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Traveling Under The Radar

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  • Traveling Under The Radar

    TRAVELING UNDER THE RADAR

    http://asbarez.com/123089/traveling-under-the-radar/
    Thursday, May 15th, 2014

    Armenia's newly-appointed prime minister, Hovik Abrahamian with
    President Serzh Sarkisian

    A proposed bill seeks to classify travels of President, Prime Minister
    and Parliament Speaker

    The next time President Serzh Sarkisian decides to travel to South
    Korea for "rejuvenation" therapy, he can do so without anyone's
    knowledge. Ditto for the Prime Minister if he chooses to engage in
    off-shore investments, as his predecessor was alleged to have been.

    Ditto for the parliament speaker. All this thanks to new proposed
    legislation pending in Armenia Parliament that would classify the
    top leaders' travels as "top secret."

    On Thursday, the parliament debated such a bill that was drafted by
    Armenia's National Security Service and proposed for consideration
    by the legislature. Under Armenian law, information related to state
    officials' travel, whose expenses are covered by the state budget,
    are public and accessible to the media.

    The NSS deputy director Arzuman Harutinunyan presented the bill to
    parliament and said that the current transparency provision of the law
    undermines the security of Armenia's three senior most leaders. Of
    course the ruling Republican Party of Armenia parliament members
    advocated for the bill, among them the newly-minted Parliament Speaker
    Galust Sahakian, who seeks to benefit from the provisions.

    "I've looked up international legislation on such issues and even
    checked the Stalin-era practices," said Naira Zohrabian of the
    Prosperous Armenia Party as quoted by RFE/RL. "Even there I didn't
    see any cases where expenditures of high-ranking state officials were
    carried out secretly."

    Other opposition lawmakers opined that this new bill gives these
    leaders carte blanche to continue their corruption, but in secret.

    Last year, disclosures suggested that the then Prime Minister Tigran
    Sargsyan had spent an excess of $200,000 from the state budget to
    hire private jets and other amenities for his travel.

    So, instead of curbing such expenditures, this "new and improved"
    government is opting to continue its lavish spending, and call it a
    "state secret." So much for the promised change.

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