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Transparency
international, the global corruption watchdog for corrupt nations
released this on Wednesday December 4th.
The country appeared to have advanced by eight points against its 2013 rating of 144th of 175 countries last year.
A
statement issued by the Transparency International noted that more than
two thirds of the 175 countries in the 2014 Corruption Perceptions
Index scored below 50, on a scale from 0 (perceived to be highly
corrupt) to 100 (perceived to be very clean).
Denmark
is the least corrupt nation in the world, ranking first out of the 175
countries surveyed while North Korea and Somalia are the most corrupt
nations of the world.
Botswana comes top as the least corrupt nation in Africa, ranking 31st least corrupt globally while South Africa is ranked 67th.
Transparency
International Chairman, José Ugaz, in a statement on the TI website,
said countries at the bottom needed to adopt radical anti-corruption
measures in favour of their people.
“The 2014
Corruption Perceptions Index shows that economic growth is undermined
and efforts to stop corruption fade when leaders and high level
officials abuse power to appropriate public funds for personal gain,”
Ugaz said.
“The biggest falls were in Turkey
(-5), Angola, China, Malawi and Rwanda (all -4). The biggest improvers
were Côte d´Ivoire, Egypt, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (+5) and
Afghanistan, Jordan, Mali and Swaziland (+4),” the statement said.
The
anti-corruption group said it was currently running a campaign to
unmask the corrupt, urging the European Union, the United States and G20
countries to follow Denmark’s lead and create public registers that
would make clear “who really controls, or is the beneficial owner, of
every company.”
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