EFFECTIVE CONTACTS SHOULD BE ESTABLISHED BETWEEN STATE AND SOCIETY IN ARMENIA
ARKA
April 23, 2008
YEREVAN, April 22. /ARKA/. Effective contacts should be established
between the state and the society in Armenia and monitoring of civil
servants' testing by public organizations can facilitate this process,
said the Chairman of the Civil Service Council Manvel Badalian.
The Council is for cooperation with public organizations, especially
when the cooperation helps reveal and control possible shortcomings
in the council activities, Badalian said.
According to him, monitoring implemented by public organizations in
testing of civil servants allows finding out even small deficiencies
in the work of testing commissions.
"It is important to us, as an outside eye can notice even small defects
- technical, methodical, methodological - which do not see anymore,"
Badalian said.
According to him, the practice of such monitoring is to be expanded
to provide wider coverage than the current three ministries. Badalian
reported 42 various state agencies under competence of the Council.
The monitoring anticorruption network was established in 2006 by
the Civil Servants Union of Armenia under financial assistance of
Eurasia-Cooperation foundation. Seven public organizations of Armenia
are part of the network.
In the scope of the program, monitoring is conducted on the testing of
civil servants in three ministries - education and science, healthcare,
labor and social issues.
ARKA
April 23, 2008
YEREVAN, April 22. /ARKA/. Effective contacts should be established
between the state and the society in Armenia and monitoring of civil
servants' testing by public organizations can facilitate this process,
said the Chairman of the Civil Service Council Manvel Badalian.
The Council is for cooperation with public organizations, especially
when the cooperation helps reveal and control possible shortcomings
in the council activities, Badalian said.
According to him, monitoring implemented by public organizations in
testing of civil servants allows finding out even small deficiencies
in the work of testing commissions.
"It is important to us, as an outside eye can notice even small defects
- technical, methodical, methodological - which do not see anymore,"
Badalian said.
According to him, the practice of such monitoring is to be expanded
to provide wider coverage than the current three ministries. Badalian
reported 42 various state agencies under competence of the Council.
The monitoring anticorruption network was established in 2006 by
the Civil Servants Union of Armenia under financial assistance of
Eurasia-Cooperation foundation. Seven public organizations of Armenia
are part of the network.
In the scope of the program, monitoring is conducted on the testing of
civil servants in three ministries - education and science, healthcare,
labor and social issues.