My blog: feel free to steal this button!

Social Bookmarking Services


Archives

Featured

Past Blogs
Current Blog


My RSS 2.0 Newsfeed

My RSS 2.0 Newsfeed


YouTube

Twitter

Threads

Facebook

Instagram

LinkedIn

Tumblr

Reddit

TikTok


The Agenda with Steve Paikin

The Huffington Post

SoundCloud


Oxford University alumni

St Edmund Hall, Oxford alumni

United Nations University alumni


The Royal Society of Arts

The Royal Asiatic Society

The Royal Canadian Geographical Society


UNICEF Team Canada

Governor General's Horse Guards Cavalry Squadron

MGB Roadsters


United Nations Children's Fund

Amnesty International Canada


Creative Commons

PGP Public Key

Friend of a Friend Protocol


 

Political Corruption is a Crime Against Hope
05 December 2012, 11h31 EST (GMT-5)
https://www.maharaj.org/blog/2012_12_05.shtml

Globe and Mail newspaper

The Globe and Mail
Click the logo for the original newspaper web page

I wrote the article below while participating in the International Anti-Corruption Conference in Brasilia, in my capacity as member of the Global Organization of Parliamentarians Against Corruption delegation.

* * *

During our ten-hour flight, my seatmate told me that he was travelling to Brasilia on a pilgrimage to meet the faith healer “John of God”, hoping for a cure for his daughter’s Parkinson’s disease. I replied that I was travelling to address the International AntiCorruption Conference, hoping to build a consensus amongst parliamentarians and NGOs to use international law to fight political corruption.

My seatmate looked at me with an air of sympathy and scepticism. To him, I was obviously the one chasing a miracle.

We live in an age of dire cynicism about corruption in politics. Nearly three-quarters of Canadians surveyed for Transparency International’s Global Corruption Barometer judged their government’s efforts against corruption to be “ineffective”. By this measure, Canadians have a lower opinion of their own government’s commitment to public integrity than do Pakistanis, Iraqis, and Nigerians.

Since then, ongoing revelations by Quebec’s Charbonneau Commission of an orgy of bribery, influence peddling, and organised crime in the corridors of power have done little to improve the standing of Canada’s governing class.

Globally, the consequences of political corruption almost defy understanding.

The World Bank estimates that more than $1 trillion are paid in bribes every year, the largest of which are to obtain state contracts and monopolies. The UN Office on Drugs and Crime estimates that multinational criminality moves $2.1 trillion per year across borders, enabled by the active collusion or passive inattention of regulators. The Tax Justice Network estimates that governments lose $3.1 trillion per year because of tax evasion, disproportionately by those with the resources to sway policy makers or public servants.

By comparison, meeting the much-vaunted Millennium Development Goals – eradicating extreme hunger and poverty, establishing universal primary education, reducing child mortality by twothirds, reducing maternal mortality by three-quarters, halting the spread of HIV and malaria, halving the proportion of people without access to clean water and sanitation, and promoting gender equality in schools and the workforce – would cost no more than $481billion in development.

What the world loses to corruption in a single year would be enough to end the worst forms of human misery and transform human civilisation, at least a dozen times over.

Political corruption robs citizens of our own resources, our fundamental rights, and our very identities as members of a free and equal society. It makes the weak prey to the strong, and delivers control of society into the hands of the unjust. It debilitates the nation, undermines the rule of law, and rots public confidence in democracy. It is a crime against hope itself.

Corruption takes many forms: the theft of public resources; the sale of political influence; the betrayal of the public trust. In all cases, however, corruption thrives when political power is able to operate in the shadows, and it withers before the glare of public scrutiny.

The solution to corruption is therefore extraordinarily simple to describe, though fiendishly difficult to achieve: a vigilant, relentless, and fearless community of citizens and parliamentarians, standing together between our leaders and the levers of power.

Parliamentarians are the watchdogs of democracy, and it is tragic that so many citizens of so many nations perceive our watchdogs as having muted their bark, muzzled their bite, and been neutered by the very powers they were meant to hold at bay. It is a perception that is too often justified, but it is a perception that is just as often desperately unfair.

There are parliamentarians around the world who risk their lives every day to speak for those who would otherwise have no voice. There are parliamentarians who tilt at the powerful for no better reason than to shield others. There are still parliamentarians who understand that election to office is not a licence to rule, but a contract to serve.

Civic organisations, parliamentarians, and global institutions have come together this week in Brasilia at the International Anti-Corruption Conference, in an effort to join forces in the fight against corruption. It is the single largest anti-corruption gathering in history.

We have seen a parade of noble laureates and village volunteers. We have wrestled with strategies that tell of vision and of folly. We have heard cries of optimism and howls of impotent rage.

But ultimately, this gathering will succeed only if it ends by inspiring cynical citizens to believe that the political process can be part of the solution, not only part of the problem; by stirring courage in timorous legislators to stare down those who know no restraint; and by convincing both groups that together, we can achieve the victory over corruption that none of us can reach alone.


 

Tweet this article at Twitter » To tweet this article through Twitter, please click here.

Post this article at Facebook » To post this article at Facebook, please click here.

Share this article at LinkedIn » To share this article at LinkedIn, please click here.


Subscribe to this article » To subscribe to my blog, please click here.

My iTunes Podcast » To subscribe to my podcast, please click here.

My YouTube Channel » To visit my YouTube channel, please click here.


My Blog » To return to my main blog page, please click here.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 


















Privacy Policy
Akaash Maharaj - Breaking News

 

Remembering Desmond Tutu

 

My article in the Globe and Mail


Television appearances

TVOntario’s The Agenda
 

Reflecting on the life of Queen Elizabeth II


Radio interviews

United Nations
 

My address in the UN General Assembly Chamber


Published articles

Testifying at Parliament
 

My testimony on regulation of social media.

   
 
iTunes Podcast
 
My YouTube Channel
 
My Twitter Tweets
 
My Thread posts
 
My Facebook Profile
 
My Instagram Gallery
 
My LinkedIn Profile
 
My Tumblr Page
 
My Reddit User Page
 
My TikTok videos
 
My RSS 2.0 Newsfeed