Transparency International's weekly newsletter and supplement to our Daily Corruption News, 15 December 2017

No Images? Click here
 
  Transparency International logo  
 
 

Hi there,

How much corruption is there in your country? Is it getting worse? Is the government the most corrupt institution, or is it the people you see in your daily life like the police?

In the USA, the majority of citizens feel that corruption has risen in the past year, with nearly six in ten saying corruption has got worse. Americans surveyed this October and November revealed the distrust they feel for their government and key institutions of power.
The results of the survey show:

• 44 per cent of Americans believe that corruption is pervasive in the White House, up from 36 per cent in 2016.
• Almost 7 out of 10 people believe the government is failing to fight corruption, up from half in 2016.
• Close to a third of African-Americans surveyed see the police as highly corrupt, compared to a fifth across the survey overall.

Disturbingly, 55 per cent of people gave fear of retaliation as the main reason people don't report corruption. But 74 per cent do believe that ordinary people can make a difference.

Ordinary people are beating corruption around the world, from a Czech civil servant stopping €2 billion from disappearing into the hands of corrupt politicians and executives, to a Pakistani husband and wife protecting their land from a land-grabbing politician.

If you would like to make a difference, Transparency International is here to work with you to fight corruption together.

 

News from Transparency International

banner2
 

Corruption in the USA: the difference a year makes

A new survey by Transparency International, the US Corruption Barometer 2017, compares 2017 with 2016. It shows that the US government and some key institutions of power still have a long way to go to win back citizens’ trust.

 

Stopping dirty money: the global Effective-O-Meter

Since 2014, a global anti-money laundering body called the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) has been assessing whether countries’ measures to stop dirty money are actually working in practice. As of December 2017, global effectiveness at stopping money laundering stands at 32%.

banner2
 
banner2
 
 

Corruption in the news this week

Latest News

Israel: Netanyahu grilled by police for seventh time in graft probe
The Times of Israel (15 December)
 
Peru: I'm not running': Peru's president Kucyznski refuses to resign over corruption allegations
France 24 (15 December)
 
Russia: Alexei Ulyukayev: Putin's former economy minister found guilty of corruption
The Independent (15 December)
 
South Africa: Nelson Mandela’s family voice dismay at funeral corruption claims
The Guardian (14 December)
 
Global: Ukraine's finance minister says anti-corruption court should satisfy IMF
France 24 (14 December)
 
Global: South Africa whistleblower aids HSBC money laundering investigation
The Telegraph (13 December)
 
Romania: Romania's lower house approves controversial courts bill
Voice of America (11 December)
 

Help put an end to corruption. Support our work.

 
Forward this message to a friend, or follow us on social media to keep up to date!
Join us on Facebook   Join us on Twitter   See us on Instagram   Connect on LinkedIn
Transparency International Secretariat • Alt-Moabit 96 • 10559 Berlin • Germany  |  Impressum
Email preferences  |  Unsubscribe