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  • Auctions Gone Awry: Public Disclosure Is Sadly Lacking And No One Is

    AUCTIONS GONE AWRY: PUBLIC DISCLOSURE IS SADLY LACKING AND NO ONE IS HELD ACCOUNTABLE
    Lousine Toplaghaltsyan

    http://hetq.am/en/marzes/tretuk/
    2 009/06/01 | 19:12

    Feature Stories Marzes

    One month ago, in the pages of the newspaper "Hayastani Hanrapetutyun",
    we came across an advert announcing that an auction of farm equipment,
    tools, and cars belonging to the community of Tretuk, Gegharkunik Marz,
    was to take place on May 19. The announcement included the deadline
    for applications and details regarding contacting the community
    municipality and a cell phone number. The announcement was signed by
    the community mayor.

    Even thought the time of the auction wasn't specified in the
    announcement we arrived in Tretuk at 11:00 am on May 19. There were no
    notices about the auction at the municipal office. The law stipulates,
    however, that the auction organizers must post public information
    about the event at least one day before at the site where it is to
    take place.

    When we asked when the auction was to start Silva Abrahamyan, the
    deputy community leader of Tretuk, told us the sale would start at
    noon. She said that they had received two bid applications from local
    residents. One was from her son, Mikhayil Abrahamyan and the other from
    Karo Asatryan. She said that the farm equipment to be auctioned off was
    quite old. In the case of one of the tractors, she said that they had
    been using it for the past twenty years and had repeatedly petitioned
    the community leader to hand over the property rights to them.

    She phoned the community head to get more specific information and
    to also ask if he was to show up at work or not. Fifteen minutes
    later, however, she told us not to wait for the village mayor. He
    had supposedly phoned and said that the auction would be postponed
    till May 21 since there were no registered bidders.

    The mayor describes his deputy's statements as "gossip"

    We decided to wait and get an explanation directly from him. One
    hour later, Suren Yeghiazaryan, the community mayor arrived and
    told us that today's auction was being cancelled since there were no
    registered bidders.

    When we told him that his deputy had given us different information
    Mr. Yeghiazaryan shrugged it off as mere village gossip. He said
    that Silva Abrahamyan's son was in Russia and couldn't possibly
    participate in the auction. We asked if it was fair and proper of
    him to label his deputy's information as mere "gossip" and proposed
    that Mrs. Abrahamyan be present at our conversation. Mr. Yeghiazaryan
    declined, saying that he saw no need for such a meeting.

    It is stipulated in the RoA "Bargains Law" that a public notice must
    be posted regarding all auctions. The law specifies that eleven pieces
    of information must be included in said notice. Most, if not all,
    were absent in the notice compiled by the Tretuk municipality. The
    following points were missing in the Tretuk notice

    1) Time of the auction 2) Title of the auction organizer 3) Address
    of the auction organizer 4) Auction rules and procedure 5) Auction
    conditions; including lot titles and descriptions. If the lot to be
    bided on is an object, its physical condition (wear and tear) and
    manufacture date. The starting bid price and other essential details.

    Mr. Yeghiazaryan agreed that the auction notice was flawed. He told us
    that there were four lots up for auction - two tractors with a start
    bid of 419,000 and 312,000 drams, a 219,000 dram dump-truck, and a
    22,000 dram trailer. All weren't included in the notice since they
    were quite old, remnants of the collective farm era. Mr. Yeghiazaryan
    described them as nothing more than junk metal.

    The issue of auctioning off the community's remaining farm equipment
    was taken up at the March 26 session of the community council. The
    session is duly registered in the council logs. Mr. Yeghiazaryan told
    us that a public advisory meeting was held on May 5 and that local
    residents were informed about the upcoming auction. A five-member
    auction committee was set up as well. To bolster his argument
    that the auction was well advertised, Mr. Yeghiazaryan said the
    community receives eleven copies of the "Hayastani Hanrapetutyun"
    newspaper. The municipality has a subscription to three copies and the
    mayor personally gets one of them. As to where potential bidders must
    get information about the lots for sale and auction fees, the answer
    is the same; from the community mayor. Potential bidders were forced
    to either make their way to the village of Tretuk or Metz Masrik,
    where Mayor Suren Yeghiazaryan resides, or to call him at the cell
    phone number provided in the notice.

    When a public notice offers little or no information

    It is no wonder then that all roads leading to auction information
    starts and ends with Mayor Yeghiazarayan, who, by the way, is also the
    president of the auction committee. However, the committee president
    wasn't able to provide potential bidders with a specific entrance fee,
    since he thought that the fee should be 10% of the valuation of each
    lot up for bid. The RoA "Bargains Law" states that the entrance fee
    must not exceed the starting bid on the most expensive lot up for
    bid by 5%. The mayor couldn't even say what the minimum incremental
    bids were to be, arguing that this detail would be decided during
    the auction.

    We requested to see a copy of the auction regulations but the mayor
    said it was locked away in somebody's fire-proof safe and that
    the owner was away on business. When we asked if we could see the
    community's budget, the mayor claimed that it too was locked away in
    the same safe.

    Mr. Yeghiazaryan told us that the auction committee was to meet
    at 3:00 pm that same day to officially register the fact that the
    auction had been called off. However, according to Article 15 of the
    RoA "Bargains Law", this procedure should take place the following day.

    Most probably, this isn't the first or last auction to be
    cancelled. The question remains, what good is publicizing an auction
    if it offers little or no information to prospective bidders? Then
    too, who is to be held accountable for the fact that the public
    notice posted by the Tretuk municipality regarding the auction was
    so flawed? Whose duty is it to see that the auction laws are observed
    if there aren't citizens who come forward as prospective bidders and
    demand a full accounting as prescribed by the law?

    If there are bidders then, by extension, there is no one to complain
    about the auction process. In the end, things will remain as they
    are. The mayor will reprimand his deputy for carelessly divulging
    "internal information" and come the next auction that same deputy
    will be less than forthcoming with the facts.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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