Transparency International's weekly newsletter and supplement to our Daily Corruption News, 19 May 2017

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Hi there,

Political corruption swirled in the headlines again this week, this time focusing on some of the world's largest democracies.

In the latest upheaval stemming from Brazil's long-running Lava Jato corruption probe, we joined calls for President Michel Temer to consider resigning after a recording emerged that appears to implicate him in condoning bribes to silence a witness – charges Temer has so far emphatically denied.

Read our full statement on Brazil here.

Meanwhile, in the United States former FBI head Robert Mueller was appointed special counsel to explore allegations of collusion between Russian officials and the Trump campaign – an investigation overseen by another ex-FBI head, James Comey, until his sacking by the president last week.

More of this week's corruption stories below...

News from Transparency International

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Germany steps backwards

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Corruption in the news this week

Spain in focus

Spain: Spain’s never-ending corruption problem
Politico (18 May)

Spanish institutions have failed to prevent graft. Its judges are trying to clean up the mess.

 
Spain: Spain urged to deal with systemic corruption by international watchdog
The Olive Press (19 May, TI mention)

Transparency International have slammed Spain for its ‘systemic corruption’.

 

Not really understanding your job

Tajikistan: Bunker found with bags of money, gold and 6 cars belonging to employee of anti-corruption agency in Tajikistan
AKI Press (18 May)
 
Tanzania: Tanzania freezes assets of anti-graft official over suspected corruption
Reuters (18 May)
 

Other news

China: China’s new anti-corruption body raises worrying questions about the rule of law
The Conversation (17 May)
 
Cyprus: New life in Limassol: If you can’t launder Russian money, then launder the Russian
Bloomberg (15 May)
 
Morocco: Thousands of Moroccans rally against corruption
Reuters (15 May)
 
Nigeria: Boko Haram is growing stronger in Nigeria thanks to corruption in the military
Newsweek (19 May, TI mention)
 

Blogs and opinion

Brazil: Brazil’s corruption scandals may be the best thing to happen to Latin America
Miami Herald (19 May)
 

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