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City Starts Razing Cherkizovsky

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  • City Starts Razing Cherkizovsky

    CITY STARTS RAZING CHERKIZOVSKY
    By Natalya Krainova / The Moscow Times

    The Moscow Times
    Wednesday, August 19, 2009

    Workers tearing down Cherkizovsky Market, once Europe's biggest market,
    in northeastern Moscow on Tuesday.

    City authorities on Tuesday began demolishing the sprawling
    Cherkizovsky Market, which was closed in June over sanitary and safety
    violations amid a broader crackdown on smuggling.

    The once-bustling, 300-hectare bazaar was deserted except for several
    photographers and reporters, a few guards and several migrants helping
    clean out the market, who said they were not former vendors.

    Earlier this summer, the complex in eastern Moscow employed tens of
    thousands of migrants, but only a few dozen were there Tuesday. Some
    managed to find jobs elsewhere in the city, but many have left for
    home amid signs that City Hall wants them gone.

    Dozens of illegal migrants were deported following the closure and
    many others were left in dire financial straits.

    The city has promised to help find new trading space for Russians
    who had been selling domestically made goods, but Mayor Yury Luzhkov
    said in July that helping accommodate "our friends from China is not
    our job."

    Several migrants hung onto a fence surrounding the market and silently
    watched a crane lifting an empty pavilion onto a truck. They said
    they came to see the market one last time.

    Denis Saakyan, 38, and Artur Sarkisyan, 32, said they were going home
    to Armenia after working at the market for nine years because they
    didn't hope to find another job in Moscow.

    Saakyan said renting space at other Moscow markets was too
    expensive. He lambasted authorities for closing down the market amid
    a crisis. "They closed all of our options," he said.

    Windows of many kiosks showed merchandise - boxes of cigarettes,
    cookies and candy - scattered on floors. A man in sunglasses and a
    baseball cap sat on a chair, waving a large Russian flag, not far
    from one of the market's open gates.

    Asked whether he was guarding the kiosks from looters, he nodded. He
    refused to say anything about himself.

    The city plans to build a fourth ring road, sports facilities,
    trade centers and office buildings through the market, a spokesman
    for the Eastern Administrative District said on customary condition
    of anonymity. He said there were some 15,500 kiosks to dismantle.

    One tenant, Vernissage v Izmailovo, will dismantle its 600 kiosks by
    2010, its director, Alexander Ushakov, told Interfax. He lamented
    the closure, noting that it wasn't the first time a sports center
    had been planned for the area.

    "Back in 1936, they were planning to host the Olympics. They were
    building a huge stadium for 200,000 people, but then they froze
    construction and the architect was shot," he told the agency.

    A few days ago, a forest ranger in Malakhovka, 30 kilometers southeast
    of Moscow, discovered a tent camp with some 200 Vietnamese who lost
    their jobs at an illegal sewing factory that made goods for the market,
    RIA-Novosti reported Monday.

    Cherkizovsky was closed June 29 after inspectors found a host of
    violations there. The crackdown followed a demand by Prime Minister
    Vladimir Putin earlier that month for "convictions" in the 2008
    seizure of $2 billion in goods purportedly smuggled from China.
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