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Armenia Learns the Price of a Clean Government

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  • Armenia Learns the Price of a Clean Government

    EurasiaNet.org
    Dec 14 2012


    Armenia Learns the Price of a Clean Government


    December 14, 2012 - 1:20pm, by Marianna Grigoryan


    Like anyone else, Armenian government officials like to look and feel
    their best. But how much should taxpayers spend to keep them in
    toothpaste, shampoo and toilet paper?

    According to Ministry of Finance data cited on December 9 by online TV
    outlet CivilNet, state bodies spent nearly one-third of a million
    dollars ($325,775 or 132.3 million drams) on personal-hygiene and
    cleaning supplies over the past year, with toilet paper alone costing
    taxpayers roughly 7.8 million drams (about $19,165).

    The Ministry of Justice's Penitentiary Department, apparently quite
    desirous of a clean shave, spent a whopping $41,000, or over 16.6
    million drams, to buy 175,000 razors - more than 36 times the size of
    Armenia's 2011 prison population of 4,812 people.

    But personal hygiene is not the only area in which the government
    seems eager to spend. The apparently house-proud National Security
    Service, the country's intelligence agency, spent over 2 million
    drams, about $5,000, on supplies of scrubbing powder between September
    2011 and August 2012, nearly $2,000 (750,000 drams) on kitchen cutting
    boards and a puzzling $850 (340,000 drams) on matches and gloves.

    The presidential administration, which paid the dram-equivalent of
    roughly $1,700 for 800 rolls of $2-plus toilet paper -- about double
    the price of the most expensive retail variety -- declined to respond
    to a query from EurasiaNet.org about its purchases of shampoo,
    toothbrushes, toothpaste and other personal hygiene items.

    The report also provided some telling consumer comparisons; while the
    National Security Service spent 150 drams (37 cents) per toothbrush,
    the presidential administration favored the 850-dram (about $2.09)
    variety.

    All told, the total amount for fighting personal pollution exceeds
    budget funds allocated for the government's fight against
    environmental pollution (over 125.1 million drams or about $308,297.)

    While that tab may not seem so hefty to Americans who remember reports
    of the Pentagon's own bathroom purchases back in the 1990s ($1,868.15
    per toilet cover; $641 per urinal, according to The Chicago Tribune),
    the revelations have sparked outrage among many Armenians.

    Poverty rates have increased by about eight percent since 2008 to
    stand at about 35 percent of the country's population of 2.97 million
    people.

    `Eight million drams for toilet paper . . . unbelievable,' commented
    65-year-old Yerevan pensioner Rudolf Hakobian. ` While President Serzh
    Sargsyan has called for the government to get tough on corruption, he
    added, `it seems that the situation within the presidential
    administration has much more a need to get under control."

    Yet as often happens in the run-up to a national election, the report
    comes with a background story. CivilNet belongs to the Civilitas
    Foundation, a Yerevan think-tank set up by Prosperous Armenian
    parliamentarian Vartan Oskanian, a former foreign minister who is
    currently on trial for alleged financial wrongdoing.

    Supporters of Oskanian charge that politics motivate the charges
    against him; earlier this year, mention was made of Oskanian as a
    possible candidate for president against President Serzh Sargsyan in
    Armenia's February 2013 elections.
    .
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66305

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