Corruption
perceived ©Gal ROMA (AFP)
|
The rise of populist
politicians around the world risks undermining the fight against corruption, an
anti-graft watchdog said Wednesday, warning that it feared a backslide in the
US under new President Donald Trump.
AFP
report continues:
"Populism
is the wrong medicine," Transparency International said as it released its
closely-watched annual Corruption Perceptions Index, which ranks nations
according to their perceived level of public sector corruption.
"In
countries with populist or autocratic leaders, we often see democracies in
decline and a disturbing pattern of attempts to crack down on civil society,
limit press freedom, and weaken the independence of the judiciary," said
TI chair Jose Ugaz.
"Instead
of tackling crony capitalism, those leaders usually install even worse forms of
corrupt systems," he said in a statement.
The
watchdog said that both Hungary and Turkey, "countries that have seen the
rise of autocratic leaders", have slipped in the corruption rankings in
recent years.
Concerns
are also mounting about the United States, where Trump assumed power last week
following a campaign that railed against the political "elite" and
promised to clean up corruption in Washington.
But
Finn Heinrich, a research director at TI, said he was "not hopeful"
the US billionaire would live up to those pledges given his myriad business
conflicts, his attacks on the media and his refusal to release his tax returns.
"When
you see that Donald Trump has put his son-in-law as a senior advisor that smells
off," he told AFP.
"His
whole cabinet is full of conflicts of interest. He said he would drain the
swamp. The first signs show that he would rather water it."
The
United States fell two places to reach the 18th spot in TI's latest index with
a score of 74 out of 100, down from 76 in 2015.
"If
(Trump) keeps his promises to fight corruption, I think the US can improve. But
if you look at his actions so far, what we worry about is that there will be a
decline," Heinrich said.
- Best and worst -
The
Berlin-based group said in its statement that "deep-rooted" reforms
were needed worldwide to tackle the inequality and systemic corruption that
have proved such "fertile ground" for populists.
For
its 2016 index, the watchdog ranked 176 countries on a scale of 0-100, where
zero means very corrupt and 100 signifies very clean.
The
data is based on surveys from the World Bank, the African Development Bank, the
Economist Intelligence unit and other bodies.
New
Zealand and Denmark shared the number one spot with a score of 90 points, with
Finland, Sweden, Switzerland and Norway rounding out the top five of squeaky
clean nations.
Strife-torn
Somalia was the worst offender in the list for a 10th year running, followed by
South Sudan, North Korea and Syria.
Qatar suffered the biggest fall, with a score 10 points lower than last year's, which TI put down to the corruption claims dogging the country's 2022 FIFA World Cup bid.
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