The hotel of the former Ukrainian minister in Crimea presented an unpleasant surprise
Guests of the Aquamarine resort complex in Sevastopol, owned by the former Minister of Defense of Ukraine Pavel Lebedev, encountered an unpleasant surprise.
The other day the hotel was closed for quarantine after a guest with coronavirus was discovered there. Other guests also found themselves in forced isolation, and they had to pay for an extension of their stay in their rooms for 14 days, albeit at a discount. This was reported by the Crimea 24 TV channel, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
People were forced to stay in the hotel due to a two-week quarantine, according to which they are not allowed to leave the complex.
According to the guests, they had difficulty getting laundry soap to wash their clothes, and the maids refused to clean the rooms, fearing that among those isolated there might be infected people.
“We fed him for one day, but now for some reason they have removed the feeding. And so a friend brings us food, we give him money,” a guest named Denis told reporters.
After the scandal received resonance in the press, the Aquamarine administration met the clients halfway and agreed to charge them 50% of the room rate, which is still a considerable amount, given the two weeks of forced “rest.”
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.