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Global Watchdog Skeptical About Armenian Anti-Graft Body

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  • Global Watchdog Skeptical About Armenian Anti-Graft Body

    Global Watchdog Skeptical About Armenian Anti-Graft Body
    By Ruzanna Stepanian 19/06/2004 01:12

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    June 18 2004

    A special body formed recently to coordinate the Armenian government's
    promised fight against endemic corruption is likely to be ineffectual
    because of its dependence on the executive branch, a top representative
    of the world's most renowned anti-graft watchdog said Friday.

    "What I know about this suggests that it is not an independent body.
    We know from the international experience that only independent
    bodies can accomplish anything," Miklos Marschall, Transparency
    International's regional director for Europe and Central Asia,
    told RFE/RL.

    The Council on Combating Corruption was set up by President
    Robert Kocharian on June 2 with the stated aim of overseeing
    the implementation of actions stemming from the government's
    anti-corruption strategy unveiled last November. It is headed by
    Prime Minister Andranik Markarian and comprises Justice Minister
    David Harutiunian, Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian, Central Bank
    Chairman Tigran Sarkisian and other high-ranking officials.

    Marschall voiced skepticism about the Armenian authorities' repeated
    promises to tackle bribery, favoritism and other rampant corrupt
    practices "There is much talk about corruption but you haven't
    seen real cases prosecuted by the appropriate authorities," he said,
    speaking on the sidelines of an international conference on corruption
    in the region which was organized by Transparency International.

    Marschall argued that if an anti-corruption effort is to be successful
    in Armenia it must primarily target the highest echelons of state
    power because graft has become an "elite business" in the country
    since the Soviet collapse.

    No serving senior government officials are known to have been
    prosecuted on corruption charges in Armenia in recent years.
    According to Kocharian's anti-corruption aide, Bagrat Yesayan, its
    government has finally realized the seriousness of the problem and
    is now committed to addressing it in earnest.

    The government's anti-corruption plan contains a long list of mostly
    legislative measures which are to be taken in the next three years.
    Government critics dismiss the document as a public relations stunt
    meant to mislead Western donors. The latter have for years been
    pressing Yerevan to take serious action against what they see as a
    key obstacle to Armenia's economic development.

    In Transparency International's most recent global survey of
    "corruption perceptions" released last fall, Armenia was ranked 78th
    out of 133 countries surveyed, the last one being considered the
    most corrupt. Neighboring Azerbaijan and Georgia were rated even more
    poorly by the Berlin-based group.
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