Residents of a dilapidated dormitory in Nalchik asked Bastrykin to intervene in the resettlement situation.
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The Chairman of the Investigative Committee of Russia, Alexander Bastrykin, demanded a report on the delays in resettling residents of a dilapidated dormitory on Ingushskaya Street in Nalchik following a complaint from a local resident.
As reported by the "Caucasian Knot," on January 30, the head of Kabardino-Balkaria reported on the issuance of certificates for new apartments in Nalchik to 124 families relocated from dilapidated housing. Social media users responded to his report with questions about the resettlement timeline for other dilapidated buildings, including several on Ingushskaya Street. In February, residents of dormitories on Musukayeva and Ingushskaya appealed to officials with a request to expedite the resettlement, complaining of dire living conditions.
Before the delivery of new apartments, 125 families (375 people, including more than 60 children) lived in a dilapidated dormitory on Kadyrov Street, where the ceiling and walls were crumbling. Authorities promised to resettle them in 2024, but they began resettling another building that was not included in the program.
The Chairman of the Investigative Committee of Russia, Alexander Bastrykin, has requested a report on the criminal case regarding delays in resettling residents of a dilapidated building on Ingushskaya Street in Nalchik. The Investigative Directorate of the Investigative Committee of Russia for Kabardino-Balkaria reported this on its Telegram channel on June 15.
The report notes that the complainant "disagreement with the process of establishing the circumstances surrounding the failure to resettle residents of a communal apartment building on Ingushskaya Street" was received in comments on Bastrykin's reception office's VKontakte account. It notes that the building, built in 1974, is unfit for habitation, with crumbling floors, deteriorated utility systems, and a flooded basement. The building has been declared unsafe, but resettlement is not scheduled until 2030.
Bastrykin requested a report from Andrei Fishman, head of the Investigative Committee of Russia for Kabardino-Balkaria, on the investigative actions taken in the criminal case, the circumstances established, and the measures taken to protect the rights of the complainant and other residents of the building.
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