Young vandals destroyed what was restored by Russia in Crimea
Vandals defaced the Salgir embankment in Simferopol and the Tauride Staircase in the center of Sevastopol, which were repaired after reunification with Russia. Photos and videos of the incident are being shared by users of social networks, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
Thus, graffiti appeared on the Simferopol embankment, the repair of which cost about 600 million rubles. The vandals spared neither the new tiles in the underground passages, nor the restored bridge arches, nor the parapets along the river.
“I walked along the Salgir embankment. There are no censored words. Below is just a small part of the masturbation of some moronic punk. They forgot about video surveillance. Well, we are reaping the fruits of this mismanagement,” writes Crimean journalist Maxim Groznov on his social network page.
Commentators believe that the situation could have been saved by a video surveillance system, which for some reason the city authorities did not install.
Crimean sociologist Natalya Kiseleva proposed using a militia financed from the budget to protect the embankment from vandals.
In Sevastopol, graffiti artists once again covered a cultural heritage site of regional significance – the Tauride Staircase. Inscriptions also appeared on lampposts and payphone booths on Bolshaya Morskaya Street, recently restored at the expense of the Moscow budget.
“In addition to Bolshaya Morskaya, the enemies destroyed the covering of the Tauride Staircase. Cultural heritage site. And these animals are among us!” – Evgeniy Gorlov, director of the Sevastopol municipal services department, wrote in his blog.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.