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Transparency vital to keeping water sector free of corruption

Berlin/Mexico City, 17 March 2006 - As thousands of delegates from all sectors of society are gathering at the 4th World Water Forum in Mexico City, Transparency International...

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Transparency vital to keeping water sector free of corruption

“The World Water Forum provides a powerful platform to highlight the importance of tackling corruption in all areas of the water sector and the role that a multi-stakeholder coalition can play in initiating and supporting pro-poor actions to combat corruption”, said Dr. Donal O'Leary, coordinator of TI's activities in the water sector, who will be presenting the initiative.

The pervasiveness and durability of corruption in the water sector necessitates an anti-corruption coalition to raise awareness and facilitate effective actions on the ground, from influencing national policy through to community-level initiatives. The urgency of this challenge is echoed in the recently issued United Nations report on water, which cites corruption as the primary reason why clean drinking water remains unobtainable for 1.1 billion people.

“The management of the world's water must be as transparent as this precious natural resource in order to meet the Millennium Development Goal of halving the number of people without access to drinking water by 2015”, said Huguette Labelle, Chair of Transparency International. “Aid money for water sector development, which has the potential to save 4,000 lives each day, must be used effectively. Otherwise, we'll be dipping into dry and dirty wells while hoping to avert illness, dehydration and lost crops”, said Ms. Labelle.

The presentation entitled, “The Water Integrity Network (WIN): An Initiative to Combat Corruption in the Water Sector”, addresses how to establish an anti-corruption coalition for the water resources and service management sector, an area in which TI has already made advances through its national chapters in Colombia and Argentina.

TI national chapter Transparencia por Colombia designed a pioneering methodology based on TI's Business Principles for Countering Bribery to demonstrate that bribery does not have to be an inherent part of doing business. In April 2005, 11 leading national and international companies in Colombia's water sector signed an anti-bribery agreement. Similarly, in December 2005, nine pre-eminent firms from Argentina's water infrastructure sector committed to a no-bribery policy.

Alma Rocío Balcazar, private sector coordinator of Transparencia por Colombia, will also present that chapter's initiative as part of the World Water Forum meeting entitled “How to Overcome Corruption in Water Resources and Services Management”, convened by the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI), Swedish Water House (SWH), Asociación Interamericana de Ingenieria Sanitaria y Ambiental (AIDIS) and International Initiatives on Corruption and Governance (IICG).

Bosnian leadership accused of lacking political will to combat corruption

Sarajevo, 26 February: Establishment of the rule of law, functional state structures, with jurisdiction transferred from the international community, is the key challenge that...

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Bosnian leadership accused of lacking political will to combat corruption

BBC Monitoring Service, 27 February 2006
Text of report in English by Bosnian news agency Onasa website

Sarajevo, 26 February: Establishment of the rule of law, functional state structures,
with jurisdiction transferred from the international community, is the key challenge
that still lies before B-H, Transparency International B-H said in its annual report.

Commenting on repression of corruption and organized crime, the report states that
the past year was one of insignificant progress, due to the lack of political will
to systematically eradicate these negative social factors.

The primary cause for this is the involvement of the B-H political elite in illegal
activities.

The report states that a positive move in the year 2005 was the signing of the UN
Convention against Corruption. The initiative for the signing was started by the
TI B-H in November 2004, and it took a whole year of lobbying to get it signed.

The work of the B-H Court and Prosecution is also positive, especially the Department
for Organized Crime and Corruption of the B-H Prosecution, which processed numerous
cases involving former and present officials.

In the global Corruption Perception Index in 2005, B-H takes a position between
88 and 96 on the list of corrupted countries. For comparison's sake, in 2003, B-H
was at the 70th position.

TI B-H also conducted a global corruption barometer research in B-H. More than 70
per cent polled persons feel that corruption has a tremendous effect on politics
in B-H. More than 40 per cent expect an increase in corruption in the near future,
while more than 50 per cent believe that corruption in B-H has an adverse effect
on business.

