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Armenia: Beloved Indoor Market, Now Shuttered, Faces Demolition

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  • Armenia: Beloved Indoor Market, Now Shuttered, Faces Demolition

    ARMENIA: BELOVED INDOOR MARKET, NOW SHUTTERED, FACES DEMOLITION

    EurasiaNet.org
    Sept 13 2012
    NY

    September 13, 2012 - 3:45pm, by Yigal Schleifer

    Are elected officials in Yerevan trying to take any local color out of
    the city's food scene? That certainly seems to be the case. Last year,
    the city's mayor issued a ban on street vendors -- many of them fruit
    and vegetable sellers -- in an effort to "clean up" Yerevan. More
    worrisome for Yerevan residents, it now looks like local leaders are
    turning a blind eye while the city's well-known indoor market, the now
    shuttered Pak Shuka, is in danger of being demolished by a businessman
    cum politician who reportedly wants to turn it into a supermarket.

    In a detail-rich report, The Armenian Weekly lays out the whole
    sordid tale:

    On Jan. 7, Tiv 1 Shuka CSJC, the company in charge of the renovation,
    began demolishing the inside of the landmark, which held ornate
    stone carvings considered by some as architectural jewels and
    massive intricate iron gates considered as the "gateway to the
    capital." For the average Yerevantsi, to shop there was an expensive
    proposition, compared to the regular markets. In its heyday, once
    inside, tourists entered another universe, where they experienced
    true Armenian culture and hospitality, and were greeted by a myriad
    of proud and friendly vendors offering them samples-from the latest
    fresh harvest of organic fruits and vegetables, intricate displays
    of dried fruits and nuts, spices and herbs, an assortment of meats,
    seafood, and poultry, fresh lavash bread, sheets of dried fruit syrup
    (ttu lavash, or sour lavash) or roll-ups, and the ever-present fruit
    sujukh (shelled walnuts threaded on a string, dipped in grape molasses,
    then hung to dry until a thick and tender coat covers it in the form of
    a sausage). Pak Shuka offered an amazing range of goods and souvenirs,
    something to satisfy every appetite, all displayed on attractive
    stalls and decorated booths. Experiencing the atmosphere, color, and
    aroma was described as visiting a veritable "colorful museum of food."

    The current owner of the building, Samvel Aleksanyan (b. 1968 in
    Yerevan), a businessman (he owns the Yerevan City supermarket chain)
    and parliamentarian representing the Republican Party of Armenia,
    has tried to reassure Yerevantsis that he only plans to renovate
    the building and construct an underground parking area. Yet, despite
    his persistent denials, rumors abound that he plans to relocate his
    largest four-story supermarket to the site of the Pak Shuka building.

    Aleksanyan's company, Fleetfood, Armenia's largest food import
    conglomerate, enjoys a de facto monopoly on the highly lucrative
    imports of wheat, sugar, alcohol, and cooking oil to Armenia. He's
    one of the country's wealthiest entrepreneurs, widely known as "Lfik
    Samo" (a nickname where "Lfik" comes from the Russian word for bra,
    as Samvel's father owned a bra shop in Soviet times).

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