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Demand For Pay: Nairit Employees Work, Then March, Then Wait

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  • Demand For Pay: Nairit Employees Work, Then March, Then Wait

    DEMAND FOR PAY: NAIRIT EMPLOYEES WORK, THEN MARCH, THEN WAIT

    http://armenianow.com/society/47942/nairit_rubber_plant_hrach_tadevosyan_protest
    SOCIETY | 23.07.13 | 15:27

    Photolure

    By Gohar Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Employees of Yerevan's Nairit rubber plant held another protest
    Tuesday morning, demanding from the president to settle their salaries,
    unpaid for almost a year, and again left after a promise to receive
    a one-month salary.

    More than 200 employees marched from their workplace to the
    presidential residence, where trade union leader Hrach Tadevosyan
    along with a few of his co-workers met the deputy head of the control
    service and reached an agreement by which one month's salary will be
    paid end of July, and another month's salary - end of August.

    The only producer of chloroprene rubber in all of post-Soviet
    territory, one of Armenia's biggest economic entities Nairit, located
    in a Yerevan suburb, has its 90 percent share owned by Rhinoville
    Property Limited company, registered offshore since 2006. For three
    years now it has not produced anything, with 1,500 of its 2,700
    employees in lay-off. The company owes 11 months' salary to its
    employees, who hold protests once every few months demanding from
    the president and the government to pay them their wages. The average
    salary at Nairit is 157,000 drams (around $380), and the annual salary
    fund totals to around $1 million.

    Melikset Harutyunyan, Nairit employee since 2006, told ArmeniaNow that
    they demand their wages and want to know what is going to happen to
    the plant.

    "They pay us our salaries only once in 2-3 months, nonetheless we keep
    going to work, so we want to know what is going to happen after all?

    Every 3-4 months some people come, supposedly to buy the plant, but
    nothing changes. I suggest we put out tents in front of Nairit and hold
    an indefinite sit-in, until the issue gets resolved," says Harutyunyan.

    For the past several months the government of Armenia has been
    negotiating with Russian Rosneft oil company over the sale of Nairit,
    but days ago information appeared in the press that the talks were
    indefinitely suspended in July, because the company would agree to
    purchase the plant only after it settles all its debts.




    From: A. Papazian
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