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Moscow Times
May 20, 2008
Medvedev To Head Council On Graft
By Anatoly Medetsky / Staff Writer
In one of his first major steps as president, Dmitry Medvedev on Monday said
he would head a council to battle corruption, which he singled out as one of the
country's worst woes.
Corruption experts praised Medvedev's willingness to assume personal
responsibility, saying it showed that he was serious about this latest effort to
clean up what one called a "national shame."
"Something needs to be done," Medvedev said at a Kremlin meeting in televised
comments. "Enough of waiting."
Medvedev gave a group of senior Kremlin, government and law enforcement
officials at the meeting a month to draw up a "national plan" to reduce graft,
said Prosecutor General Yury Chaika, one of the participants. The plan could
introduce tougher punishment for this offense, he said.
Current penalties for taking a bribe range from a fine to 12 years in prison.
In addition to Medvedev's council, the Kremlin's chief of staff, Sergei
Naryshkin, said he would head up a new working group that will coordinate
government agencies in the anti-corruption effort.
Frank Schauff, chief executive of the Association of European Businesses in
Russia, said it was "pretty practical" to have the council as a political body
and let the working group do the actual job.
Medvedev will add weight to the effort by heading the council, Schauff said.
"I think it's a good sign that it's going to be taken seriously," he said.
Boris Titov, chairman of Delovaya Rossia, a lobby group for small- and
medium-sized businesses, agreed that Medvedev's show of personal responsibility
was remarkable. "It shows that the work is important and is doable," he said.
Then-President Vladimir Putin set up a council to combat corruption in late
2003 but stayed away from direct involvement in its work. The group met just
once and yielded little, experts said. It was disbanded early last year.
Instead, Putin ordered then-Kremlin aide Viktor Ivanov to put together
legislation to improve the situation. A bill that would place officials'
finances under more control was scheduled to be ready last fall. Medvedev said
Monday, however, that the bill required more work.
At the Kremlin meeting, Medvedev listed approaches to fighting corruption
that included passing more bills to fill the legal gaps in the area and creating
more transparency in government spending.
Courts should become more independent, but citizens should have a chance to
appeal decisions by officials outside of the courtroom, Medvedev said. Those
taking bribes should face the risk of destroying their careers, he said.
Those at the Kremlin meeting included Federal Security Service director
Alexander Bortnikov, Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev, chairman of the
Supreme Arbitration Court Anton Ivanov and Economic Development Minister Elvira
Nabiullina. Another participant was Dmitry Afanasyev, a managing partner of law
firm Yegorov, Puginsky, Afanasyev and Partners. His firm is a frequent
government adviser on legal issues and he is a member of Delovaya Rossia's
governing council, Titov said.
In one of the previous attempts to combat corruption in the judiciary, Anton
Ivanov, a key Medvedev ally, submitted a bill to the State Duma in late 2006
that would require judges to report their incomes, cars, apartments and other
property annually to the courts they serve. The bill did not make it through the
Duma, however.
Such efforts could be more successful under Medvedev as president, said
Vladimir Yuzhakov, an expert at the Center for Strategic Research, a think tank.
He also called for a speedy passage of the Viktor Ivanov-sponsored bill. If
enacted, the legislation would allow control not only over officials' incomes
but also over their expenses and would extend that oversight to members of their
families, he said.
The government should also regulate the activity of heads of state
corporations that have sprung up recently to boost the development of
capital-intensive industries, such as shipbuilding and airplane manufacturing,
Yuzhakov said. These directors are not public officials, but they receive state
funding to use at their discretion, he noted.
Titov said businesses needed a law on lobbying that brought interaction
between them and lawmakers out from under the table. The government should raise
officials' salaries and assure them of decent retirement terms so they lose an
incentive to seek bribes, he said.
Law enforcement agencies should create departments for fighting corruption,
he said.
Russia's low scores in world corruption rankings shows that it is in deep
trouble, said Yelena Panfilova, director of the Russian chapter of global
anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International. Last year, Russia scored
just 2.3 out of 10 in an annual TI Corruption Perception Index, where 10 is the
highest transparency ranking and 0 is the most corrupt.
"Anything under three is a national shame," she said. "It means … the
situation has gotten totally out of hand."
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