Somalia, Myanmar, Iraq top corruption blacklist
2 hours ago

LONDON (AFP) - Sleaze is hobbling the recovery of war-ravaged countries like 
Iraq and Somalia, which joined Myanmar among states perceived as the world's 
most corrupt, an anti-graft watchdog reported Wednesday.

Berlin-based Transparency International (TI) said in its annual Corruption 
Perceptions Index covering 180 countries that some of the world's poorest 
nations were seen as having the most dishonest political and business elites.

But the group said that even countries believed to be the least corrupt -- 
named this year as Denmark, Finland and New Zealand -- needed to do more to 
combat corporate graft.

"It is not just a problem of the poor countries, rich and poor nations share 
heavy responsibility, said Huguette Labelle, chairwoman of the respected 
organisation. 

"The top scorers, the wealthy countries, are often complacent .. bribe money 
often originates in the top scorers, the wealthy countries," she told a press 
conference in London.

The index score relates to perceptions of the degree of corruption as seen by 
business people and country analysts. It ranges between zero, which is highly 
corrupt, and 10, which is very clean.

On the 2006 list, the worst levels of perceived corruption were in Haiti, 
Myanmar, Iraq and Guinea.

TI has frequently noted that because the index is based on subjective 
assessments, the fact that Iraq had such a low rating may be linked to the 
bigger international profile of the country since the US-led invasion in 2003 
and the huge influx of reconstruction funds.

It continued to find a strong link between poverty and graft with 40 percent of 
the countries scoring below three this year -- indicating that corruption is 
considered to be rampant -- classified by the World Bank as low-income states.

Myanmar, whose military rulers are currently facing the largest anti-government 
protests in 20 years, was tied with Somalia at the bottom of the list with a 
meagre 1.4 rating, while Denmark improved its showing to join "perennial 
high-flyers" Finland and New Zealand with the top score of 9.4.

Wealthy democracies rounded out the top 10 on TI's list -- Singapore and Sweden 
(9.3), Iceland (9.2), the Netherlands and Switzerland (9.0) and Canada and 
Norway (8.7).

It noted significant improvement among African countries such as Namibia, South 
Africa and Swaziland, which the organisation said highlighted that political 
will and reform can root out sleaze.

Eastern European states including Croatia, the Czech Republic, Macedonia, and 
Romania also bettered their showing, which TI attributed to the "galvanising 
effect of the European Union accession process".

But strife-wracked states such as Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia and Sudan remained 
stuck at the bottom of the index.

"Countries torn apart by conflict pay a huge toll in their capacity to govern," 
Labelle said.

"With public institutions crippled or non-existent, mercenary individuals help 
themselves to public resources and corruption thrives."

TI said top-scoring countries had an obligation to support more accountability 
and "institutional integrity" in countries with the highest levels of 
public-sector corruption.

"Bribe money often stems from multinationals based in the world's richest 
countries," the report said.

"It can no longer be acceptable for these companies to regard bribery in export 
markets as a legitimate business strategy."

It added that offshore financial centres, often located in the most developed 
countries, allowed corrupt officials to hide their ill-gotten wealth.

TI said that such states must help the asset tracing and recovery process while 
multinational companies introduce and implement anti-bribe codes.

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