Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Systemic Corruption Still Prevalent In Armenia. Ranked 129 In New Co

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

  • Systemic Corruption Still Prevalent In Armenia. Ranked 129 In New Co

    SYSTEMIC CORRUPTION STILL PREVALENT IN ARMENIA. RANKED 129 IN NEW CORRUPTION INDEX

    epress.am
    12.01.2011

    Armenia was ranked 129th among a list of 183 countries in this
    year's Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), published by Transparency
    International Anti-Corruption Center and launched in Yerevan today.

    Though it had a different ranking last year, Armenia's actual score
    remains unchanged from last year. At a score of 2.6, it shares
    the 129-133 spots in the CPI 2011 ranking along with the Dominican
    Republic, Honduras, the Philippines and Syria.

    Armenia has been included in this list continuously since 2003. In
    order for countries to be included in the list, there must be at
    least three sources available, which is why not all countries in
    the world are included in the list, said Transparency International
    Anti-Corruption Center Executive Director Varuzhan Hoktanyan.

    "It's not possible to measure corruption - based on the extent of
    disclosure. This refers to absolutely all countries. In our case,
    there's an international obligation that Armenia also invests this
    activity, and we have to do everything to appear perceptible to the
    international community.

    "The 129th place as compared to last year's 123-126th places is the
    lowest ranking for Armenia since 2003. A country's ranking in this
    list is very important since this is likewise taken into account,
    and for Armenia this is a very low indicator. In 2007-2010, a slow,
    monotonous decrease was observed; however, this year [Armenia] is in
    a relatively stable condition," he said.

    As for the spread of corruption during elections, according to
    Hoktanyan, "The fight against corruption for us begins with clean
    elections."

    "If clean elections are not held in Armenia, we will have systemic
    corruption, and we will observe the flourishing of different ways of
    using administrative resources. As a consequence of this, the state
    becomes a tool - for furthering the narrow economic interests of
    different financial groups," he said.

    Among former Soviet republics, according to CPI 2011, the most
    corrupt is Russia (143rd place), Belarus (143) and Ukraine (152). From
    Armenia's neighboring countries, Azerbaijan ranks at 143, while Turkey
    and Georgia are ranked 61st and 64th places, respectively.

    This year's report noted that systemic corruption exists in nearly
    all former Soviet republics:

    "20 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, except Baltic
    republics (singling out Estonia with its score (6.4) being the highest
    not only among the former Soviet republics (FSR), but also among all
    former Communist countries) and Georgia in recent years, all FSRs,
    including Armenia, are countries with systemic corruption. It comes to
    prove that massive systemic economic and political changes in 1990s
    unfortunately were not accompanied with corresponding institutional
    reforms," reads the report summary.

    The CPI, released annually since 1995, looks at public sector
    corruption based on expert assessments and opinion surveys. The 2011
    CPI ranked 183 countries and territories from 0 (highly corrupt) to 10
    (very clean) based on perceived levels of public sector corruption. It
    used data from 17 surveys that looked at factors such as enforcement of
    anti-corruption laws, access to information and conflicts of interest.

Working...
X