gally built slum on theedge of the town. The one hundred families kicked out so far have been compelled to move either to the premises of a chemical plant recently closed because of environmental pollution (Cuprom), or to the apartment block enclosed by the wall. The remaining residents of Craica have a choice: either lead pollution, or rats in the Horea Street apartment block. They fear for their squalid homes, in danger of demolition, or for their children, exposed to everyday violence in the new ghettos. The mayor has made it clear: eradication of the slums of Craica is just the first step. The goal is to get rid of these families, so in the spring of 2013 they will also be evicted from the town. The legal services protest in vain: Catalin Chereches, the most popular local politician in the country, was re-elected by the residents of the town with a sweeping majority in the June of 2012.