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Yerevan's Bus Fare Protests: A Timeline

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  • Yerevan's Bus Fare Protests: A Timeline

    YEREVAN'S BUS FARE PROTESTS: A TIMELINE

    Posted on July 29, 2013 by Christian Garbis in Featured, Headline, News

    July 18: Fares for public transportation by bus or minibus
    are scheduled to increase from 100 to 150 dram. The owners of
    48 companies operating privatized transportation routes had filed
    petitions with the Yerevan municipality to increase the fares, citing
    high maintenance costs and price increases in liquefied gas imported
    from Russia, which is used to fuel minibuses. Electric trolley bus
    routes, favored by senior citizens because of the cheaper fare,
    will also go up from 50 to 100 dram. The fare hike is the first in
    well over a decade. The announcement is made by Henrik Navasardyan,
    head of the Yerevan Municipality's Department of Transportation.

    1x1.trans Yerevan's Bus Fare Protests: A Timeline Photo by Anush
    Khachatryan

    July 19: Young activists protesting against the slated price increase
    congregate in front of Yerevan City Hall. Protesters at one point are
    seen throwing 50-dram coins in the direction of the main entrance,
    which is heavily guarded by policemen. One coin accidentally lands
    on the head of Mayoral Advisor Albert Gevorgyan while he is talking
    to journalists.

    July 20: The new fare prices go into effect. Three young activists,
    Davit Haroutyunyan, Sona Msryan, and Arsen Ohanyan, are detained for
    passing out flyers that call on commuters to refuse to pay the new
    fare. At bus stops, protesters tape flyers to the windshields and
    windows of buses instructing people to continue paying the 100-dram
    fares. They also hand them out to passengers when buses pull up at
    bus stops. Announcements are made with bullhorns urging citizens to
    continue paying the same fare. Activists claim that the new fares are
    unjustified since the bus routes are owned by government officials or
    individuals with close ties to the government, and are thus lucrative
    businesses.

    July 22: The citywide protests continue to gain followers. More
    activists are detained. Celebrities who sympathize with the movement
    begin offering free rides to people waiting at bus stops. Bus drivers
    continue to accept the 100-dram fares, some begrudgingly, as reports of
    quarrels with passengers come online. The social media, specifically
    Facebook, is being used as a main channel for creating awareness and
    disseminating information about the situation on the ground.

    July 23: Protesters face resistance from riot police, and six more
    activists are detained. They are released shortly after hundreds of
    people swarm in front of the police headquarters. Small protests
    continue at bus stops throughout the city center. Meanwhile,
    Hetq Online publishes an article claiming that Navasardyan owns a
    Yerevan bus route, and that one of his sons runs a company that sells
    advertising space on public transportation vehicles. The news story
    stirs even more controversy and outrage.

    The movement's name, "I Will Only Pay 100 Dram," is revealed with
    the announcement of a rally scheduled at Mashtots Park-a symbolic
    site of civic protest.

    July 24: An innovative carpooling initiative goes online on a new
    website called freecar.am, where motorists who have spare seating
    offer their services to people who cannot afford to pay the new fares.

    (As of July 28, 269 drivers have signed up.)

    Karen Andreasyan, an Armenian human rights defender, in a statement
    putting pressure on Yerevan Mayor Taron Markaryan, says that the price
    hike is unjustifiable without public debates and a signed order by
    the mayor instating the new fare. Markaryan himself announces that
    he signed the order on July 19, only one day before the new fare
    price went into effect. Per Armenian law, it is illegal to put new
    directives into force without prior notice.

    Purported overtures made by the Heritage and Prosperous Armenia Parties
    to lend sponsored support to the movement are rejected by its leaders.

    July 25: In a move signaling the understanding that the civic movement
    has no political undertones, Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan-during
    opening remarks of a meeting with his cabinet-hails the initiative,
    stating that civil society is taking shape and the government must
    do more to address public concern.

    Activists continue their protests unabated. Some are seen in
    Republic Square distributing flyers printed with articles on public
    transportation per Armenian law.

    Just before 6 p.m., Mayor Markaryan announces that he is temporarily
    suspending the fare hike, but makes no mention of when prices may
    increase in the future. Hundreds of activists take to the streets in
    celebration, marching through Liberty Square and down Mashtots Street,
    the tricolor in hand.

    July 26: Activists continue to congregate en masse in front of
    Yerevan City Hall, calling for the dismissal of Navasardyan and Misak
    Hambardzoumyan, the director of Yerevan Trans Ltd., a transportation
    operator. They are met by a persistent wall of police, but remain
    peaceful. Activists also demand that commuters obliged to pay the
    higher fare over the last week be reimbursed.

    July 27: A sit-in protest continues in the evening at Yerevan City
    Hall, where activists strategize to determine the direction the
    movement will take. A similar gathering is held at Mashtots Park.

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/07/29/yerevans-bus-fare-protests-a-timeline/#prettyPhoto

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