Zimbabwe losing $1 billion a year to corruption – report


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tiz-corruption-demo

Zimbabwe is losing at least $1 billion annually to corruption, with police and local government officials among the worst offenders, Transparency International said in a report today.

Social media groups like #ThisFlag and #Tajamuka have cited corruption in President Robert Mugabe’s government and police roadblocks where money is taken from motorists as among the main reasons for protests that have rocked the southern African nation in the last few months.

Transparency International Zimbabwe (TIZ) said the police, local councils, the vehicle inspection department that issues driving licences and the education department were among the most corrupt institutions.

“The resulting institutionalisation and systematisation of corruption in Zimbabwean political and economic spheres has been extensive,” TIZ said.

“It would be surprising if the value (of corruption) were less than $1 billion annually.”

Police spokeswoman Charity Charamba said she could not immediately comment.

Critics and the opposition accuse Mugabe of failing to tackle high-level graft and say endemic corruption is one reason foreign companies are hesitant to invest in the country.

Mugabe has at times admitted to corruption among his cabinet ministers but says police lack the evidence to prosecute.

“It could be true there could be corruption but we don’t have people who are prepared to give evidence,” Information Minister Christopher Mushohwe said in response to questions about the report.

“Give us the evidence and the law will take its course.”

Zimbabwe was last year ranked 150th out of 168 countries on the Transparency International index, which measures public perceptions of corruption in public institutions.

Corruption mainly consists of public officials demanding bribes for basic services like installing an electricity metre, approving a house plan to facilitating investment.

Zimbabwe’s tax authority in May suspended its head and five managers in connection with the purchase of luxury cars that were undervalued by a local dealer, one of few high-ranking graft cases to be made public in recent years.-The Source

 

See also:

80 percent of Zimbabweans say government has failed to fight corruption

“Masamba asiyana” Mnangagwa says as he vows to root out corruption

Corruption is everywhere in Zimbabwe- even in bathrooms-MP

Chamisa says corruption is now a religion in Zimbabwe

MP says corruption is worse than AIDS because it kills the innocent

Chinotimba says he was offered $500 to kill debate on corruption

A catalogue of corruption

US spending $100 000 a year on anti-corruption in Zimbabwe?

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Charles Rukuni
The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

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