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Armenia's Customs Agency & OVIR: Deterrents for Armenia's Growth

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  • Armenia's Customs Agency & OVIR: Deterrents for Armenia's Growth

    Armenia's Customs Agency & OVIR: Deterrents for Armenia's Growth and
    Diaspora's Repatriation

    2009/07/13
    HETQ Online - Investigative Jouralists Of Armenia
    http://hetq.am/en/society/ovir/

    Feature Stories society

    Persons arriving into Armenia for permanent residence may import their
    personal property without paying customs duties; this is stated in
    article 105 of Armenia's customs code. On the surface this appears
    like a simple code similar to the ones American and European countries
    have for those moving to their countries. However, the details that
    Armenia's code leaves out and the process of Armenia's heavily
    bureaucratic custom agency, geared for maximum bribe making, creates a
    nightmare scenario for the repatriate where weeks are lost simply
    trying to obtain the goods and use them.

    In this article I will try to detail the disastrous process a
    repatriate typically goes through based on my experience and that of
    several other repatriates I've spoken to.

    In order to bring in your personal goods to Armenia duty free, you
    must register your Armenia address in your 10-year Armenian passport
    and only within the first 6 months of your address registration are
    you allowed to import your personal items duty free.

    At Armenian embassies abroad, Diaspora Armenians can obtain a 10-year
    Armenian passport issued by OVIR (Administration Department for
    Passports and Visas) with one exception, the Diasporan's Armenian
    names are butchered and foreign spelled names given in the Armenian
    passport.

    OVIR has a policy to disregard the true and original spelling of
    Armenian names; instead they transfer the foreign spelled Armenian
    names directly into an Armenian passport.

    For example, if you were born in Armenia but moved to the United
    States and took citizenship there, and your name has Armenian letters
    which doesn't exist in the English alphabet, then you would get a
    different name if you repatriate back to Armenia than the one you were
    born with in Armenia.

    In order to get your address registered in the passport, you must go
    to OVIR's infamous 5 story Soviet building in Yerevan which has dozens
    of doors on each floor and not a single door sign to indicate the
    purpose of each office, nor a single receptionist or a sign in the
    lobby to guide a person to the right place.

    You will be lucky if you find one unbitter employee who knows and is
    willing to show you the right office door and even luckier if that
    person in the right door explains the registration process to you
    without yelling at you to go to `a police station to get an address
    confirmation and then come back'. Needless to say you will need at
    least two weeks and four times of going back and forward to OVIR in
    order to get your address registered in your passport.

    Once you have a 10-year passport with your address registered inside,
    you must wait until your items arrive to Armenia and then apply for
    your duty free right under article 105. If you apply before your
    items arrive so that you can retrieve your items quickly upon arrival,
    your application will be rejected.

    When your items do arrive, you must then present a hand-written
    application (dimum) for Article 105 at the main customs office on
    Khorenatsi Street. It takes about one week for the customs agent to
    call you in for a response.

    Meanwhile, you will not be able to retrieve your personal goods until
    a response. And although you can retrieve your car upon arrival, you
    do not get a license plate number but are allowed days to drive
    without plate numbers for ten days. This means you will constantly be
    pulled over by the police for driving without plate numbers.

    Upon response from customs regarding your Article 105 application, you
    will be very fortunate if they approve you right away without any
    problems. In my case, after being questioned by the custom agent
    regarding my background and the validity of my Armenian passport ,
    where I was treated more like a criminal rather than someone
    repatriating from America to live in his homeland, my application was
    neither rejected nor accepted. Instead I was given a `30 day
    temporary import right' until they conducted `further research with
    OVIR regarding the passport'.

    Simply stated, a `30 day temporary import right' means the
    bureaucratic nightmare work doubles. Meanwhile you are not allowed to
    drive the car for 30 days until the customs agent doing his `research'
    gives a final answer to your Article 105 application.

    In essence, for one month you will be running around from one custom
    agency to another custom agency (all about 20-40 minutes apart and 1-6
    hours spent at each location), while missing papers or stamps, missing
    digits or inaccurate wording in handwritten documents will force
    delays, further going back and forward and the opportunity by custom
    agents to take bribes in order to gloss over any `errors'.

    Moreover, with regards to the personal items sent, you must remember
    in what country each product was made, how much they weigh, what size
    they are and what material they're made of, in order for the broker
    you hire to fill out the forms correctly and have your items released.

    If, for example, in your application you incorrectly name the country
    where your 5 year-old computer or printer was made, that item will not
    be released to you from Abovian customs storage; unless of course you
    give a bribe or go back to the Araratyan customs agency to redo your
    application.

    To make a long story short, my car and personal items arrived in
    Armenia on May 27, 2009 (see Is Armenia's custom's agency for real or
    a comedy show?). It took a total of 20 visits to four different custom
    agencies, a lot of complaints with customs agents, Armenia's migration
    agency and Diaspora Ministry, until I received my personal items on
    June 6, the article 105 approval on June 22 and the right to drive the
    car on June 24. Below are the reasons for each of the 20 visits to
    the four various custom agencies.

    6 visits to Khorenatsi Customs ` 1st time to apply `dimum' for article
    105 before items arrived, 2nd time to `dimum' for article 105 when car
    and items arrived, 3rd time for interview, 4th time to pick up
    temporary approval document, 5th time to `dimum' for final approval of
    article 105, 6th time to pick up final approved document

    5 visits to Noragavit Cusotms ` 1st time to pickup car upon arrival,
    2nd time for temporary import right clearance by hiring a broker, 3rd
    time for final import clearance (but I was sent back because mailed
    documents from main custom house on Khorenatsi had not arrived), 4th
    time for final import clearance by hiring broker again, 5th time to
    fix error in wording description for type of car and three digits
    missing in car model number according to Armenia's Department of Motor
    Vehicles (DMV) or `Guyee'.

    5 visits to Abovian Customs ` 1st time to pick-up list of personal
    items to take to Arartatyan agency, 2nd time to submit paperwork from
    Araratyan agency and pay storage fee, 3rd time to pick up items eight
    days after arrival and pay for more storage fees, 4th time to pickup
    missing paper they had forgotten to give but was requested by
    Araratyan agency, 5th time to deliver final article 105 approval
    papers.

    4 visits to Arartayan Customs ` 1st time to apply `dimum' for personal
    item storage rights at the Abovian customs storage, 2nd time to hire
    broker to create paperwork for temporary release of personal items
    stored at Abovian, 3rd time to hire broker to create paperwork for
    final release approval, 4th time to bring missing document from
    Abovian customs and to pickup final approval forms.

    Whether the problem is plain stupidity, iron curtain Soviet mentality,
    or money making opportunity for customs agents/brokers which are
    causing Armenia's laws and its implementation to be so backward, the
    result is that it is preventing this country from moving forward and
    becoming a stronger/efficient nation.

    For a country that has more of its people living outside than inside,
    Armenia cannot afford to create road blocks for people's rights to
    their own names or simple access to their belongings in and out of the
    country.

    The solution to make Armenia a place where more Armenians want to live
    is simple ` get rid of laws and the implementation of laws that
    torture people, and implement common sense laws that make people's
    lives easy and efficient.

    After all, the job of every government is to make the lives of its
    citizens better, and not the opposite, as it currently is in Armenia.

    Dro Tsarukyan
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