Moscow city authorities have bulldozed some 100 buildings housing small shops and cafes which they said violated municipal law, putting thousands of people out of work.
In a dramatic move, diggers began to level the targeted buildings at around midnight, some of which housed food stores, pharmacies, florists and cafes next to busy metro stations.
The city authorities said the 97 buildings destroyed overnight – some several storeys high – were all built without proper authorisation, often in the 1990s soon after the break-up of the Soviet Union, and were dangerous.
Many Muscovites were shocked at the loss of convenience stores and questioned why the buildings had been allowed to stand until now.
“The way that this was done was very primitive: some 100 businesses were levelled overnight and around 15,000 people were left with nothing,” said municipal lawmaker Olga Kosets, estimating the resulting job losses.
Mayor Sergei Sobyanin wrote on social networking site VK that the buildings had been “put up illegally” and were “dangerous for Muscovites”.
He said that they were “put up mainly in the 1990s with the clear connivance or assistance of officials”, a dig at his predecessor in the post, Yury Luzhkov.
The sites will now be “beautified”, he promised.
The demolitions came as President Vladimir Putin has invoked the need to support small businesses in order to help diversify an economy reeling from falling oil prices.
Municipal lawmaker Kosets, who also heads an association of small and medium-sized businesses, said the shops had been “built with the agreement of the city hall on land that it owns”.
Nevertheless, “it was always clear that the ownership deeds were temporary and the city hall could destroy these stores if it judged they spoiled the urban landscape”, she added.
Opposition politician Alexei Navalny wrote on his blog that it was “impossible to build all this without papers, permits and bribes” and called for the corrupt officials to be punished.
The city authorities had warned owners that the demolition work was imminent but did not say exactly when, leaving them scrambling to secure stock on Monday night.
The “Business Russia” association said that some of the owners would take their case to the city hall and demand compensation for their losses.
Since becoming mayor of the city of some 14mn in 2010, Sobyanin has cracked down on the city’s once-chaotic shopping environment, closing street markets and pulling down nearly 22,000 small kiosks that once lined pedestrian underpasses.

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