During the year 2005, the TI B-H successfully realized four large and several small
projects, with the help of donations from Finland, Canada, Germany, the European
Union and Open Society Fund, working with citizens and institutions to help strengthen
institutional capacities.

Judging from the findings of TI B-H, corruption as a phenomenon is most evident
at the municipal and cantonal levels. Most of the corruption affairs in B-H could
not have happened without direct involvement or support from senior political officials,
states the report.

Privatization in B-H has been characterized by sales of state enterprises and banks
at the price of one euro without prior analysis or assessment, and in violation
of court verdicts, with death threats addressed to senior political officials, racketeering
and extortion.

Postponing of privatization of the so-called strategic enterprises has severe negative
consequences for the state. Public enterprises in most cases hold a monopoly, and
still mark losses of several million KM.

The citizens are the only ones suffering the consequences of this situation.

The report states that a strategic priority of B-H is to reform public administration,
which uses an incredible 70 per cent of public funds. Domains of public health and
education can certainly not be excluded from corruption, states the report, and
gives several suggestions to alleviate the problems.

During its work, TI B-H has faced numerous problems, including anonymous threats,
being stigmatized by certain state politicians as an organization working against
the state, and even threats of undertaking measures against TI B-H.

Source: Onasa news agency website

Copyright 2006 British Broadcasting Corporation
All Rights Reserved

European Commission urges China to make tenders fair and transparent

China European Commission urges China to make tenders fair and transparent AFX Europe, 03 November...

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European Commission urges China to make tenders fair and transparent

BEIJING (AFX) – The Chinese government needs to nurture an open, fair and transparent government procurement environment, a European Commission (EC) official said.

‘We hope China will act more systematically on public procurement,’ EC director general Alexander Schaub said at a seminar in Beijing.

‘If the market is open, the best products should win out, with the most efficient use of taxpayers’ money.’

Schaub added that reforms in the tender practice could also help to reduce corruption and money laundering. Schaub said he sees tremendous opportunities for European firms to bid for projects in China with the mainland's economy showing little signs of slowing.

However, he said much work needs to be done in the areas of regulatory reform in China to make both trade with the outside world as well as government procurement practices more consistent and transparent.

Schaub said successful bids by EU firms for major government procurement projects will also be helpful in addressing the growing trade imbalance between the two sides which is in China's favor.

Last year, according to official Chinese statistics, China's trade surplus with the EU reached 64.52 bln usd, while EU figures place the total much higher.

Theft, bribery and extortion rob millions of proper healthcare, says Global Corruption Report 2006

1 February 2006, Berlin / London - Corruption in the health sector deprives those most in need of essential medical care and helps spawn drug-resistant strains of deadly...

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Theft, bribery and extortion rob millions of proper healthcare, says Global Corruption Report 2006

1 February 2006, Berlin / London – Corruption in the health sector deprives those most in need of essential medical care and helps spawn drug-resistant strains of deadly diseases, says Transparency International's Global Corruption Report 2006, published today.

For the millions of poor held hostage by unethical providers, stamping out corruption in health care is a matter of life and death. “Corruption in health care costs more than money. When an infant dies during an operation because an adrenalin injection to restart her heart was actually just water — how do you put a price on that?” said Huguette Labelle, Chair of Transparency International. “The price of corruption in health care is paid in human suffering.”

Statement by Huguette Labelle on Entry into Force of the United Nations Convention Against Corruption

Berlin, 15 December 2005 - Today 38 nations are joining together in an historic alliance to conquer...

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Statement by Huguette Labelle on Entry into Force of the United Nations Convention Against Corruption

Berlin, 15 December 2005 – Today 38 nations are joining together in an historic alliance to conquer corruption.
There is promise on the horizon that through this landmark achievement, all member states of the United Nations will eventually marry their strengths in a common bond against bribery, extortion and malfeasance. Because of its broad reach across continents, the United Nations Convention Against Corruption has the potential to address an important channel of international corruption: bribe payments by crooked companies, and extortion by corrupt officials.

