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Kocharian Ally Set To Head Armenian Oversight Body

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  • Kocharian Ally Set To Head Armenian Oversight Body

    KOCHARIAN ALLY SET TO HEAD ARMENIAN OVERSIGHT BODY
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 31 2007

    President Robert Kocharian will ask parliament to elect a leading
    member of the pro-presidential Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) as the
    new head of a state body tasked with overseeing use of public funds,
    it emerged on Wednesday.

    The Audit Chamber has until now operated under the tutelage of
    Armenia's National Assembly and been greatly influenced by its
    speakers. One of the amendments to the Armenian constitution enacted
    in November 2005 declared it fully independent of the legislature.

    The latter can now approve or reject only chamber heads nominated by
    the president of the republic.

    Deputy parliament speaker Ishkhan Zakarian, who is affiliated with the
    BHK, has for months been tipped to take over the body. Zakarian met
    with President Robert Kocharian on Wednesday and told RFE/RL afterwards
    that the head of state will nominate him for the post. He said the
    decision will be formally conveyed to the parliament leadership later
    in the day.

    Zakarian is a figure close to Kocharian and Gagik Tsarukian,
    a millionaire businessman and the founding leader of the BHK. The
    party is represented in the government by three ministers. It also
    controls one of the two posts of deputy parliament speaker.

    The Audit Chamber has repeated criticized in the past the government's
    use of public finances and external loans but lacked the legal
    and administrative muscle to affect government policies. It was
    particularly active from 2003-2005 when the Armenian parliament was
    headed by Artur Baghdasarian, the leader of the now opposition Orinats
    Yerkir Party.

    In particular, the chamber harshly criticized the government's
    privatization policies, implying that they were tainted with
    corruption. It also accused the Justice Ministry of misusing a 1999
    World Bank loan designed to strengthen the Armenian judiciary. The
    government denied those allegations.
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