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Fighting Corruption At The Highest Levels

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  • Fighting Corruption At The Highest Levels

    FIGHTING CORRUPTION AT THE HIGHEST LEVELS
    Maria Titizian

    http://asbarez.com/106718/fighting-corruption-at-the-highest-levels/
    Monday, November 26th, 2012

    When Investigative Journalism Pays Off

    Anyone who lives in Armenia or who follows politics in this country
    understands that impunity is one of the causes of widespread
    disillusionment, distrust in the justice system and the prevailing
    cynicism. These sentiments are grounded in facts and not perceptions
    as some things invariably can be in societies where there is no
    cohesion or solidarity. There have been countless cases where those
    with powerful connections to the ruling regime have been able to
    manipulate the system and escape prosecution squandering all hope
    for the application of the fundamental precept of equality before
    the law for all.

    A case in point was the appointment of Gagik Beglaryan as Minister of
    Transport and Communication, a potentially "lucrative" posting after
    he was forced to resign as mayor of Yerevan for beating up a member
    of President Sargsyan's protocol office. The violence was motivated
    because this official asked Mr. Beglaryan's wife to change her seat
    at a Placido Domingo concert in Yerevan a few years ago.

    This is not breaking news, nor has Mr. Beglaryan misbehaved recently,
    at least not to my knowledge. However, men like Gagik Beglaryan
    (Chorni Gago), Ruben Hayrapetyan (Nemets Rubo), Suren Khatchatryan
    (Liska) and many others with similarly colorful nicknames continue
    to operate, conduct business, maintain relationships and steer clear
    of any recrimination through their very powerful connections and by
    having a plethora of volunteers to act as their fall guys. And those
    who wield no influence, who do not have access to unlimited amounts
    of cash and resources, who are not related to anyone who can provide
    them with protection are the ones upon whom the heavy hand of the
    law comes to rest.

    As long as there is an absence of political will, as long as the
    justice system is not independent, as long as society tolerates this
    kind of behavior, and as long as mainstream media does not report on
    it these men who hold the levers of power are free to act in a manner
    which they feel entitled to. It doesn't have to be so. Recently, events
    unfolding in Brazil have underscored how persistent, professional and
    relentless investigative journalism can bring those whom the justice
    system hasn't been able to touch to answer.

    On November 12, 2012, Jose Dirceu, former chief-of-staff (2003-2005)
    of Brazil's former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (Lula) was
    sentenced to almost 11 years for corruption by the country's Supreme
    Court. He is known to be the mastermind behind Mensalao, a massive
    corruption scheme that diverted public funds to pay legislators in
    the ruling coalition to vote in favor of government initiatives.

    The verdict was significant for Brazil who suffers from a long
    tradition of impunity and absence of freedom of expression and even
    more so because it was handed down seven years after the scandal
    first broke (and which almost cost Lula his re-election in 2006)
    and five years after the Supreme Court decided to hear the case.

    Reporting on the verdict, an article in Al Jazeera stated: "The high
    profile sentences have been seen by many in Brazil as evidence that
    politics is no longer immune from punishment." Reuters reported
    the following: "The corruption trial, which has been running live
    on Brazilian TV for the last two months, could have repercussions
    for future trials involving senior politicians, who have long been
    regarded as untouchable."

    About a month ago, Transparency International and the Instituto Prensa
    y Sociedad (Press and Society Institute, IPYS) gave three Brazilian
    journalists, Andreza Matais, Jose Ernesto Credendio and Catia Seabra
    the annual Latin American Investigative Journalism Award for their
    reporting on the scandal that eventually led to the resignation of
    another chief-of-staff, Antonio Palocci (of current president Dilma
    Roussef). Their investigative journalism in Folha de Sao Paulo began
    with a story about a questionable purchase of a luxury apartment. "As
    they followed leads and pieced evidence together, a complex network
    of illicit activities came into view, much of it centering on a
    consultancy firm in which Palocci was involved."

    According to Global Investigative Journalism Network, none of this
    would have been possible without the tenacious and fearless reporting
    of Brazilian journalists.

    Addressing the Latin American Investigative Journalism Conference in
    Bogota, David Kaplan of the Global Investigative Journalism Network
    said, "If you invest in investigative journalism, you get dividends
    in democracy, transparency and accountability."

    Could exposing real cases of corruption lead to fundamental changes
    in our own country? Perhaps, but it is also true that there have been
    cases where criminal activity among the so-called elites of Armenia
    have been made public with the same disappointing result  - a slap
    on the wrist, a forced resignation coupled with a convenient loss of
    memory and a promise of a better, more influential appointment at a
    later date.

    While the Brazilian experience is encouraging, to expect mainstream
    broadcast media in Armenia (who is only as free as the president's
    office allows it to be) or semi-independent print and web media outfits
    to engage in such investigative journalism where we would see the
    departure of people who abuse their positions of power and influence
    might be premature because of the atmosphere of fear which persists.

    Forcing accountability and "encouraging" the executive branch of
    government to release the chains around the judiciary's neck so that
    it can ensure the equal application of the law will come about when
    we liberate the individual, the reporter, the anchor, the editor,
    the writer, the media mogul from the chains of their own forbearance.

    Investigative journalism, citizen journalism, and social media will
    be effective tools only when we begin to believe that we are free.

    The consequences of that freedom might be threats and intimidation
    which might deter the journalist from reporting on cases of abuse
    and blatant corruption. However, if all those who report the news,
    also support one another, exercise their civic rights, express their
    solidarity with one another, mobilize society to join forces, then
    not even the long arm of our privileged elite can touch them. Yes,
    the Brazilian example is encouraging and we should learn from it by
    applying constant, consistent and unrelenting pressure by reporting,
    elucidating and enlightening fearlessly. The dividends for democracy,
    transparency and accountability will far outweigh the consequences
    for all of us.




    From: A. Papazian
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