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Thursday, August 20, 1998 Published at 10:59 GMT 11:59 UK


World: Europe

Rave energy reactivates ghost-town

A perfect place to hang out


Andrew Harding: "If you thought the former Soviet Union was all fur hats and bad news, think again"
Thousands of people are gathering in Crimea, Ukraine, for a two-week rave festival, in the shadow of an unfinished soviet nuclear reactor. Our Moscow correspondent Andrew Harding reports.

Every summer a remote corner of Ukraine turns into a giant beach party.


[ image: After a day dancing on the beach ...]
After a day dancing on the beach ...
At least 10,000 young sun worshippers make the journey from as far away as Siberia to participate into a two-week rave festival celebrating the sort of lifestyle that the communists tried to ban.

After a day on the beach, at night the raves begin with DJs and bands from places like Moscow and St Petersburg.

Entry is free and the drug scene is said to be fairly small. For both young and old ravers, it is vodka that still rules, not ecstasy.

In the shadow of the atomic plant


[ image: ... a night at the rave]
... a night at the rave
The strange thing about the whole event is that it takes place not in some smart holiday resort but in a grim Soviet ghost-town.

The town of Shelkino was built for workers at a giant atomic power-plant which - following the nearby Chernobyl disaster - was never completed.

The town was left for dead until the ravers decided the local beach was the perfect place to hang out.

Income for the town


[ image: Vodka rules]
Vodka rules
The festival organiser, Nikita Marshunok, says the crowds are growing every year.

Locals may not understand the fashion or music of the revellers, but Marshunok says that about 10,000 visitors bring "a lot of money for a town like this."


[ image: A ghost-town finds new life]
A ghost-town finds new life
Our correspondent says that the few weeks each year during which Shelkino is a boomtown are enough to keep the place alive.

For a generation of post-Soviet revellers, says our correspondent, the old system is dead; Long live the new party.



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