BISHKEK (TCA) — The Government of Kyrgyzstan will open a special account for funds coming from the fight against corruption. According to the Government Decree, signed by Kyrgyz Prime Minister Muhammedkaly Abylgaziev on June 22, the account in the treasury system will be distributed exclusively over decisions of the Government. The second account will be open to citizens wishing to help the state to pay off its debts. Such a proposal came from the Parliament deputies. Special account "The Government intends to open a special account, where funds will come from those who want to help the State," the Prime Minister said at the Parliament meeting during the discussion of the Government's report for 2017 on June 14. Kyrgyzstan began to take loans from 1992, the second year of its independence. By March 31, 2018, the state's external public debt reached $3.9 billion, of which $1.7 billion is the debt to China. At the end of 2017, the state foreign debt was $4.1 billion, or 53.9% of GDP. The proposal of the head of the Cabinet caused heated discussions not only among experts and the media, but also in the general public. The first and the only person to respond to the Government's appeal was MP Kamchybek Joldoshbayev, who is ready to donate one million soms. However, the general public did not support the Government’s initiative. Kyrgyzstan’s citizens regularly pay taxes and have the right to expect that the State will rationally dispose of them. Asking for charity from people "The State is not a kind of abstract dependent which citizens keep at their own expense for the kindness of their soul. The State, including its management institutions, is the manager to whom citizens gave the most common functional levers for regulating economic activity to obtain in return for their security, order and the most efficient distribution of economic and social benefits," the Beli Parus newspaper writes. The state top managers are pathetic about calling for help to the citizens of the country, telling about great foreign debt and little money available, and malicious corrupt officials who had robbed the budget for billions of soms. But ordinary people cannot understand their relation to the state debts and stolen budget money. If the state made ill-considered strategic decisions, it was not clear where budgetary funds were spent, and taxpayers are unlikely to make voluntary donations. Asking for voluntarily help from the people, Prime Minister Abylgaziev understates the authority of the country at the international level, the Fabula Press newspaper reported. “Which states or international financial institutions will trust the state which asks for charity from its people? Abylgaziev begs from his people instead of feeding them." Mired in corruption Former judge of the Constitutional Chamber of Kyrgyzstan, Clara Sooronkulova, believes that such a proposal indicates the weakness and helplessness of the State. Who will give money to the State which is mired in corruption? If such a charitable foundation were created in another situation, perhaps people donated their money to help...