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Russian daily: Electric Networks of Armenia may be sold #ElectricYerevan

June 29, 2015 By administrator

194320Unrest in Armenia due to electricity price hike and the authorities’ promise to nationalize the Electric Networks of Armenia (ENA) may force Inter RAO to sell the company. The Russian holding company has already conducted negotiations with Russian businessmen of Armenian origin, including the owner of Tashir Group Samvel Karapetyan. But finding a new owner is not easy: the imbalance in tariffs led to ENA accumulating huge debts, while protesters still demand that the authorities not subsidize the company’s losses from the budget, Kommersant reports.

As a result of 10-day rallies and riots against energy price hike in Armenia, President Serzh Sargsyan said on June 27 that ENA may be nationalized and handed over to concessive management. Chief of Police of Armenia Vladimir Gasparyan said the state will acquire ENA in two months. Russian Inter RAO that owns the company, however, denies the report on its involvememnt in negotiations to sell ENA, accoridng to Interfax.

A source in Yerevan claims that Russian businessman Samvel Karapetyan plans to buy ENA, as negotiations had begun before the tariff hike. Armenian representatives of Tashir Group refuted the news.

The conflict broke out around the ENA after the Public Services Regulatory Commission (PSRC) of Armenia increased the electricity tariff by AMD 6.93 ($ 0,015) per 1 kWh. The company itself required to raise the prices by AMD 17 ($ 0,036). PSRC’s decision led to spontaneous demonstrations in Yerevan and other Armenian cities. President Serzh Sargsyan on Friday after a meeting with Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov (co-chairman of Armenian-Russian Intergovernmental Commission) said that the government will conduct an audit and cover all costs of electricity tariff hike until the results of the audit are known.

ENA justifies the need to increase the tariff due the fact that the Armenian NPP did not operate for 88 days, which is why the cheap energy was replaced with the expensive output of gas power plants. These amounts were not included in the energy balance in the calculation of tariffs, and the company had to take out loans with an interest of up to AMD 8 billion ($16.9 million), according to the source. ENA owes about AMD 23 billion ($ 48.6 million) to power generators.

A source explained that compensating the price hike is a temporary solution: the current growth rate will allow the ENA to maintain network performance, but will make it impossible to develop the power grid. In addition, the company’s application on tariff hikes intended to repay debts to power-generators till the end of the year, but now they will be able to return the debts only in 2016.

Protesters in Armenia perceive ENA and its management to be initiators of the conflict, and proposal to nationalize the company does not meet support among citizens, Kommersant says.

Related links:

«КоммерсантЪ»: “Интер РАО” не выдержало армянских драм
ТАСС: В “Интер РАО” не подтвердили информацию о продаже “Электрических сетей Армении”
Интерфакс: “Интер РАО” опровергло информацию о продаже армянской “дочки”

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Electric Networks, Yerevan

Silent Revolution?: ‘#ElectricYerevan’ protests in Yerevan force political leadership to take ‘emergency’ steps

June 29, 2015 By administrator

By Naira Hayrumyan
ArmeniaNow correspondent
600x400xbaghramyan-energy-price-protest-day-6.jpg.pagespeed.ic.GiPNiOPppAWhile the current protests in Yerevan are dubbed “Electric”, they are more like a “silent revolution”. Demonstrators in Baghramyan Avenue are not setting any political demands, besides the “social demand” of revoking the decision on the electricity price hike, they are silent, they spend the day singing and dancing and gather in the evenings for rallies.

However, the political leaderships of Armenia and Russia are forced to take urgent steps.

In response to the protest blockading Baghramyan Avenue in Yerevan, a meeting of the Armenian-Russian intergovernmental commission was urgently held in the Armenian capital. Then, President Serzh Sargsyan said that Russia decided to issue a loan of $200 million for the purchase of modern weapons for the army and transfer the investigation of the murders of the Avetisyan family in Gyumri, blamed on a Russian soldier, to the Armenian side. Also Russian assistance with the extension of the life of the Armenian nuclear power plant was announced and the sides agreed on commissioning an audit of the Armenian power grids owned by the Russian company Inter RAO UES.

The Armenian government, in its turn, decided to take upon itself the subsidization of the increased part of the electricity tariff, paying it from the state budget.

However, the fact that thousands of protesters remained in Baghramyan Avenue means that these decisions do not satisfy the requirements of the people. And although no one in the avenue presented new demands, Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan overnight made what looked like a panic statement, claiming that the demonstrators have passed from social to “obscure political demands.”

