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Foreign Partners Respond To Crackdown On Bjni

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  • Foreign Partners Respond To Crackdown On Bjni

    FOREIGN PARTNERS RESPOND TO CRACKDOWN ON BJNI

    A1+
    [08:05 pm] 03 November, 2008

    Foreign partners of SIL Concern have responded to the latest scandal
    over the Sukiasian-owned businesses, in particular the crackdown on
    Bjni Company.

    "I cannot believe that the authorities deny any political motives
    behind the crackdown on this successful company of mineral waters. The
    loss of this national brand will directly inflict great losses on
    Armenia's shaky economy. Imagine the French government closes Evian
    or Perrier or the U.S. government closes Coca Cola or Pepsi," says
    President of Harwal Group Harut Ohanessian.

    "Reasonable people will condemn the regime's steps which obviously
    intend to dissolve the successful business of their political
    opponents to deprive them of their property. Unfortunately, this
    valuable national resource is destroyed for political reasons, he says.

    Remind that the SIL Concern issued a statement according to which
    an Armenian business group owned by a fugitive opposition-linked
    businessman Khacahtur Sukiasyan claimed to be heading for financial
    ruin because of what it described as a "political vendetta" waged
    by the government. The SIL Concern group, which comprises a major
    commercial bank and a dozen other companies (Bjni, Pares Armenia,
    Pizza de Roma, Sports Time, Yerevan's Mill and Nor Shin), fell foul
    of the authorities after its main owner, parliament deputy Khachatur
    Sukiasian, publicly welcomed former President Levon Ter-Petrosian's
    September 2007 return to active politics. The companies have sustained
    great losses.

    Another Sukiasian-owned company, the exclusive distributor of Phillip
    Morris cigarettes in Armenia, went out of business earlier this year,
    saying that customs officials are refusing to process its imports on
    government orders. According to SIL, Phillip Morris now sells its
    cigarettes in the Armenian market through another firm allegedly
    controlled by President Serzh Sarkisian's influential son-in-law.

    Three of those companies were inspected by tax authorities and charged
    with evading millions of dollars in taxes late last year. Two of
    them, a pizza restaurant chain and a printing house, saw their chief
    executives arrested on corresponding charges. In a written statement,
    SIL accused the authorities of seeking to "destroy" the companies
    owned by Sukiasian and his extended family. "With this approach, the
    current authorities have proved one thing: that those entrepreneurs
    who will dare not to follow their rules of the game will be strictly
    and arbitrarily punished," the statement said.
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