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  • Faded Black Sea port putting on a fresh face

    International Herald Tribune, France
    May 30 2006

    Faded Black Sea port putting on a fresh face
    By Andrew E. Kramer The New York Times

    TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2006


    BATUMI, Georgia Welcome to Georgia's new beach town.

    Two years after this city was wrested from a separatist leader in one
    of the former Soviet Union's obscure little conflicts, Batumi is on a
    crash development program as a resort.

    The 19th-century port built by French architects is a place where the
    palm and grapevine covered foothills of the Caucasus Mountains
    cascade onto gray pebble beaches, where stately hotels like the
    London are getting a fresh coat of paint, and where the coffee is
    served in the Turkish style, mixed with grounds.

    But try getting a room in one of the beachfront hotels, and you will
    learn there has not been a vacancy here since 1993: the hotels are
    occupied by refugees, who, with no home to return to, checked in and
    never left.

    In its second beach season since central authority was restored,
    Batumi is still ironing out some kinks. Since the breakup of the
    Soviet Union, the leader of the Adjaria region, Aslan Abashidza, shut
    Batumi from the world and used the port for smuggling guns and
    alcohol, frightening away tourists, until he was ousted on May 5,
    2004, by Mikheil Saakashvili, the president of Georgia who assumed
    power in 2003, vowing to rein in the country's three separatist
    conflicts - two in former beach resorts.

    The refugees come from a different and still unresolved conflict in
    Abkhazia, also on the Black Sea coast - and therein lies the secret
    of the money pouring into Batumi's mini-tourism boom. Georgian
    officials are hoping this town will become a shining example of
    development and international investment that comes when a separatist
    region becomes part of a recognized state.

    The city, they say, is becoming a showcase of how quickly one of the
    so- called "frozen conflicts" of the former Soviet Union -
    Nagorno-Karabakh in Armenia, Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia
    and Transnistria in Moldova - can thaw out.

    "We should communicate to them that they have a future," Saakashvili
    said of residents of nearby Abkhazia, in an interview. "It will take
    two or three years, but they will notice. When we have yachts in the
    harbor, they will see."

    Like Beirut on the Mediterranean Sea, another cosmopolitan seafront
    town that dropped off the map because of war, Batumi on the Black Sea
    is now shaking out of its stupor and hanging out a welcome sign.

    Adjaria is ethnically Georgian though distinct from the rest of the
    country for a minority Muslim population, but still, most experts
    say, harbored no deep-seated ethnic tension. Georgia's other two
    separatist enclaves are far thornier social, ethnic and political
    challenges.

    Still, Levan Varshalomidze, the 34- year-old new governor of Adjaria,
    is hopeful the tourists trickling back to the eastern Black Sea will
    soften his separatist neighbors.

    "When people make money they find a common language," he said.

    The transformation is fast.

    French consultants suggested the Goni Russian tank base, being
    vacated, be converted to a golf course. On a bluff over the Black
    Sea, it recalls the rolling green fairways overlooking the Pacific at
    Pebble Beach in California. Two years after Abashidza fled to Moscow,
    Novotel, the French hotel chain, has signed a contract to open a
    hotel.

    Under Abashidza, 14 kilometers, or about 10 miles, or roads were
    paved. In the past two years the new government laid down 120
    kilometers of fresh asphalt.

    In one of his last acts as strongman, Abashidze mined a bridge
    leading into town. An amusement park that is being dubbed Georgia's
    Disneyland is going up near the spot this summer.

    In the largest investment to date, the TuranAlem bank of Kazakhstan
    bought 21 hotels, which also came with the refugees. As part of the
    investment, the bank will pay each refugee family $7,000 to move out,
    enough for a modest apartment in an outlying district.

    The deal is seen as an important and positive sign that money from
    oil-rich former Soviet states is being invested in their poorer
    neighbors.

    When the refugees are gone, the Kazakh investors will raze and
    rebuild some hotels and refurbish others. The hotels are now home to
    1,912 families, or about 6,000 people.

    At present, the Meskheti hotel is more fire-trap than tourist
    attraction. A large puddle has formed in the lobby from a dripping
    ceiling. Scruffy men in track suits lounge in the shade drawing on
    cheap cigarettes. Marina Gahukidze, 42, has lived in a 10th floor
    single room with a view of the beach since 1993. She and her husband
    raised three children in the room. On a recent visit, two boys were
    unloading backpacks and settling into homework.

    "We didn't expect to live here so long," she says of the only home
    her children have known.

    About 15 kilometers south of town is a Byzantine castle with a
    crenellated wall, now guarding a courtyard of citrus trees, also
    making a debut to the modern world as a tourist attraction; it was in
    a closed border zone and off limits in Soviet times. The detritus of
    stone Roman waterworks are scattered beside a magnolia; the smell of
    mandarin trees in bloom waft over the old rocks.

    The now abandoned castle is emblematic of the potential of tourism in
    Georgia, where the landscape resembles northern California.

    "It will be a key part of economic growth," Irakli Chogovadze, the
    minister of economy of Georgia, said in an interview, while attending
    the ribbon cutting at the Intourist Palace hotel in Batumi on May 24.
    "Wherever you put your finger on the Georgian map, you have
    potential."

    Beside a bubbling fountain in the hotel foyer, waitresses in pressed
    white shirts weaved through a crowd of diplomats with trays of
    Champagne flutes and caviar canapés.

    The Georgian economy grew 9 percent last year, with foreign visits up
    14 percent. Most of the visitors are coming from the former Soviet
    Union, Turkey and Iran. The Iranians began slipping over last summer
    for a few days of freedom, including booze and girl watching.
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