In the protest venue some individual participants put forward various demands, up to the nationalization of Armenia’s strategic assets that were transferred to Russia and the resignation of the government. However, these demands are made privately, and no one formulates them officially.

The police force that yesterday promised to clear the demonstration did not launch any operation eventually. According to political analyst Andrias Ghukasyan, they were stopped by the large number of people who gathered in the area. According to various estimates, they were up to 10,000. However, as experts say, the police realize that breaking up the rally could lead to the downfall of today’s government in Armenia, where a movement of civil disobedience is gaining momentum.

The government is trying to “buy some time” in order to try, perhaps, to resell the Armenian power grid. According to Russia’s Kommersant newspaper, Inter RAO UES is in talks with the owner of Tashir Group Samvel Karapetyan and another Russian businessman of Armenian origin.

Minister-chief of government staff David Harutyunyan yesterday said that resale and nationalization of the company cannot be excluded, but first an international audit needs to be conducted.

The minister said that within the framework of the Eurasian Economic Union that can find solutions in the energy sector. But first of all improvement of the system is needed.

In fact, to the silent rally in Yerevan political response is heard at the highest level. And the power of the people who gathered in Baghramyan Avenue is felt strongly in government offices.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Electric, Silent Revolution, Yerevan

Armenian protesters still defying police after tense night #ElectricYerevan

June 29, 2015 By administrator

(Karo Sahakyan/PAN Photo via AP)

(Karo Sahakyan/PAN Photo via AP)

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) — A couple of hundred demonstrators remain on a central avenue in Armenia’s capital, defying police orders to disperse and end their weeklong protest against higher electricity rates.

The unrest is the most serious that the impoverished former Soviet nation has seen in years.

After the Armenian president promised to suspend the rate hikes by the Russian-owned power company, riot police came out in force late Sunday and ordered the protesters to disperse.

About 2,000 of them went peacefully, but several thousand others refused and the mood was tense. The police, however, did not move against the protesters and thousands stayed through the night.

On Monday morning, as usual, a smaller number remained. They refused a police request to remove a barricade of trash containers placed across the road.

Filed Under: Events, News Tagged With: Electric, police, protesters, Yerevan

#ElectricYerevan Armenian PM sounding Like Erdogan accusing Protestors that appeared at Baghramyan have other motive.

June 28, 2015 By administrator

Armenian-PMYEREVAN. – Some forces that appeared at Baghramyan Avenue have a goal not to solve the problem of electricity, but destabilize the country and provoke clashes between our citizens, Armenian PM Hovik Abrahamyan said in a statement. Report news.am

They are focused not on social and economic element, but unclear aspirations, PM said, adding that this may be concluded taking into account response to president’s offer on audit.

“We have expressed readiness to engage representatives of expert community and civil society. In such a situation, the decision to keep demonstrators illegally block Baghramyan Avenue is unclear, especially as the initiative group said the protest will continue at Freedom Square. The members of the initiative “No to Plunder” by receiving a positive solution of the issue, demonstrated high quality of legal conscience that is in the interests of society and the state. Their decision confirmed optimistic view that we have a really good generation of young people who feel responsible for their moves.

Confirming the readiness of the authorities in achieving solutions to problems through dialogue and collaboration, I once again urge our fellow citizens who continue to protest on Baghramyan Avenue, to refrain from anti-constitutional actions not to aggravate the situation,” the statement reads.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Armenian, Electric, PM, protestors, Yerevan

Protests in Yerevan: day six #ElectricYerevan

June 28, 2015 By administrator

f558fa7efbabff_558fa7efbac39It is the sixth say that members of the “No to plunder” civil initiative have been blocking Baghramyan Avenue in Yerevan, demanding revocation of the decision raising electricity prices.

Activist Vaghinak Shushanyan told Tert.am that the initiative will do what most people decide.

“I would like to urge people not to succumb to provocations or listen to calls for a revolution. None of our demands has largely been met, but they have made a step,” the activist said.

“We have won the first battle of a great war because even political opposition forces have not been considered at the presidential level for so long a period,” Shushanyan said.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: day, Electric, six, Yerevan

#ElectricYerevan: Police warn of possible use of force

June 28, 2015 By administrator

Colonel Valeri Osipian

Colonel Valeri Osipian

The Armenian police have urged protesters campaigning against rising electricity prices in Yerevan’s Baghramyan Avenue to unblock the central thoroughfare tonight, warning of possible use of force to “restore public order”.

