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Chinese mainland less corrupt: Report
Beijing(China)—The Chinese
mainland is perceived to be less corrupt than in 2005 — climbing to 70
of 163 countries from the previous year’s 78, Berlin-based
nongovernmental graft watchdog Transparency International (TI) said in a
report for this year released on Wednesday.
Haiti, Myanmar and Iraq are perceived as the most corrupt countries in
the world while Finland, Iceland and New Zealand are seen as the
cleanest. In Asia, Singapore was ranked No. 5, Hong Kong No. 15, Japan
No. 17, Macao No. 26 and South Korea No. 42. Taiwan’s ranking declined
from last year’s 32nd to this year’s 34th, but the result is in line
with the public’s perceptions about corruption, especially since there
have been so many corruption scandals, including last week’s indictment
of Taiwan leader Chen Shui-bian’s wife Wu Shu-jen.
Among other nations, Australia is at nine, Britain at 11 and Russia at
121. TI noted that while industrialized nations scored high on this
year’s index, corruption scandals continued to rock many of them. A
significant worsening in perceived levels of corruption was seen in
Brazil, Cuba, Israel, Jordan, Laos, Seychelles, Trinidad and Tobago,
Tunisia and the United States, which dropped to 20th place from 17th
last year.
Algeria, Czech Republic, India, Japan, Latvia, Lebanon, Mauritius,
Paraguay, Slovenia, Turkey, Turkmenistan and Uruguay showed a marked
drop in graft, TI said. The index score relates to perceptions of the
degree of corruption as seen by businesspeople and country analysts and
ranges between zero, which is highly corrupt, and 10, which is very
clean.
TI said that corruption was shockingly rampant worldwide with almost
three-quarters of the countries in the report scoring below five,
including all low-income countries and all but two African states. The
Transparency International is an organization devoted to combatting
corruption by bringing civil society, business and governments together.
On last year’s list, the worst levels in perceived corruption were in
Chad, Bangladesh and Turkmenistan.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |