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Global Corruption Survey Finds No Improvement In Armenia

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  • Global Corruption Survey Finds No Improvement In Armenia

    GLOBAL CORRUPTION SURVEY FINDS NO IMPROVEMENT IN ARMENIA
    By Anna Saghabalian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Sept 26 2007

    Endemic government corruption in Armenia has not decreased in the
    past year despite Armenian leaders' assurances they are addressing
    the problem in earnest, according to an annual global survey released
    by an international anti-graft watchdog on Wednesday.

    The Berlin-based Transparency International again rated countries
    of the world on a 10-point scale, with zero indicating an extremely
    high degree of corruption as perceived by experts, entrepreneurs and
    ordinary citizens.

    Armenia and five other states ranked 99th out of 180 nations covered
    by Transparency International's 2007 Corruption Perceptions Index. It
    was assigned a score of 3.0, faring slightly worse than it did in
    the previous CPI released one year ago. The score is based on seven
    corruption-related surveys conducted in Armenia by other organizations,
    including the World Bank.

    Armenia was again judged to be less corrupt that most other ex-Soviet
    states, including Russia and Azerbaijan. The latter occupies 150th
    place in the rankings. By contrast, Armenia's other ex-Soviet neighbor,
    Georgia, jumped to 79th place, having seen its CPI score rise from
    2.9 to 3.4.

    Amalia Kostanian, head of Transparency's Armenian affiliate, the
    Center for Regional Development (CRD), said the findings of the
    latest survey are a further indication of a lack of progress in the
    Armenian government's stated anti-corruption efforts. She said those
    efforts have proved ineffectual because of their heavy emphasis on
    legal amendments and what she called a lack of government commitment
    to rule of law.

    Kostanian argued that prosecution of senior government officials on
    corruption charges remain extremely rare. "Risks involved in corrupt
    practices remain very low," she told reporters.

    The government unveiled in late 2003 and claims to have successfully
    implemented a three-year plan of actions aimed at tackling bribery
    and other corrupt practices. However, there is little evidence that
    the set of mainly legislative measures has had a major impact on the
    situation on the ground.

    Earlier this year, Kostanian resigned from a government body
    monitoring the program's implementation in protest against its
    perceived inactivity. The resignation followed the publication of
    a CRD opinion poll which found that nearly two-thirds of Armenians
    believe that corruption has actually increased in recent years.

    In a December 2006 interview with RFE/RL, the late Prime Minister
    Andranik Markarian admitted that his government's anti-corruption
    drive has not been "as effective as we hoped." He said Yerevan will ask
    Western donors to help it draw up a new strategy that will "ascertain
    mechanisms for putting the [anti-graft] legislative framework into
    practice." It is not clear if his successor, Serzh Sarkisian, intends
    to do that.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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