Colonel Valeri Osipian, deputy chief of Yerevan’s police, described the Saturday statement by President Serzh Sargsyan offering a compromise plan on the electricity price hikes as “victory” both for the demonstrators and the entire society, including the police, and recommended that No To Plunder activists “return to the framework of law”.

The protesters want the unpopular decision by the utilities commission to raise electricity tariffs by over 16 percent beginning in August to be scrapped. But at a meeting with senior government officials late on Saturday Sargsyan suggested that the Armenian government will take upon itself the subsidizing of the increase until it gets the conclusion of an international audit of the Russian-owned Electric Networks of Armenia company.

Activists of the No To Plunder pressure group who have been holding protests in Yerevan since June 19 did not react immediately to the announcement, calling for “nationwide mobilization” on Sunday to determine their attitude towards the government plan and decide on further actions.

Talking to media hours before the rally, Colonel Osipyan said: “Within the framework of the law the police will use means to restore public order in Baghramian Avenue. The offenders will be punished.”

The police already used force against demonstrators on June 23, but the heavy-handed reaction then only angered people and they turned out in even larger numbers to get barricaded in Baghramian Avenue later that night.

The police have not used strong-arm methods since then, but have kept reminding the protesters that while peaceful their rallies violate Armenia’s law on freedom of assembly.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Electric, police, Protest, Yerevan

Armenian Demonstrators to Decide Whether to Halt Protest #ElectricYerevan

June 28, 2015 By administrator

YEREVAN, Armenia — Jun 28, 2015, 10:35 AM ET
AP_logo_update_20130709-1By AVET DEMOURIAN Associated Press

Demonstrators protesting higher household electricity rates blocked the Armenian capital’s main avenue on Sunday for a seventh straight day, but they planned to decide in the evening whether to call a halt to their protest after the president promised to suspend the rate hikes.

If the protesters don’t leave by late Sunday, the Yerevan police warned that they would take steps to disperse the demonstrators and open the street to traffic.

After nearly a week in which the number of protesters grew steadily to reach about 15,000, the turning point came late Saturday when President Serzh Sargsyan announced that the government would bear the burden of the higher electricity costs until an international audit of the power company could be done. The protesters claim the Russian-owned utility is riddled with corruption.

The unrest is the most serious that the former Soviet nation has seen in years, posing a challenge to Sargsyan’s government and causing great concern in Moscow. Russia maintains a military base in Armenia and Russian companies control most of its major industries.

Protest organizer Vaghinak Shushanian said Sunday that the president did as much as he was able to do legally, and while it was not a complete victory for the demonstrators, it made sense for them to take a break. But he said the decision on whether to halt the protest would be made by the demonstrators themselves as the crowds returned for the evening rally.

The city’s deputy police chief, Valery Osipian, said his officers were prepared “to try to restore social order” if the street weren’t cleared by the end of the night. After an initial attempt to disperse the protesters through the use of water cannons, which only angered them and brought international condemnation, the police have stood by peacefully.

During the heat of the day, as usual only a few hundred protesters remained on the street, separated from the police by a line of large trash containers. They were joined in the afternoon by a newlywed couple, who carried signs calling for the electricity company’s debts to be paid by its Russian director and for the utility to be nationalized.

Sargsyan said Saturday that he wouldn’t exclude the nationalization of the Armenian power company, a subsidiary of the Russian electricity company Inter RAO UES.

The president’s focus, however, was on plans for an audit, which he said would be conducted by an international company with input from some of the protest organizers. If the audit showed that the rate hikes were justified, they would be passed on to consumers, he said.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: demonstrators, Electric, Yerevan

Armenian Government to assume the burden of price hike until audit conducted #ElectricYerevan

June 27, 2015 By administrator

By Siranush Ghazanchyan

Consultations-620x300Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan held consultations with the agencies responsible for the Republic’s economic policy to discuss issued of energy security and solution of existing problems.

Speaking about the ongoing protests against the planned electricity price hike, President Sargsyan hailed the mutual trust established between the protesters and the law-enforcement bodies over the past days.

“I have been following the recent developments and I can assert that over the past week Armenia has turned into a large and effective educational center, where our citizens and law-enforcers, journalists and lawmakers, intellectuals and foreigners teach each other, listen to each other, tolerate each other, something that rarely happens in the world.,” the President said.

The President reminded that during a meeting with Russian Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov he stressed the importance of conducting an audit at the Armenian Electric Networks. He added, however, that the decision on price hike was justified.

“I’m confident that if the price is not increased, the energy system will face the danger of collapse.”

