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Armenia: Bus Boycott Leads To Lower Fares

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  • Armenia: Bus Boycott Leads To Lower Fares

    ARMENIA: BUS BOYCOTT LEADS TO LOWER FARES

    EurasiaNet.org
    July 26 2013

    July 26, 2013 - 3:39am

    Armenia's Barevolution (Hello Revolution) may have petered out, but,
    in the end, its bus revolution succeeded. After a five-day-long boycott
    of public transportation in the Armenian capital over a 50-percent
    fare hike, Yerevan Mayor Taron Markarian on July 25 agreed to scrap
    the increase.

    Some sign of likely change had been in the wind after Prime Minister
    Tigran Sarkisian scoffed at speculation that the boycott was a staged
    political provocation, describing the campaign as for "social equality,
    justice and . . . against poverty." Transportation tariffs now stand
    at 100 drams (24 cents) for buses and marshrutkas and 50 drams (12
    cents) for trolleybuses.

    Nonetheless, pointed out Hetq Online, the mayor's comments are
    "somewhat contradictory." While returning prices to their original
    level, an increase is, he claimed "unavoidable." Though he did not
    elaborate on the topic, higher prices for imported Russian natural
    gas, widely used in Armenia as fuel, are thought to have sparked
    the increase.

    A commission made up of "specialists and interested persons" will
    now sit down to figure out how to introduce a "unified system of
    payments" for public transportation that could introduce the 150-dram
    fare without putting "the burden of higher fare rates on socially
    vulnerable groups . . . " ArmeniaNow.com reported the mayor as saying.

    In an apparent attempt at spin, Markarian, however, expressed pleasure
    that various celebrities and others had started an online carpooling
    campaign to take Yerevan residents where they wanted to go without
    public transportation. "I am happy with the warmth that again exists
    now between Yerevan residents in terms of helping and being more
    caring toward each other,"RFE/RL's Armenian service reported him as
    saying in a statement.

    But, ultimately, the price reversal could signify more than neighborly
    good feelings. As Ianyanmag.com noted, the decision gave "Armenians
    more than a community victory, but the sense they can change more
    than 50 AMD when they come together."

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67308

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