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TBILISI: Hell On Rails: Tbilisi-Batumi Train Like 'Travelling In A S

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  • TBILISI: Hell On Rails: Tbilisi-Batumi Train Like 'Travelling In A S

    HELL ON RAILS: TBILISI-BATUMI TRAIN LIKE 'TRAVELLING IN A SAUNA'
    By Anna Arzanova

    The Messenger, Georgia
    Aug. 17, 2006

    Contrary To Previous Announcements
    Georgian holidaymakers are forced to travel to Batumi on trains
    like this

    As holiday season reaches its peak, travelling by train from Tbilisi
    to Batumi is turning into a nightmare.

    In an effort to attract more Armenian tourists, Georgian Railways
    moved its recently renovated rolling stock from the Tbilisi-Batumi
    service to the Yerevan-Makhinjauri (Adjara) route. Eight old,
    un-refurbished carriages have made an unwelcome reappearance at
    Tbilisi railway station.

    The current heat wave makes travelling in these Soviet-era dinosaurs
    almost unbearable, and despite the fact that there are not air
    conditioners or renovated toilets, the price remains the same:
    GEL 20-35.

    "It was awful. I could hardly bare such conditions. We knew that
    there should have been conditioners and the toilets should also
    have been good, but unfortunately there was nothing. We paid GEL 20
    per ticket and travelled in a sauna! How can they deceive people in
    such a manner?" Maia Gagoshidze, who had just arrived from Batumi,
    told The Messenger.

    At the beginning of the season, Georgian Railways declared that
    carriages newly refurbished in a Dneipropetrovsk factory with TV sets,
    DVDs, air conditioners and high-level customer service, would ply
    the Tbilisi-Batumi tourist route all summer.

    Lika Menteshashvili, who will soon leave for the resort town of
    Kobuleti, Adjara, complained that she bought her ticket, but does
    not know in what conditions she will travel.

    "I want to know why they added eight old carriages and did not warn
    anybody. People should have known about this beforehand by and then
    to chosen how to travel. Yes, they post up statements in front of the
    ticket office but not everybody pays attention, and they also refuse
    to refund tickets." Menteshashvili stated.

    Georgian Railways say that the notices were put up to protect
    passengers' rights. The notices say that Georgian Railways has been
    forced to add un-modernised carriages to the overnight Tbilisi-Batumi
    train, and advise passengers to take this into account before
    purchasing their tickets.

    "In order to avoid misunderstandings, we put up notices at the ticket
    office. We warned people that these are old trains and gave them
    the possibility to choose whether or not to buy a ticket," head of
    Georgian Railways Ltd., Irakli Ezugbaia, stated.

    According to cashiers at the railways station however, passengers
    have not been inquiring about the conciliations of the carriages,
    as the most important thing for holidaymakers is to get a ticket,
    and get to the beach.
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