Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia Ranked Among World's Most Corrupt Countries

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia Ranked Among World's Most Corrupt Countries

    ARMENIA RANKED AMONG WORLD'S MOST CORRUPT COUNTRIES

    Asbarez
    Nov 17th, 2009

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-A respected international watchdog reported on Tuesday
    a further slight increase in government corruption in Armenia, ranking
    it among the 60 most corrupt countries of the world covered by its
    annual surveys.

    Armenia as well as Bolivia, Ethiopia, Kazakhstan Mongolia and Vietnam
    share a lowly 120th place in Transparency International's latest
    Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) of 180 nations. It was 109th in
    the previous CPI released by the Berlin-based group a year ago.

    The 2009 survey assigned Armenia a score of 2.7 measured on a 10-point
    scale, with zero indicating an extremely high degree of corruption
    as perceived by entrepreneurs and experts. The South Caucasus state
    scored 2.9 points in 2008.

    "I must point out that as a rule, a change of up to 0.3 points is
    not deemed significant within the framework of this study," said
    Amalia Kostanian, chairwoman of Transparency's Armenian affiliate,
    the Anti-Corruption Center (ACC).

    Still, Kostanian stressed the fact that the watchdog has found
    no decreases in the scale of widespread bribery and other corrupt
    practices in the country for the past decade. "In fact, we have been
    stagnating since 2003," she said, presenting the findings of the
    latest CPI at a news conference.

    The Armenian authorities claim to have stepped up their declared fight
    against graft in recent years, adopting various anti-graft programs
    and forming special bodies tasked with their implementation. The
    administration of former President Robert Kocharian launched in 2003
    the first such program consisting of mainly legislative measures.

    There is little evidence that it has strengthened the rule of law in
    the country, however.

    Kocharian's successor and longtime close associate, Serzh Sarkisian,
    admitted last year that the virtual absence of prosecutions of
    corrupt government officials has undermined public trust in the stated
    crackdowns on corruption. His prime minister, Tigran Sargsyan, has
    been even more vocal in acknowledging the seriousness of the problem.

    The ACC and other local civic groups believe that the situation has
    barely improved under the Sarkisian administration. Kostanian stated
    in September that anti-corruption drives periodically announced
    by the government will be doomed to failure as long as Armenia's
    top government officials are allowed to have extensive business
    interests and strangle entrepreneurs challenging them. She described
    the "fusion between large entrepreneurs and politicians" as the root
    cause of the problem.

    Armenia continues to compare favorably, in terms of corruption
    perceptions, with two of its neighbors, Azerbaijan and Iran, that are
    143rd and 168th respectively in the Transparency rankings. However,
    the two other neighbors, Turkey and Georgia, are well ahead of it,
    ranking 61st and 66th in the closely watched survey.
Working...
X