As it follows from the occupiers’ “press”, the so-called “prosecutor’s office” in Sevastopol, acting on the request of the “city government”, “seized” part of the vineyards of the “Aya Urban Winery” project.
It is indicated that the “subordinates” of gauleiter Mikhail Razvozhaev “conducted an inventory of the Aya lands” and “appealed to the prosecutor’s office to seize” 23.1 hectares, where, in addition to vineyards, a restaurant with a view and a recreational complex are also located.
The aforementioned “Aya Urban Winery” project became a “Crimean investment” in 52 hectares of the “Major Agro” agroholding, which controls about 40 thousand hectares in total.
In turn, “Major Agro” is a minority structure of the holding “Major”, mainly engaged in the sale of cars and service in that area, with beneficiaries Mikhail Bakhtiarov and Pavel Abrosimov.
The “successful winemakers” themselves now write that “nobody really sheds light on the current case, and harmful rumors are creeping, scaring off investors”, and they still hope “to resolve everything back”.
In this regard, it is noteworthy not only the presence at the winery “Aya Urban Winery” in the Sevastopol village of Rodnoye (Uppa) of illegally imported Italian equipment from “Barida”, “Garbelotto”, “Gortani”, “Miros” and “Sordato”.
It is even more interesting that just a month ago, the same Razvozhaev, in a “pre-election conversation” with the Kremlin dictator, bragged about “Aya Urban Winery” as a “major investment in the development of the city.”
Obviously, it was the “success of the investment” that did not allow the Razvozhaev clan to “pass by” the winery and allow “outsiders, the wrong people” to make money on it.



