Transparency International's weekly newsletter and supplement to our Daily Corruption News, 17 November 2017

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Hi there,

Too often, ordinary citizens stand on the front lines against corruption. From facing bribes to access basic services like medical treatment or filing a police complaint, it is always those who are least able to pay who suffer most.

To understand how people around the world experience corruption, we believe it’s important to have data. That’s why since 2003 we have been asking ordinary people if and how they experience corruption in their daily lives.

In last the last two years we’ve surveyed 162,000 citizens from 119 countries and this week we released the results. The Global Corruption Barometer (GCB) it is the largest survey of its kind and gives us valuable insight about what people experience and just how far countries have to go to fight corruption.

This is how we found out, for example, that nearly one in four people paid a bribe when they accessed a public service in the 12 months prior to when the question was asked, and that 57 per cent think their government is doing badly in fighting corruption. 

However, there is good news: more than half the people around the world – and particularly young people – agreed that average citizens could make a difference.

We had further evidence of from our chapter in Italy this week. Andrea Franzoso discovered and spoke out against corruption at the railway company Ferrovie Nord Milano (FNM) where he was employed. He found that former president Norberto Achille was using company funds for personal use. Transparency International Italy brought a civil case against Achille who was eventually sentenced for misappropriation and fraud.

Cases like this show that individual decisions and actions can make a difference. But people won’t speak up if they fear reprisal. That’s why it is important to protect those who stand up against corruption. This week, Italy took an important step in that direction, when parliament passed a law to protect whistleblowers.

Legal victories like this can help encourage other citizens to speak up when they see wrongdoing, and this is just one way ordinary people can stop corruption. Everything helps: from sharing a simple tweet to reporting corruption at work – don’t underestimate the power a single action can have!

 
Whistleblowing in Italy
 

A victory for Transparency International, Civil Society, and whistleblowers in Italy

What would you do if you discovered that the president of the publicly listed company you worked for was using company cash and benefits for his own purposes? Read the full story of Italian whistleblower Andrea Franzoso and the status of whislteblower protection in Itay. 

 

Open letter to the President of Equatorial Guinea: Ramon Esono Ebalé must be released

It has been 62 days since the artist and satirist Ramon Esono Ebalé was detained without charge in Equatorial Guinea. He was arrested when he returned to his country to renew his passport.

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Persecution of anti-corruption activists must stop in Ukraine

Following an escalation of attacks, Transparency International and its chapter in Ukraine are calling on the authorities to protect civil society from the abuse, including physical beatings, that activists are facing.

Honduras Arms Trade
 

How the Honduran military and police profit from the illegal arms trade

An investigation by InSight Crime and Transparency International Honduras has found that many of these guns come from Honduran military and police stockpiles.

 

Corruption in the news this week

Top Stories

Indonesia: Indonesian politician who disappeared in corruption scandal found in hospital
The Guardian (17 November)

The search for Indonesia’s house speaker Setya Novanto, who disappeared after becoming the target of an arrest warrant, came to a dramatic end on Thursday when he was reportedly found unconscious in hospital.

 
USA: Narco-a-Lago: Money laundering at the Trump Ocean Club Panama
Global Witness

The Trump Ocean Club in Panama was Trump’s first international licensing deal and one of his most lucrative. Yet a new report finds that the Trump Ocean Club was used to launder money and that Donald Trump was one of the beneficiaries.

 
USA: Mistrial declared in Menendez bribery trial
CBS News (16 November)

The judge in the bribery trial for Sen. Bob Menendez has declared a mistrial, after jurors were unable to reach a verdict for more than a week.

 
South Korea: Ex-spy chiefs arrested in South Korea on corruption charges
The New York Times (16 November)

Two South Korean spy chiefs who served under Park Geun-hye, the impeached former president, were arrested Friday on charges of illegally channeling tens of thousands of dollars a month from their agency’s secret budgets for Ms. Park’s private use.

 

Blog/Opinion

Global: Political corruption enters a new golden age
The Atlantic (16 November)
 
Global: Why does Vladimir Putin hate me?
CNN (14 November)
 

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