia resident Goga Gerantia recalled. “At least recently we’ve been able to breathe a little. Some people worked as builders, others opened shops, and some of my neighbours got jobs in hotels and restaurants.

“In Samegrelo, where no one had laid one brick on top of another for decades, they built a whole resort. People were hoping for a better future.”

President Saakashvili’s party lost a parliamentary election on October 1, leaving the government in the hands of billionaire Ivanishvili’s Georgian Dream coalition.

A constitutional reform is in train to make the prime minister and parliament more powerful than the president, and as a result Saakashvili is left unable to force through his pet projects.

A wave of unemployment has hit Samegrelo–Zemo Svaneti, where much of the work was focused.

“A few months ago, Anaklia, Ganmukhuri and Mestia were flourishing,” Levan Konjaria, chairman of the town council in Zugdidi, the centre of Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti, said. “Now there’s just a few cows wandering around. The building work has stopped. This region needs attention, or all that work will have been in vain.”

Visiting the region on December 4, Saakashvili expressed regret that the projects had been frozen. He put the number of people who had lost their jobs at 6,500 people.

“You can’t sacrifice work on which so many families depend just to spite one man,” he said. “Forget that it was Saakashvili’s idea, say the idea came from the prime minister or someone else, but just build.”

He stressed that Lazika was still a good idea. “Forty-five per cent of Georgia’s population lives in villages. We need a new urban centre that offers people job opportunities,” he said.

Most of the building companies under contract have declined to speak to the press, with some saying they are under investigation by state prosecutors.

Soso Keidia, one of the founders of the Sunny construction firm, said its director had been arrested.

“No one wants to say anything. Everyone is awaiting the next steps taken by the new government,” he said. “Over 1,000 Sunny workers on big building projects in the new resort zone have been thrown out into the street as work stop for an unknown period.”

Saakashvili alluded to the investigations during his visit, saying, “Even local government is feeling the pressure from prosecutors. It is being asked why it spent money on building Lazika.”

He insisted, “This money was spent because I ordered it. I did this, and whatever they say, I will finish the job.”

Even if Lazika is dead as a concept, the port facilities may yet see the light of day.

“Building a city is absurd, but as for a port, that’s more realistic,” Ivanishvili said. “But right now, I don’t have a precise project or a precise answer.”

David Narmania, the minister for regional development and infrastructure, said discussions on the port were still going on, even though work on it was suspended.

“Negotiations are taking place with investors about building a port,” he said.

Nino Gerzmava is an IWPR-trained journalist in Georgia.

Friday, November 02, 2007

NEWS:
Georgia News Digest 11-01-07
A service of the
Georgian Foundation for Strategic and International Studies
Attached PDF file easily navigable with Bookmarks pane
Archives and associated files at
groups-beta.google.com/group/genews/files


N.b. Headlines in the digest header are now linked to the items, in both the email body and the attached PDF file.

1. Jihadi Murat [excerpt]
2. Losing Russia [excerpt]
3. Bitterness of a lover spurned
4. Authorities do not exclude possibility of threat of neighboring state under pretence of “contr-terrorist operation
5. EU allotted 120m eur to Georgia in terms of ENP action plan
6. No pain, no gain: an end to energy-dependency

7. Date for completion of construction of new Azerbaijani oil terminal in Georgia established
8. Georgia expects new Azeri gas contract soon
9. Georgia not worried about Russian gas price
10. PACE seeks to relaunch discussions on frozen conflicts in Europe
11. Peacekeepers in Abkhazia, S. Ossetia must remain calm
12. Grigory Karasin converses with commanders of peacekeeping forces in Abkhazia and South Ossetia
13. Saakashvili’s statement can result in new victims
14. Georgia amassing forces in conflict area
15. Separatists increase security measures
16. Abkhazian wine of Georgian origin?

