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Lost deposits and missing people

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  • Lost deposits and missing people

    Lost deposits and missing people

    November 30 2013


    After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the issue of dissipation of
    deposits in Soviet Savings banks is one of the most painful concerned
    issue for our citizens, if not the most painful. However, the pain is
    gradually lessening because people are becoming fewer and fewer. The
    matter refers to eligible and demanding depositors, whose deposits due
    to natural and unnatural death are gradually vanishing. In other
    words, there is no man, no problem. And the man, unfortunately, is not
    immortal. Especially the elderly, and particularly elderly and
    affected depositors. The National Assembly adopted a law on the
    deposits dissipated in the Soviet Saving Bank allegedly as a
    reimbursement. Remembering the ridiculous amount of reimbursed money,
    we also want to remind you backdated that exclusively the wives and
    husbands of the depositors were recognized as successors, and the
    children and grandchildren of the depositors do not have any right to
    this ridiculous and wee reimbursement. Let's confess that media and
    journalists then covered this most important issue possibly less, and,
    now, it seems that they do not cover it at all. While, the problem
    continues to exist, and no matter how small the expected reimbursement
    is, especially after recent rise in gas and everything, people
    terribly feel the need for even this wee reimbursement. First, the
    matter, of course, refers to the very elderly, because sixty and
    seventy years old people do not cherish a hope that their turn will
    come at all to receive three hundred dollars for their once
    contributed ten thousand rubles. But, whose turn is it now? Did the
    war veterans and people with disabilities receive their paltry
    compensation by the order of priority? Has the turn of elders come?
    And, if not, when will it come? People are curious and do not know who
    is eligible to give thorough answers to their questions. It is clear
    that there will be eligible persons, but many of affected and
    demanding depositors have even lost their ability to move. Who is
    going to point out the direction to these thousands of feeble and
    affected, if not the media and the journalists? We do not have lack of
    journalists dealing with social media, don't we? And, some of them are
    persistent, honest, zealous and consistent. However, the issue of
    affected depositors is not almost covered in our media, and, I think,
    it has its `objective' reasons. Perhaps, one of the reasons is that,
    nevertheless, the topic of affected depositors is not particularly in
    fashion. The other reason, probably, is that our journalists of new
    times have not lost deposits in the Soviet Saving Banks, and if their
    parents had lost, their children, as we said, are not considered as
    heirs and successors. In fact, everything is done for the deposits not
    to pass from generation to generation. Everything is accurately
    calculated. Quite serious and respectable savings at the expense of
    their own people. Voskan YEREVANTSY

    Read more at: http://en.aravot.am/2013/11/30/162778/

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