As it was expected, within the framework of the “pre-election” exchange of pleasantries between the clans of Crimean collaborators, quite interesting and traditionally tragicomic stories emerge.
One of them has now begun to be promoted on the occupied peninsula, with reference to the media of Karelia and the deputy of the Petrozavodsk city council Olga Tuzhikova, who “completely suddenly” publicly exposed the “brutal conditions” in the Yevpatoria sanatorium “Primorye”.
Let us recall that this clinical sanatorium from “Ukrprofozdorovnitsa” was seized in 2014 and was then turned by Crimean collaborators, namely the clan of the “speaker” Vladimir Konstantinov, into a “washing machine” for laundering “budget funds” on contracts for “health services”.
Naturally, over the course of a decade of “wise management,” the facility fell into complete disrepair. For large-scale money laundering, “Primorye” was “transferred to the” illegal “state unitary enterprise” “sanatorium and health complex “Russiya”, with a base at another, captured Yalta health resort, and controlled by Konstantinov’s “state council” as a “founder”.
At the same time, through “Russiya”, “Konstantinovites” laundered at least 1125 million on more than 160 “state contracts”, and almost two billion on “purchases”; only on “Moscow vouchers” to Konstantinov’s pockets “dissolved” about 490 million rubles.
Therefore, it is not surprising that the current “general director” of “Russiya”, Alexander Kharlamov, was “matched” by Konstantinov to the “new composition of the state council”, as a “majoritarian” from “United Russia” from Chernomorske and Razdolne areas.
The current “black mark from Karelia” for this “promising” billionaire juggler was produced by his competitors from a fairly typical story of a local disabled woman who “was entitled to free sanatorium treatment from the social insurance fund and payment for travel to the vacation spot.”
This lady waited “only” three years for a “voucher” to “Primorye,” and got there because “she was lucky: someone refused a voucher to Evpatoria from August 3,” after which the happy disabled woman spent “three nights on trains, almost four days on the road.”
Arriving at the sanatorium, the disabled woman “was happy” about the lack of hot water, and about her “neighbor from Kondopoga,” who “washes herself in a basin,” as well as the good news from the plumber that “there has been poor water pressure in this sanatorium for four years now, and the management is doing nothing to fix the situation.”
The disabled person describes “Primorye” “with soul”, attaching a photo of crushed cockroaches and reporting that “the room has dirty walls, torn wallpaper, grimy switches. The floors look like they were made before the revolution. It’s scary to go out onto the balcony”, especially delighted by the “wobbly wardrobe that was just trying to fall on the bed” and the washed-out mattress pad “with blood stains”.
The disabled person also describes that without mosquito nets she was “bitten by mosquitoes and other insects”, and “the air conditioner in the room did not work well, and it smelled disgusting… and then “several liters of black stinking water” were poured out of it.
Among other things, the story is described of how “two women in the sanatorium got stuck in the elevator and sat in it for about an hour – the button to call the dispatcher did not work” and that on the “section of the beach that belongs to the sanatorium”, “wooden sun loungers with peeling paint… are fastened together with wire, which is sprinkled with sand”.
Moreover, “many”, including the heroine of this quest “to survive in Primorye”, “did not expect such a “set-up” and fall, tripping over the wire”. Obviously, this story will remain another “storm in a teacup”, but it clearly shows how and at whose expense the Crimean collaborators declare “tourist potential” and “resort season”.