Corruption ;Nigeria Improves in TI Ranking
Nigeria
moved to 144th from 148th in Transparency International latest corruption
perception index worldwide, that also saw the United States dropping four
notches out of the top 20 countries in the world.
However,
Nigeria made the four notch jump without improving its score of 27 out of a
possible 100 as recorded in 2017.
Africa’s
most populous country is tied with Kenya, Comoros, Guatemala and Mauritania.
And it is ranked better than Cameroon put at 152nd.
Botswana
remains Africa’s most transparent country with a ranking of 34, followed by
Namibia, Mauritius and Senegal.
The United
States slid to 22nd in the world from 18th last year, dropping out of the top
20 countries for the first time since 2011, Transparency International said in
a report that cited growing threats to democracy worldwide.
The group
said its latest report on business leaders’ perceptions of corruption put the
United States at 71, down from 75, on a scale of 0-100.
That sounds
a “wake-up call” about the need to tackle conflicts of interest, undue
influence of the private sector and widening gaps between rich and poor, said
Zoe Reiter, the watchdog’s acting representative to the United States.
“This is a
red flag because it’s really part of a pattern that we’ve seen since the 2008
global financial crisis of a loss of trust … in our public institutions,” she
told Reuters. “People don’t see us as having adequate mechanisms in place to
fight corruption and ensure the accountability of our elected officials.”
Concerns
were already mounting before the election of Donald Trump, although they have
been highlighted by the actions of a rich president who defied precedent to
keep his personal tax affairs secret and retain his business holdings in
office.
“Concerns
around the Trump administration are quite serious, but this has been stewing
for several years,” she said. “Conflict of interest wasn’t a new problem, but
it was illuminated in its glory when you have someone who is basically breaking
norms.”
“Trump is a
symptom not a cause. His presidency is illuminating some of the problems.”
Denmark and
New Zealand had the best scores on the Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) again
in 2018, scoring 88 and 87, while Somalia, Syria and South Sudan remained at
the bottom, with scores of 10, 13 and 13, TI said.
Overall,
more than two-thirds of countries scored below 50 on the 2018 index, and the
average was 43, said TI, which has more than 100 chapters worldwide.
The group
said only 20 countries had significantly improved their scores since 2012,
including Argentina and Ivory Coast.
Sixteen
others, including Australia, Chile and Malta, declined significantly in the
same period.
The average
score for EU and western European countries held steady at 66, while
sub-Saharan Africa scored just 32, TI said. A score of 100 is considered “very
clean”, while a score of zero is highly corrupt.
TI said its
analysis showed a clear link between having a healthy democracy and fighting
public sector corruption, and cited declining scores for Turkey and Hungary, in
connection with challenges to the rule of law and press freedoms.
Hungary’s
score dropped by eight points to 46 over the past five years, amid troubling
developments including the forced departure of the Open Society Foundation and
Central European University, founded by philanthropist George Soros, TI said.
Turkey’s
score dropped by nine points in the same period to a score of 41, as the
country was downgraded to ‘not free’ on a democracy ranking, TI said.
“Corruption
is much more likely to flourish where democratic foundations are weak and …
where undemocratic and populist politicians can use it to their advantage,”
said Delia Ferreira Rubio, who chairs the global civil society group.
FROM pmnewsnigeria.com
No comments