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Bankrupt Armenian Carrier Unable To Clear Huge Debt

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  • Bankrupt Armenian Carrier Unable To Clear Huge Debt

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    June 24 2004

    Bankrupt Armenian Carrier Unable To Clear Huge Debt

    By Gevorg Stamboltsian 24/06/2004 16:19

    The executive director of Armenian Airlines said on Wednesday that
    the state-owned carrier which was declared bankrupted recently is
    highly unlikely to fully repay its debts estimated to total $28
    million.

    In an interview with RFE/RL, Arsen Avetisian said the company would
    be able to do so only if it was allowed to resume and operate a
    single daily flight from Yerevan to Moscow for at least two
    consecutive years.

    `But given the existing agreement between [the private airline]
    Armavia and the Armenian government, the likelihood of the
    implementation of a financial adjustment plan drawn up by Armenian
    Airlines is very small,' he admitted.

    Armavia, which is owned by Russia's second-biggest Sibir airline, was
    granted most of Armenian Airlines' flight rights in the former Soviet
    Union and Western Europe when it signed the agreement with the
    government more one year ago. It has since replaced Armenian
    Airlines, notorious for mismanagement and poor service, as the
    country's flagship carrier.

    The Yerevan-Moscow flights reportedly generate 42 percent of
    Armavia's operating revenues. Sibir, which has already invested
    heavily in its Armenian subsidiary's fleet of mainly European-made
    aircraft, is therefore unlikely to share the lucrative service with
    anyone.

    Meanwhile, Armenian Airlines creditors, most of them based outside
    Armenia, are expected to gather in Yerevan next month to discuss its
    future. According to Avetisian, they will likely decided to liquidate
    the company. He said it can partly clear the debts with proceeds from
    the planned sale of its property and equipment, including Soviet-era
    commercial jets.

    Armenian Airlines, profitable as recently as in 1997, began steadily
    sliding into bankruptcy in 1998 and carried out its last flight in
    December. Avetisian blamed the downfall on the Russian economic
    crisis of 1998 and a series of subsequent restructurings which
    deprived the company of some of its profit-making divisions. But some
    independent aviation experts believe that the company fell victim to
    government corruption, inefficiency and mismanagement.
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