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  • Georgians fight power reform

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
    June 22 2005


    GEORGIANS FIGHT POWER REFORM

    Electricity price rises and power cuts are causing tension in
    Samtskhe-Javakheti.

    By Ketevan Mishvelidze and Tsaulina Malazonia in Akhaltsikhe

    The humming of power generators fills the streets of Akhaltsikhe
    where in order to catch up on housework women have taken to bringing
    irons to work as offices are the only buildings in the city where
    electricity is regularly available.

    They can't smooth out their wrinkles at home as much of the
    Samtskhe-Javakheti region has been blacked out since last month when
    the government introduced a new way of paying for electricity,
    described by some as draconian but by the government as essential if
    the system is to function.

    The state-run United Distribution Company, temporarily managed by the
    US firm PA Consulting, has installed shared electricity meters at
    homes around the region with each serving two or three blocks of
    flats or several private residences.

    The readings are then divided equally between all users and one bill
    issued every month for all homes. Families get 15 days to pay their
    share in full or power is cut off to all homes sharing the meter.

    The new system has caused turmoil among families used to paying no
    more than 30 lari (16 US dollars) for electricity who are now
    receiving bills for up to 100 lari (55 dollars), no matter how many
    people live in the property.

    A solitary pensioner like Eter Saanishvili now has to pay as much a
    wealthy neighbour who uses electricity to heat his house.

    Saanishvili has been living in a street that has been without power
    for the past month. She is being asked to pay for large amounts of
    electricity used during a time when she wasn't even living at home
    but staying with relatives. `How could I have consumed so much
    electricity not being at home?' she said. `No one cares about us, its
    no one's headache that people like me are left in the dark.'

    Another distressed resident who asked not to be named insists the new
    bills are completely unaffordable, `No one asks me what my salary is
    or whether I have any income. They just demand categorically that I
    should pay. I won't pay, just as I won't resign myself to the
    blackouts. My salary is only 57 laris. If I pay 50 laris for
    electricity, how can I feed my child on the remaining seven lari?'

    The electricity price rises and subsequent power cuts have led to a
    rise in political tensions in the region.

    On June 6, an angry crowd of around 250 people broke into the
    provincial government building, demanding a meeting with the governor
    to protest against the new system. A meeting was granted the next
    day, but the governor, Giorgy Khachidze, was unsympathetic.

    `I will not tolerate disorder even if the whole district comes to my
    door, men, women and children. If the police and I cannot restore
    order, we will call in the military,' he said.

    The head of the local office of United Distribution Company defended
    the reforms, which he said were an attempt to correct the wide
    disparity between power consumption and payments received.

    `People have taken electricity for granted far too long, spending as
    much as they wanted, and not paying. This caused losses to the state
    and people did not get power anyway. Now we are going to find out
    exactly how much power every neighbourhood consumes,' said Giorgy
    Beradze.

    He explained that the `communal' electricity billing system is just
    the first phase of the reform process. Phase two will involve setting
    up individual household meters in 16 Georgian cities including
    Akhaltsikhe.

    `Another 20 million lari (11 million dollars) has been earmarked for
    this in this year's government budget,' Beradze said.

    Nikoloz Valiashvili, advisor to the UDC's general director, said such
    reforms are essential, because abuse of the system has become
    chronic.

    `We investigated the region and discovered up to 32 ways to steal
    electricity, practiced by the locals,' he said. `For example people
    have been tying a fishing hook to a really long rod and hitching it
    onto a high-voltage power line.'

    Former Georgian parliament deputy Gochi Natenadze is cynical, saying
    the regions have been targeted as the government is too afraid to
    implement the new system in the capital. `Whoever came up with this
    reform thought they could do what they want in `backward' regions,'
    he said.

    Samtskhe-Javakheti is a desperately poor region with no natural gas
    and where water is supplied once every few days for a couple of
    hours. Despite some windfalls from the new Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    pipeline, unemployment is still more than 80 per cent.

    If the situation does not improve before winter arrives - and
    winters can be very cold and snowy here - more trouble is expected,
    particularly in neighbouring Akhalkalaki and Ninotsminda which are
    next in line for reform. These regions are home to some 90,000
    Armenians, who are already suspicious of the Georgian government.
    Tensions are also running high here as the local Russian military
    base, a major employer, prepares to shut down.

    Giorgy Beradze insists the reforms will continue. `Let them live in
    darkness until they start paying for the electricity they use,' he
    said.

    Ketevan Mishvelidze and Tsaulina Malazonia are reporters for Southern
    Gates, a newspaper supported by IWPR in Samtskhe-Javakheti.
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