He suggested to select an experienced international consulting company to conduct an audit at the Electric Networks, to give an answer to the following questions: to what extent the price hike is justified and which are the dangers threatening the energy system in case the price is not increased.

The President said that before the final decision, the government will assume the burden of the increased prices.

“If the audit comes to prove that the price hike is justified, the consumers will start paying the cost. In case the audit concludes that the planned price hike was groundless, the government will do its best to get back the sums spared by the Electric Networks and will call the officials to accountability,” President Sargsyan stated.

Filed Under: Events, News Tagged With: assume, burden, Electric, government, Yerevan

Week Two on Horizon: “#ElectricYerevan” powers on

June 26, 2015 By administrator

Bell-board-Week-two-electric-yerevanA protest against proposed electricity tariff hikes has entered its second week in Yerevan and in some communities outside the Armenian capital. The stand-off has turned into a sit-in that has its epicenter near the Presidential Residence on Baghramyan Avenue, and as momentum seems to be growing, there are expectations and some apprehensions of what the weekend and beyond hold.

Led by the “No to Plunder” civil initiative, the movement has been dubbed “Electric Yerevan” and with crowds of up to 10,000 demonstrators, has gotten the attention of international media – some of whom are making comparisons to incidents that sparked revolution in Ukraine.

In Yerevan, however, leaders of the resistance to the proposed 16 percent hike (effective August 1), insist that their cause is social, and not political, and they simply want to be heard, again, as the voice of the people.

Some media reports have speculated that protest leaders want negotiations with President Serzh Sargsyan, but those leaders say their demands are clear and it is up to the president whether to meet them.

“There are no expectations for a new meeting,” one of the members of the initiative, founding president of amateur bicycle riding and tourism federation Arman Antonyan told ArmeniaNow.

After an early demonstration was met with force (water cannons) and detention of more than 200, police have promised to remain calm so long as the protestors do, too. Both sides kept order, and the result has been growing numbers that opponents of the tariff hike hope to see grow.

“The president was here before leaving for Brussels (to attend a European Peoples Party summit), if he wanted to change something, he would have. Now, maybe, we should press with more numbers of people, because changes take place only with united forces. If we become 60-70,000, our demand will become heard,” Eduard Mkhitaryan, member of No to Plunder civil initiative told ArmeniaNow.

They are not ready to go for any compromise. President Serzh Sargsyan, who returned from Brussels on Thursday, still leaves protestors’ demands unanswered, and the government warns about electricity interruptions, if the tariff is not increased.

Meanwhile representatives of the government wrote on social networks that as a matter of fact the government has nothing to do with increasing or decreasing the tariff, as doing so is the responsibility of the Public Services regulatory Commission (PSRC).
Political analyst Edgar Vardanyan from the Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS) is sure that negotiations with the government might harm the civil movement.

“In non-democratic countries movements that were initiated to reach radical changes and succeeded, de facto negotiations with the government were run only when it became clear that the movement won, however, there was need to record a “soft” victory to avoid unnecessary shocks,” Vardanyan wrote on his Face book account.

“In the beginning of the movement or in the midway negotiating with the authorities almost always harmed civil movements,” he concluded.

But the absence of negotiations has created a wall, and negotiations will be very complicated, although they seem to be easy; economist Ashot Khurshudyan, an expert with the International Center for Human Development said.

“It is complicated, because we should find a solution which will be accepted by the sides.”

“The wall situation is the one when the sides realize that a mutual solution is necessary, and the alternatives are bad for the both of them. In this case, a mutual solution means, for the government – people go home, or at least liberate the Avenue moving to another spot. The protestors want the same, only when their condition is met, when their voice is heard (the meaning of closing the avenue is always the same – “do not ignore our problem”),” Khurshudyan said.

The “wall” grows bigger if the issue is politicized, leaders of the movement say.

“This is solely a civil initiative, and follows only one goal – suspension of electricity tariff increase. The youth has stood up and will go till the end,” initiative leader Arman Antonyan said.

“Now there are MPs with us, both opposition and republican. They come and go, but nobody will make a speech. This movement is self-initiated, no loud announcements will be made,” Mkhitaryan added.

By Sara Khojoyan
ArmeniaNow reporter

Filed Under: Events, News Tagged With: electric yerevan, week two, Yerevan

Yerevan, Prime Minister Rejects Reversal on Energy Hike, As Russia Urges ‘Compromise’

June 25, 2015 By administrator

Protesters on Baghramyan Avenue continue their demands into the fourth day (Photolure)

Protesters on Baghramyan Avenue continue their demands into the fourth day (Photolure)

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)—Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian on Thursday defended state regulators’ decision to raise electricity prices and urged thousands of protesters to unblock a major street in Yerevan on the fourth day of their nonstop demonstrations against the controversial measure.

