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Poll Finds Public Distrust In Armenian Anti-Graft Plan

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  • Poll Finds Public Distrust In Armenian Anti-Graft Plan

    Poll Finds Public Distrust In Armenian Anti-Graft Plan
    By Armen Zakarian 17/09/2004 10:26

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    September 17 2004

    Armenians remain overwhelmingly skeptical about the success of their
    government's declared fight against corruption with almost half of
    them believing that it itself is the biggest obstacle to the rule of
    law, according to a new poll made public on Thursday.

    The survey conducted by the Armenian Center for National and
    International Studies (ACNIS), a private think-tank, shows that nearly
    two thirds of about 2,000 people interviewed across the country
    are not familiar with an anti-corruption strategy unveiled by the
    authorities last year. Only 5 percent of them are confident that it
    will be successfully implemented, ACNIS pollsters said. Forty-nine
    percent said they would subscribe to the view that "a corrupt regime
    can not fight against itself." Others attributed the perceived lack
    of results in the stated anti-graft crusade to government incompetence
    and pervasive influence of business "oligarchs."

    The authorities' anti-corruption plan approved by Western donors
    is a set of largely legislative measures designed to curb illegal
    practices such as bribery and nepotism. A special body headed by Prime
    Minister Andranik Markarian was formed earlier this year to oversee
    its implementation. The Council on Combating Corruption in turn set
    up a "monitoring commission."

    The success of the council's stated mission was called into question
    in June by a senior representative of the Berlin-based watchdog
    Transparency International. He said the body is likely to be
    ineffectual because it is not independent.

    According to the ACNIS survey, the most common popular perception
    of the problem's root causes is a political one, with 42.8 percent
    saying that Armenia's rulers lack legitimacy because they did not
    come to power as a result of democratic elections. "In a country
    that has disputed elections many people agree that the government
    gives privileges and other rewards to those who helped them come to
    power," Stepan Safarian, a leading ACNIS analyst, told journalists,
    presenting the survey results.

    More than a third of those polled said they were offered bribes in
    return for voting for particular candidates in last year's presidential
    and parliamentary elections. Most claimed to have refused to accept
    the illegal payments.

    Votes bribes are one the most frequent forms of Armenia's chronic
    electoral fraud which marred the 2003 elections criticized as
    undemocratic by international observers.

    The poll also suggests that nearly half of Armenians bribe government
    officials at least once a year. The bulk of those who admitted doing
    so said their kickbacks were meant to ensure fair and lawful treatment
    by government bodies. Health care institutions, the judiciary and
    the military were singled out by most respondents as the most corrupt
    structures in Armenia.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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