Refleksi :Tuan-tuan jago anti korupsi dan  BPS di NKRI.  Berapa banyak koruptor 
 ditahan dan dikukum di NKRI tiap tahun  selama ini di bawah kekuasaan rezim 
Raja Bohong? Lebih sedikit atau lebih banyak, menurun atau naik angkanya? 

http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=Mjk4ODE0MTM4

Graft finances terrorism: Iraq
Published Date: February 10, 2011 

BAGHDAD: Instead of fighting graft Iraq's ministers prefer to hide departmental 
corruption, contributing to a major source of insurgent financing, the 
country's top anti-fraud official said yesterday. Iraq is rated by watchdog 
Transparency International as the fourth most corrupt country in the world, 
with diplomats and local officials persistently citing widespread graft as a 
major impediment to the country's development. "Once they step into their 
positions, they see their ministry as a family concern and prevent others from 
coming in or fighting against corruption," said Rahim Hassan Al-Uqailee, head 
of Iraq's Commission on Integrity (COI). "They seek to protect their team," he 
told AFP in an interview.

Uqailee said 4,082 arrest warrants were issued in 2010 against officials 
suspected of corruption, compared to 3,791 the year before. He said 197 were 
for top mandarins or ministerial-level officials, compared to 152 the previous 
year. Last year, 2,844 suspects were referred to court for 2,322 cases of 
corruption, amounting to a total $1.3 billion in diverted public funds, he 
added. Warrants against defense ministry officials accounted for the biggest 
chunk of the total, with 13.4 percent of the overall figure, followed by the 
interior ministry in second place at 7.3 percent. Municipality and public works 
was third with 6.2 percent.

In the most high-profile such arrest warrant issued in recent years, Iraq's 
ex-trade minister Abdel Falah al-Sudani was dramatically detained in May 2009 
after his plane was ordered back to Baghdad as he tried to flee the country. 
"We are in constant conflict with them (ministers) but we manage to impose the 
law. The COI is feared by all, including senior officials and even ministers," 
said Uqailee, who has headed the commission since January 2008. "Prime Minister 
Nuri Al-Maliki is trying to fight corruption and has made efforts in this 
direction, but he cannot do everything by himself," the 44-year-old former 
judge added.

I believe the ministers do not fight against corruption seriously, and 
sometimes even think it is better to cover it." The number of civil servants 
imprisoned for corruption grew from 94 in 2006 to 148 and 417 the next two 
years, and 1,719 in 2009. Last year's number was 1,619. "The increase in the 
number of arrest warrants, indictments and convictions doesn't mean there is 
more corruption, it means we are more efficient," said Uqailee, adding he 
regularly receives death threats, like many of the 1,650 employees working 
under him.

According to monthly surveys conducted by the COI, the government ministry seen 
by Iraqis as the most corrupt for nine out of the past 12 months is the justice 
ministry, while residents of the holy Shiite province of Najaf saw their 
province as the most corrupt for eight months in 2010. For the judge, who is 
appointed by the prime minister but can only be dismissed by vote supported by 
a majority of parliamentarians, the biggest danger from corruption comes from 
its link to terrorism.

There is no real political will to fight against this scourge, and yet 
corruption is one of the most important avenues that fund terrorism and 
terrorist operations," he said. Public funds often end up in the hands of 
terrorist groups through civil servants sympathetic to their cause, Iraqi 
officials say. In the past, some convicted corrupt officials-even at senior 
level-have been accused of links with insurgents and militias. Uqailee said 
that his team could fight corruption more effectively if it was better equipped 
with access to information, a protection program for witnesses, and laws 
controlling political party and campaign financing.

If parliament could adopt them, we could end corruption in four years," he 
declared. "But I am pessimistic, because I do not think this is possible in the 
legislature because of political conflicts in the country." Questioned about 
last month's Supreme Court ruling that changed oversight of several independent 
institutions, including the COI, from parliament to the cabinet, Uqailee said 
he disagreed with the decision. "I totally disagree from a legal point of view 
about this decision, but I respect it because it was taken by a specialized 
institution," he said.- AFP

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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