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Military ghost town goes under hammer in Latvia
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A town left empty after the withdrawal of Soviet and Russian forces from the Baltic state of Latvia has been sold at auction for $3 million.
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The buyer of the Skrunda 1 town, consisting of 45 hectares (111 acres) of land, 70 buildings, including 10 apartment blocks, a hotel, club, warehouses and garages was a company from Russia, the privatization agency said. ”It is positive that property which has been empty for a long time and where has been no economic activity has been sold,” the agency, which carried out the auction of the town sale, said in a statement. It was sold for 1.6 million lats ($3.10 million). The agency did not know what the buyer, Aleksejevskoje-Serviss, intended to do with its investment. Skrunda 1, about 150 kilometers (93 miles) west of the Latvian capital Riga, was created for Soviet military needs and is located near a former anti-missile radar base. Russian troops withdrew from Latvia in 1994, three years after the Baltic states quit the former Soviet Union, but Moscow made a deal to lease the Skrunda radar base until August 1998, after which it was pulled down and the last Russian soldiers left Latvia.
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REUTERS
RIGA
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