Abrahamian also announced that the Armenian government will compensate some 105,000 low-income families for the more than 16 percent tariff increases authorized by the Public Services Regulatory Commission (PSRC) last week. Monthly poverty benefits paid to them will be raised by 2,000 drams ($4.2), he said.

The Armenian Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs estimates that the tariff hike will cost the average family living below the official poverty line only 1,400 drams in additional monthly expenditures.

“I would like to appeal to our activists, organizers of those rallies and say that such actions will lead nowhere,” Abrahamian said at the weekly meeting of his cabinet. “I am calling on them to be more constructive. The government is ready to discuss any issue that is being raised by them.”

Abrahamian insisted that the price hike reflects “objective realities” of the Armenian energy sector. He echoed the PSRC’s arguments that the Electricity Networks of Armenia (ENA) utility needs to be compensated for last year’s depreciation of the Armenian dram, a longer-than-anticipated stoppage of the Metsamor nuclear plant’s reactor and decreased water levels on rivers fueling hydroelectric stations.

The ENA has had to buy larger volumes of much more expensive electricity generated at Armenian thermal power plants. The company owned by a Russian energy giant currently has over $225 million in outstanding debts to power plants and banks.

Critics say, however, that the ENA’s losses are the result of corruption and mismanagement. They also point to the company’s extravagant expenses, including on luxury cars and office space for its senior executives, which have been disclosed by the Armenian media in recent months.

Abrahamian sought to dispel these claims accepted by many Armenians. “I don’t exclude that there have been abuses [within the ENA,]” he said. “But I want to declare with utmost responsibility that regardless of the scale of possible abuses inside the company, not a single penny of them was calculated into the tariff.”

“Such abuses stemming from poor management have hurt the company’s owner, rather than consumers, seeing as its profits have decreased,” added the premier.

Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian

Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian

Abrahamian went on to assert that failure to raise the tariffs would disrupt electricity supplies in Armenia and lead to the kind of crippling power shortages which the country had endured in the early 1990s.

No To Plunder, a pressure group leading the protests, was quick to dismiss these statements. One of its leaders, Vaghinak Shushanian, said the protesters will not leave Marshal Baghramyan Avenue until the authorities meet their demands.

“If he has so much courage, he should come here and talk to us,” Shushanian told RFE/RL’ Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). “Let him appear before the people here and say from the podium that … this measure is justified.”

Like senior law-enforcement officials, Abrahamian said that the nonstop protests on the avenue leading to the presidential palace are illegal. But he stopped short of threatening to forcibly disperse the mostly young people demonstrating there.

The chief of the Armenian police, Vladimir Gasparian, also did not voice such threats when he visited the scene and talked to some protesters early in the morning.“Stay peaceful and don’t provoke us,” he said.

Gasparian further said that law-enforcement authorities are investigating violence against more than a dozen journalists, including three RFE/RL correspondents, perpetrated by his officers during Tuesday’s violent crackdown on the Bagramian Avenue protesters. “Who said that we can’t have shortcomings and make mistakes?” he told reporters. “The key thing is to identify and address them.”

Gasparian was accompanied by Levon Yeranosian, one of his deputies who the journalists say personally ordered the violence.

Russia Urges ‘Compromise Solution’ To Armenian Standoff
Russia has called on the Armenian authorities to make concessions to thousands of people holding nonstop demonstrations in Yerevan against the latest increase in electricity prices in Armenia.

Significantly, a senior Russian official also disputed claims by some Russian pro-government politicians and pundits that Western powers are behind the continuing standoff between Armenian protesters and riot police.

“We count on the common sense and wisdom of the Armenian leadership,” Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin said late on Wednesday, according to the RIA Novosti agency. “According to our information, one can expect that a compromise decision on issues raised by the demonstrators will be found.”

“We are awaiting news from Yerevan,” added Karasin. He did not specify whether the Russian government is ready to assist in such a settlement.

Karasin cast doubt on the credibility of these claims, saying that they “need to be proved.” “We will be carefully looking into everything that preceded [the Yerevan protests,] but I wouldn’t jump into such hasty conclusions,” he said.

A spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that Moscow is “very closely” monitoring the dramatic developments in Armenia and hopes that there will be no “violations of the law.”

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: energy, hike, prime minister, Rejects, Reversal, Yerevan

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