17. presentation: Unprecedented: A look at Kosovo, Abkhazia and the right to statehood
18. UN Press conference
19. President Mikheil Saakashvili stresses Rustavi2 journalist’s heroic deed
20. Latest incident in Georgia connected with domestic crisis
21. Bezhuashvili informed Czech foreign minister on yesterday’s incident in Ganmukhuri
22. Georgian president condemns Russian peacekeepers' "treacherous" attack
23. Saakashvili takes lead in stirring up hostility
24. Georgian president calls Russian peacekeepers' actions "attack"
25. Mikhail Saakashvili halloos special forces at Russian peacekeepers
26. Saakashvili vows to publish video tape
27. Georgian parliament speaker, ministers discuss Ganmukhuri incident
28. Georgia ends agreement for peacekeepers in Abkhazia
29. Georgia urges expulsion of peacekeeping force commander
30. Burjanadze reckons that Chaban should leave Georgia immediately
31. Burjanadze: decision on termination of Russian peacekeepers’ made
32. MPs want international reaction to incident with Russian peacekeepers
33. MPs push for peacekeepers’ pullout
34. Georgia needs to quit CIS for withdrawal of peacekeepers
35. Gen Chaban may be replaced on CIS DM Council's decision
36. video: Top Russian peacekeeper to stay - despite Georgian objections
37. Georgia summons Russian envoy over Ganmukhuri incident
38. Georgia seeks end to Russian peacekeepers’ mandate in Abkhazia
39. Russia should show restraint re Georgia's provocations
40. Vyacheslav Kovalenko summoned to Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia
41. Kovalenko accuses Georgian law enforcers of provoking incident in Ganmukhuri
42. CIS has received no Georgian request to recall General Chaban
43. Sergei Mironov considers Georgia's demand unjustified
44. Moscow tells its peacekeepers to show restraint
45. Tbilisi actions are planned provocation
46. Akishbaia evaluates decision on withdrawal of peacekeepers as important
47. Abkhazian government calls on international community to evaluate incident in Ganmukhuri
48. Moscow accuses Tbilisi of attacking Russian helicopter
49. Georgia denies attack at peacekeepers' helicopter
50. JCC not enough for solving conflict
51. Georgia presents its own Georgian-Ossetian settlement plan
52. Imedi TV – law enforcers do not let Imedi TV Zugdidi office employees work
53. Murdoch's News Corp. to run Georgia opposition media
54. Georgian TV chief turns to Rupert Murdoch
55. News Corp. takes management of Patarkatsishvili’s Imedi shares
56. Labor Party leader warns of permanent protest rallies
57. video:
Opposition rally planned
58. If the authorities try to carry out any provocation against rally participants, it will be the authorities’ last day
59. Ombudsman warns of political repression in wake of Zugdidi protest violence
60. Patriarch calls on opposition and government to restrain themselves

61. U.S. calls government, opposition for a dialogue
62. Nestan Kirtadze of the oppositional Labor Party to leave for Berlin
63. Authorities made Okruashvili leave the country
64. Opposition leaders meeting Daniel Fried
65. Koba Davitashvili fails to go to Kakheti region
66. GEL 12 million spent on construction of tunnel at president’s residence
67. USA supports Saakashvili’s initiative to lower election barrier from 7% to 5%
68. CEC approves results of lot drawing for parties in Dec 2 elections
69. Constitutionalism and political expediency
70. Controversial documentary on fatal 2006 police operation released
71. Public opinion: who influences the President?
72. How will the country get on as the IMF steps back?
73. French delegation shares what they know about wine
74. Main part of program on rehabilitation of Kutaisi to be completed by May 2008
75. Liberal laboratory at Russia's door
76. Bonfire of tax and regulation fires growth
77. Looking back to the glory days
78. Caucasus is scene of new chapter in the Great Game

79. Banking, bricks and water
80. Analysts discuss Georgia’s ‘monopoly problem’
81. Selling Tbilisi’s water supply system means selling Georgia itself
82. Preaching creative destruction

full digest: Georgia News Digest - Ansicht in Groups BetaNeu!

Jonathan Kulick, Ph.D., Director of Studies, Georgian Foundation for Strategic and International Studies, 3a Chitadze, Tbilisi 0108, Georgia (Republic),
jonathan.kulick@gfsis.org, office: +995 32 47 35 55, mobile: +995 95 33 33 40, USA voicemail: 310.928.6814