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Page added on November 20, 2009
Author: SEM
Sierra Leone News
The recently published report of the Corruption Perception Index (CPI) published by Transparency International has tipped Nigeria as being among the most corrupt nation in the world filing ranks with three other Sub-Sahara African countries with a score of 2.5, ranking 130 in the world and 27 in the region the reports say.
The position the West African giant finds itself in puts it Nigeria in the category of most corrupt nation as countries that score 3.0 or above are perceived as relatively less corrupt. CPI is a measure of domestic and public sector corruption which has seen the oil rich nation ranking amongst some of the world’s most corrupt nations. The other countries in the same bracket with Nigeria are Mauritania, Mozambique and Uganda.
Botswana ranked 37 in the world and 1st in the region with CPI score of 5.6. It was followed by Mauritius (CPI score:5.4) and Cape Verde (CPI score: 5.1) while Somalia came at the bottom of the rung, ranking 180 in the world and 47 in the region with CPI score of 1.1, followed by Sudan (CPI score:1.5) and Chad (CPI score:1.6).
The report says “of the 47 countries reviewed in the region (the same as in 2008), 31 scored less than 3 (out of 10) indicating that corruption is perceived as rampant, while 13 scored between 3 and 5, indicating that corruption is perceived as a serious challenge by country experts and businessmen.”
The report noted that “as in 2008, only three countries scored more than five: Botswana, Mauritania and Cape Verde.” It further observed that “as in previous years, the CPI results show that corruption has a particularly stark and devastating effect on countries that face ongoing political stability and high levels of poverty.”
The CPI is a composite index, drawing on 13 different experts and business surveys.
Highest scorers in the 2009 CPI are New Zealand at 9.4, Denmark at 9.3, Singapore and Sweden tied at 9.2 and Switzerland at 9.0. These scores reflect political stability, long-established conflict of interest regulations and solid, functioning public institutions.
The report stressed the urgent need on the part of governments to renew their commitment to implement anti-corruption reforms and legislation. “With government efforts to tackle corruption seen as ineffective across the region, it is clear that there must be renewed commitments to implement anti-corruption reforms and legislation and to introduce preventive measures, including education programmes. This will help to restore public trust and contribute to a reduction in the levels of corruption throughout the region.”
On the occasion of the official release of the report, the Chair of Transparency International (TI) Huguette Labelle explained the rational behind the exercise. “At a time when massive stimulus packages, fast-track disbursements of public funds and attempts to secure peace are being implemented around the world, it is essential to identify where corruption blocks good governance and accountability, in order to break its corrosive cycle.”
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One Comment on "Nigeria tagged world’s most corrupt!"
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H.O. on Fri, 20th Nov 2009 12:41 pm
If your headline was in fact true, then Nigeria would have been at the bottom of the CPI list. Yet, there are 50 countries below Nigeria on the CPI list including Sierra Leone.
I think that’s like the pot calling the kettle black!