Belarus seems to have a knack for breaking dubious records.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice once
famously called Belarus "the last dictatorship in Europe," an epithet
that has stuck to the authoritarian regime of President Alyaksandr
Lukashenka.
Now, the country's capital has been branded the European city with the worst living standards.
A
study released last week by Mercer, a global human-resources
consultancy, says expatriates in Minsk are worse-off than anywhere else
in Europe. The city ranked last in Mercer's annual living-standards
tally, trailing 182 other European cities.
Slagin Parakatil, a senior researcher at Mercer, says Minsk fared poorly in most of the 39 criteria examined for the report.
"One
of the criteria in which it didn't get very good scores is consumer
goods -- the availability of fruit, meat, and fish; there's also the
infrastructure -- we're looking at reasonable, expatriate-standard
housing facilities," Parakatil says. "If an expatriate needs to have
emergency surgery, the score is relatively low for services provided by
both private and public hospitals."
The city also got bad marks
for its recreational facilities, economic and political environment,
airport facilities, and transport connections.
Unlike most other
Eastern European cities, which have moved up the list since Mercer's
previous study, Minsk remains last with consistently low scores.
'Nowhere To Go'
Do Minsk residents share this unflattering view of their city?
Some,
such as Valmen Aladau, an architect and professor at the Belarusian
National Technical University, have denounced the Mercer study as
slander.
"Minsk is one of the most interesting cities in Europe,
everyone who's been here has said so publicly," Aladau says. "This is
pure political vileness that is probably targeted against our
government and ends up hurting the whole population. We don't have
enough hotels. But in terms of being interesting, there should be more
such cities in Europe."
But a poll carried out by RFE/RL's
Belarus Service in the streets of Minsk shows that many residents do
agree with Mercer, particularly with regard to their city's
recreational facilities.
"In all European cities, if you're not
in a hurry to go home in the evening, there are clubs and cafes where
you can spend some time," says one woman. "Here, the only places open
at night are the casinos and train station."
"Nothing open at night" (Bymedia.net)"There aren't enough places to drink coffee from a nice cup, not a plastic one," says another woman.
"For
children, for instance, there's the Ice Palace, but it would be nice to
have something other than just the Ice Palace," a third woman says.
"There's almost nowhere to take kids during the summer holidays."
Syarhey
Khareuski, a Belarusian cultural analyst, agrees that city authorities
have done little to preserve and embellish Minsk's historical city
center.
"Take a walk in the center of Minsk, what is there to
see? Two churches, and that's all. Museums that were once planned were
never built. Instead of museums and exhibition halls, you have ordinary
pubs. The efforts of the current authorities have concentrated on
selling every square meter of space in the city center, lining their
pockets, and allowing as many vehicles as possible to pass through the
city center."
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