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  • Who Will Buy Armavia?

    WHO WILL BUY ARMAVIA?

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    April 3 2013

    by Susanna Petrosyan, Yerevan. Exclusively for Vestnik Kavkaza

    Armavia, the national airline company of Armenia, stopped flights and
    went bankrupt on April 1. "The company's owner has been allocating
    funds from other areas of business to maintain development of
    the company in the last three years. But today, the situation has
    changed in such a way that such actions can no longer continue, so
    it was decided to stop flights and start the bankruptcy procedure",
    the official statement of Armavia says. Money for tickets sold will
    be paid back.

    Armavia is owned by Mikhail Bagdasarov, a friend of President Serzh
    Sargsyan and one of Armenia's largest entrepreneurs.

    The bankruptcy of the company was predicted a year ago. The
    International Airports of Armenia Company (owner of the Zvartnots)
    servicing Armavia was cancelling flights occasionally due to a debt
    of 5 million euros. Cancellations and delays of flights were a problem
    for Armenian aviation as a whole.

    Bagdasarov said that the company would go bankrupt unless the Zvartnots
    owner reduces service fees by 25%. The airport's press service
    responded by saying that "the service fees had been the same for
    three years. "No changes in fees at the airport have been made in the
    last few years, the price for fuel depends on the prices set by Mika
    Limited, a company belonging to Bagdasarov. Concerning fuel prices,
    there is a state-regulated margin that depends on wholesale prices
    and the airport cannot exceed the margin when supplying Armavia".

    The company's owner lacks logic in the economic situation. Bagdasarov
    expressed no grievances about the airport's prices during some of
    the hardest years of 2009-2010. On the contrary, he insisted that the
    global recession had brought Armavia benefits, the company purchased
    a set of flight routes from large airline companies and planes from
    bankrupt companies.

    In 2012, the economy started going uphill and the owner of the national
    airline company suddenly started demanding a reduction of prices. So
    how did the company with a monopoly that had been surviving the most
    recessive times suddenly end up bankrupt? Specialists say that even
    a monopoly does not allow Armavia to work efficiently.

    "The causes of Armavia's bankruptcy are many-sided. The main reason
    is provincial greed" You cannot grant a man a whole industry when
    he has no assets in such a business. Everything was leased. Such a
    policy is aimed at doubling, robbing and giving nothing in return,"
    Shagen Petrosyan, former head of the State Directorate for Civil
    Aviation of Armenia, stated.

    Petrosyan does not believe that the expenditure of the air company
    exceeded its income: "The industry has always been profitable
    and the company has been accumulating debts for 10 years, ending
    up on the brink of bankruptcy as a result of improper fee policy,
    choice of routes, poor business plans and purchases of planes under
    disadvantageous conditions. Armavia offers services at exaggerated
    fees, compared with some European and Middle Eastern companies and
    even the companies of Tbilisi."

    A year ago, Armavia staff started a strike and the company failed
    to make flights to Russia, using the high fees of Zvartnots Airport
    as an excuse. It was later revealed that the Russian Federal Air
    Navigation Service had banned flights of Armavia to Russia due to
    debts. The company paid them off and renewed flights. Armavia owes
    Russian airports about 45 million rubles. In addition, it needs to
    pay Russian banks over $20 million.

    In 2000, Armenian Airlines became the first state-owned air company to
    go bankrupt. The company had an income of $5 million a year. According
    to some data, the company went bankrupt through a corrupt scheme. It
    was made bankrupt to give Defense Minister Mikhail Bagdasarov a
    route for promotion. He became the owner of the newly-formed company
    Armavia. The government believed that a private owner would boost
    the airline industry, although it has never happened.

    According to unofficial information, the Armavia owner was negotiating
    the sale of the company to foreign investors. There are no Russian
    buyers, but there are purchasers from Italy, Australia and the East.

    Taking into account Armenia's characteristics and the topicality of
    corruption schemes and the fact the aviation was a juicy piece of the
    "economic pie" of Armenia, a new private owner may appear, promising
    to solve all the problems of aviation.

    The deal between Armavia and the government expires on April 22. Some
    specialists propose appointing a government official, forming a
    commission to analyze the bankruptcy caused before liberalizing
    the industry.

    James Akopyan, an observer of Lragir, expresses confidence that both
    the government and the parliament should work on the case and form
    a commission as soon as possible to investigate the problems of the
    strategic field of air transportation.

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/economy/38805.html

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