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Diary
from the Yerevan International Airport Printable
Version
July
2007
By
Hayk Rachidian
Hello
Armenia! Here I am tired from long flight from US, finally
landed in Yerevan airport. Well, Armenia changed a lot in
the past 4 years. The Airport terminal is new and it is
civilized now.
You
are lucky if your flight is the only one to pass the customs
and immigration control. In my case I was not so lucky and
two more flights from Russia have arrived at the same time.
If it is just one flight from Austria or London is ok, people
are more or less organized and keep the line to pass immigration
control, but when few flights from Russia mix then the chaos
starts.
Entry
and exit processes are organizes and painless, may except
the luggage mess that always there. For some reason when
there are too many bags or two flights combined together,
the Airport personnel usually pile up all bags in the floor
and it is quite hard to find bags and dig them out of the
mountains of luggage.
The
new terminal building is nice, but I still could not understand
why force all people to pass trough the duty-free shops.
The biggest issue is the arrival area, it is still too crowded
and space is not enough. They should separate Russian routs
from other international, because Russian flights are still
not so organized.
Another
annoyance is the taxi drivers, when exiting the luggage
area you get immediately attacked by the army of taxi drivers.
I wonder why taxi drivers are waiting in restricted arrival
area. I had to give a credit to cab drivers in Armenia,
they are doing a great job, but they should have dedicated
space and not hang out in arrival area.
The
old airport building is quite complicated and it is not
that easy to get around or understand where to go to. I
could not find information desk and had to ask local police
where to find things.
The
best way to get to the city is to hire a taxicab, for about
$10 in 15 minutes you will be in downtown Yerevan. The Armenian
Government greatly improved arrival and departure procedures
as well as cracked down on bribery among the passenger customs
officials, but unfortunately Cargo and Parcel Customs still
the most corrupt organizations in Armenia.
Well,
it is always a sad moment to depart from Armenia, but the
good thing is that departure experience is the pleasant
one. It is streamlined and very easy: pay departure tax,
which is increased because of humiliating dollar exchange
rate, around $30, check in your luggage, pass friendly customs
and that is it. I remember before, in mid nineties, departure
was a real torture. Customs would literally hold you off
until you paid some bribe. The departure procedures improved
a lot and made traveling to Armenia easy. When you depart
do not forget to buy some great Ararat factory cognac from
the duty free store, the prices are little cheaper than
in the city.
Our
reviews are based on personal experience and reflect our
point of view. This story is updated in 2007, interesting
to see how arrival experience will turn out next time.
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