Thursday, February 19, 2009

Cambodia among the countries placed on "Grand corruption watchlist" ... where "For my friends, everything they want. For my enemies, the law."

Click on the graph to zoom in (Graphic by Global Integrity)

Excerpt from Global Integrity Report: 2008
http://report.globalintegrity.org/globalIndex/findings.cfm#WatchList

NEW FOR 2008: "Grand Corruption" Watch List

Beginning in 2008, Global Integrity began looking for possible triggers of in the countries assessed in the Global Integrity Report — "grand corruption"countries where certain key anti-corruption safeguards were so weak that the risks of large-scale theft of public resources was greater than in most countries. We looked in our data for three red flags: extremely poor conflicts of interest safeguards in government, weak oversight over large state-owned enterprises, and poor or non-existent controls over the flow of money into the political process. Our rationale was simple: "follow the money" from commercial and special interests to politicians (through political contributions), and then assess whether those officials were sufficiently constrained by conflicts of interest regulations to effectively regulate the large state-owned enterprises whose revenue everyone is after. If those data (our Government Accountability, State-Owned Enterprises, and Political Financing categories) were all "Very Weak" (below 60), those countries were placed on the Watch List.

Being placed on the Watch List does not necessarily mean that grand corruption and looting of public resources will always take place in the country, but rather that the risks may be significantly higher than in most countries.

The 2008 Grand Corruption Watch List includes: Angola, Belarus, Cambodia, China, Georgia, Iraq, Montenegro, Morocco, Nicaragua, Serbia, Somalia, the West Bank, and Yemen.

Promoting governance and anti-corruption reforms in Watch List countries will be extremely challenging until fundamental changes take place. In countries such as the West Bank and Iraq, the lack of basic security will need to be addressed before accountability measures can be successfully implemented. In other countries, including Angola, Cambodia, and China, effective one-party rule stands in the way of moving forward with setting up the basic checks and balances that are crucial to decreasing discretion and increasing transparency in the way government functions.

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Cambodia: Country highlight

Cambodia suffers from a range of governance and anti-corruption challenges, including vote-buying and political financing scandals to privatizations that have tended to favor a small group of wealthy elites. Media independence is compromised by self-censorship: a common occurrence in most media houses. Judicial appeals offer little redress for most citizens or small businesses: "For politically-related [court] cases, the following is the rule of thumb: For my friends, everything they want. For my enemies, the law."

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

true, but be reminded that corruption wasn't bornt yesterday, eithe; it existed at every level of gov't, past or present. well, that said, corruption shouldn't be tolerated, period! reform in corruption must start with all level of society, not just any particular one. perhaps, it calls for paradigm change or attitude changes in all people, too! and education is one of the best way to get people to understand the consequences of corruption. hello, wake up, people! we all can learn from the past, too, you know!

Anonymous said...

I am shock, shock, and shock that Cambodia ranked at the bottom!

It does not take a paradigm shift--just takes people in power knowing the different between right and wrong. Simple things that one learned since you are two year olds.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, but at least it ain't bad enough to cause any world financial crisis as the US did.

Anonymous said...

You Viet leech at 5:43 AM must eat shit and die!

Anonymous said...

Cambodia is a developed country.
I mean corruption developement.

Anonymous said...

Well, if the US can do it, why can't we?

Anonymous said...

You fool may lightning teach you just like ah Hok landy!!!!!! you stupid corupters!!!!!

Anonymous said...

If you voted for CPP (Cambodian People's Party):

Also known as:

Communist People's Party
Khmer Rouge People's Party
Khmer Krorhorm People's Party


You're support the killing of 1.7 million innocent Khmer peoples.

You're support the killing of innocent men, women and children in Cambodia on March 30, 1997.

You're support murder of Piseth Pilika.

You're support assassination of journalists in Cambodia.

You're support political assassination and killing.

You're support attemted assassination and murder of leader of the free trade union in Cambodia.

You're support corruption in Cambodia.

You're support Hun Sen Regime burn poor people's house down to the ground and leave them homeless.


These are the Trade Mark of Hun Sen Regime.


Hun Sen, Chea Sim and Heng Samrin are Khmer Rouge commanders.
When is the ECCC going to bring these three criminals to U.N. Khmer Rouge Trail?

Khmer Rouge Regime is a genocide organization.

Hun Sen Regime is a terrorist organization.
Hun Sen Bodyguards is a terrorist organization.
Hun Sen Death Squad is a terrorist organization.
Cambodian People's Party is a terrorist organization.

I have declare the current Cambodian government which is lead by the Cambodian People's Party as a terrorist organization.

Whoever associate with the current Cambodian government are associate with a terrorist organization.