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Serzh Sargsyan Needs Forceful Guarantees

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  • Serzh Sargsyan Needs Forceful Guarantees

    SERZH SARGSYAN NEEDS FORCEFUL GUARANTEES
    Naira Hayrumyan

    http://www.lragir.am/index.php/eng/0/comments/view/28093
    Comments - Monday, 19 November 2012, 11:55

    Armenia has improvement regarding the investment climate by 74 points,
    reaching the 25th position from the 98th in the Doing Business report.

    It seemed that a wave of investments, a boom of foreign capital should
    have followed this report but nothing happened. The reason is that
    nothing has changed but on paper. The government does nothing for
    investors to feel safe. On the contrary, the authorities demonstrate
    readiness to defend officials.

    A lawsuit that would punish officials for fraud against investors
    could be a good message to foreign investors while nothing similar
    seems likely to happen. And the example would be Edmond Khudyan's
    case which publicly calls the names of officials involved in corrupt
    fraudulent schemes, and prosecutors again pretend to be deaf.

    The Prosecutor's office shows signs of life only when the president
    "wakes it up" and makes it collect data against Vartan Oskanian. The
    U.S. ambassador has already called this "selective justice".

    Otherwise, it could be called lack of justice.

    The court defends the interests of official harming investors, hence
    depriving the country of important investments which could not only
    enhance but also develop the culture of the Armenian economy.

    Actually, the court is becoming the main criminal hindering the
    economic and political development of Armenia.

    The court is just something adjunct to the government intended to
    defend its interest. It is clear that if the court rules in favor
    of an investor once, the entire system will collapse. The system is
    based on mutual responsibility: each supports the ones standing next
    to them, not letting them fall.

    The U.S. ambassador John Heffern has stated more than once that he is
    trying to attract investments to Armenia. But the potential investors
    ask him three questions about the judicial, tax and customs fees and
    competition issues. "I can't answer these questions yet," says the
    ambassador, urging the authorities to display political will.

    Anyway, he understands that any expression of "political" will is
    likely to be the end of the current government. Perhaps, Armenia's
    president needs serious guarantees that he won't be left under the
    ruins of the system, which will collapse if the investors win in the
    fight investors v. officials. Who will give him guarantees? The fact
    that no investment has come to Armenia despite progress in the Doing
    Business report means that there will be no guarantees. Investments
    will wait for the collapse of the system. Then Serzh Sargsyan will
    surely be left under the ruins.

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