2006年VOA标准英语-Energy Revenues and Corruption Increase in Russ(在线收听) |
By Anna Ardayeva --------- It's been a pretty good year for Russia. As oil prices continue to grow, so do Russia's gold and foreign currency reserves, which are now the 4th largest in the world -- a remarkable recovery after the 1998 ruble crisis. But it's not only Russian money that grew. Experts say corruption also increased dramatically in the last few years and its levels are so high that it hampers economic growth.
Georgi Satarov, head of Moscow's Indem Foundation, has been studying Russian corruption for years. He says he's skeptical about the Russian leader's intention to fight corruption and predicts it will not go beyond public speeches.
Russian traffic police serve as the best example for how widespread corruption is in Russian society. Money will buy you out of virtually any trouble you might face on the road from exceeding a speeding limit to much more serious crimes.
The 31-year-old businessman says bribing on the road comes naturally and doesn't think that anything can -- or should -- change. "I think it’s impossible to change anything aside from assisting law enforcement organs when they try to arrest those who take bribes. If someone from the state services, who you are dealing with is asking you for money, you can go to police and punish this person. The other thing is how then your problem will be solved. Not everyone of us is ready to spend personal time on fighting windmills." Experts agree that in order to root out Russian corruption, the state needs a full-scale anti-corruption policy. But critics say that in a country where all television channels belong to the state, political competition is virtually non-existent and prosecution is selective. Public cynicism is so deep that any steps to fight corruption would be taken as a temporary and useless measure. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/7/33397.html |