在线英语听力室

VOA标准英语2008年-Russian President says Anti-Corruption Drive Ca

时间:2008-07-25 06:13:26

搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。

(单词翻译)

Russian President Dmitri Medvedev is calling for legislation by the end of this year to fight corruption2. But as VOA Moscow Correspondent Peter Fedynsky reports, the Russian leader expects corruption of the anti-corruption effort.
 
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev prepares for his address at the Federation3 Council, parliament upper chamber4, in Moscow, 2 July 2008

Speaking in Russia's parliament, President Medvedev said it is painful to say corruption is a way of life for a huge number of people in his country. The Russian leader says corruption is such a normal part of daily life that bribe5 takers do not feel any risk.

Mr. Medvedev says people confronted with such crime are reconciled to it. He says it is easier to simply pay up than to create problems by turning to law enforcement or the judicial6 system.

The Russian leader presented draft legislation he wants adopted by the end of 2008. He says the country should enter the new year with a modern set of anti-corruption laws that Russians will not be ashamed of. But he acknowledged that corruption could emerge from the struggle against it.

He says anything can be used to make a lot of money, included the anti-corruption fight, but the Russian leader says that does not mean people should just throw up their hands and do nothing.

Dmitri Medvedev's predecessors7, presidents Boris Yeltsin and Vladimir Putin, also waged public campaigns for honest government.

The chairman of Moscow's Eurasia Foundation, Andrei Kortunov, says discussion of reforms includes removing incentives8 for corruption, such as higher salaries and better career advancement9 for bureaucrats11.

He says the absence of free media to expose dishonesty and the practice of appointing, rather than electing, governors also stand in the way of clean government. Kortunov says other obstacles include complicated and opaque12 regulations a corrupt1 bureaucrat10 may interpret to his advantage.

Kortunov says if everything is well written, procedures are simple and clear, and little depends on a given bureaucrat, then there are fewer possibilities for corruption.

But columnist13 Alexander Minkin of the Moskovskiy Komsomolets newspaper is skeptical14 about the success of Mr. Medvedev's campaign. He says many of the people the president needs to enlist15 in the struggle - governors, generals and ministers - have used tainted16 money to buy lavish17 homes in Russia and abroad.

Minkin traces corruption to moral decay in Russian society.

He says only a moral person can fight corruption, adding that it is very difficult to struggle against the phenomenon with money, because it is impossible to pay somebody enough. Minkin notes that a bureaucrat's salary can never be higher than the amount he can get from bribery18.

Recent estimates on the amount of bribes19 paid in Russia puts the figure between $33 billion and $120 billion each year. Transparency International, an international non-governmental organization, ranks Russia as one of the most corrupt nations. Russia holds 143rd place out of 179 nations on the list beside Gambia, Indonesia and Togo.

 


分享到:

Error Warning!

出错了

Error page: /mobile/index.php?aid=59654&mid=3
Error infos: Got error 28 from storage engine
Error sql: select `l`.`tag`,`l`.`index`,`l`.`level_id`,`b`.`id`,`b`.`word`,`b`.`spell`,`b`.`explain`,`b`.`sentence`,`b`.`src` from `new_wordtaglist` `l` left join `new_word_base` `b` on `l`.`tag`=`b`.`word` where `l`.`arc_id`='59654' and `l`.`level_id`>='' group by `b`.`word` order by `l`.`index` asc

本文本内容来源于互联网抓取和网友提交,仅供参考,部分栏目没有内容,如果您有更合适的内容,欢迎 点击提交 分享给大家。