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Statement by Huguette Labelle on Entry into Force of the United Nations Convention Against Corruption

Transparency International successfully fights Milosevic lawsuit

Berlin, 07 October 2005 - Transparency International has successfully fought a civil lawsuit filed by former Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, who sought damages for his...

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Transparency International successfully fights Milosevic lawsuit

The list was published as part of Transparency International's Global Corruption Report 2004, which had political corruption as its thematic focus.

The case came before the state-level Berlin court (Landesgericht Berlin) on 18 August 2005. On 22 August the court decided entirely in TI's favour. Milosevic has now let the appeal window close, indicating his tacit acceptance of the court ruling.

“Justice has been served,” remarked Transparency International Chairman Peter Eigen. “The court's decision was a validation of our mission and of the right of civil society to speak truth to power. Protecting this right is essential for just and democratic societies.”

The figure of approximately US$1 billion allegedly stolen by Milosevic was drawn from an Associated Press report. The court ruled that TI was entirely within its rights to quote from a reliable media source in the interest of raising public awareness and advocating for anti-corruption reforms.

The table in the Global Corruption Report draws attention to the general issue of the misuse and sometimes outright theft of public funds by corrupt officials, and the attendant damage this causes. Leaders and civil servants often deposit such illicitly acquired funds in overseas banks. The United Nations Convention against Corruption, which will come into force in December 2005, provides a framework for recovering such funds and bringing the corrupt to justice anywhere in the world.

Transparency International is grateful for the strong and professional defence it received on a pro bono basis from top-tier law firm Covington & Burling.

Bosnia opposition urges anti-corruption laws

Bosnian opposition parties are angry that the internationally appointed authority in the country has refused to support what they say is a crucial law aimed at cutting down...

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Bosnia opposition urges anti-corruption laws

ISN, 18 April 2005

By Nidzara Ahmetasevic in Sarajevo for IWPR

Bosnian opposition parties are angry that the internationally appointed authority
in the country has refused to support what they say is a crucial law aimed at cutting
down corruption, tax evasion and money laundering.

They say the lack of legal provisions enabling courts to seize illegally acquired
property and other assets is costing the state millions of euro in lost money. Although
they presented a draft law on the seizure of illegally obtained assets almost 18
months ago, the ruling nationalist parties have refused to adopt it and the office
of the High Representative (OHR) under Paddy Ashdown, has also held aloof.

The scale of the problem is not seriously disputed. Studies by international and
legal experts over several years have shown that huge amounts of money are lost
to the government every year through money laundering, embezzlement, tax evasion
and the illegal acquisition of property and other assets. Only this year, studies
pointed to the extent to which organized and economic crime structures are damaging
the country’s coffers. They pointed out that while Bosnia has received huge financial
donations over the past decade, including more than US$5 billion in aid from 1995
to 2000, little of this investment is visible on the country’s shabby streets, or
in the life-styles of the poverty stricken population. The OHR has also admitted
that several billion convertible marks (KM), the Bosnian currency, earmarked for
social spending had ended up in private hands in the past few years.

Losing billions to corruption

In Bosnia’s reconstruction sector alone, about 74 million KM are embezzled every
year, according to Transparency International, a respected anti-corruption watchdog.
The Customs and Fiscal Assistance Office, CAFAO, says another 1.2 billion KM, which
is more than the annual budget of the Federation – Bosnia’s larger entity – is lost
to the government each year through scams such as fake companies, or companies registered
in the name of dead people.

This corruption has more than purely economic consequences. An efficient fight against
organized crime and corruption is one of 16 conditions set by the European Commission
if Bosnia is to get a green light for a Stabilization and Association Agreement
(SAA), a key stage on the road to EU membership. The establishment of a special
legal department for tackling organized and economic crime and corruption marked
a first step by the courts to bring the criminals to justice. But this initiative
has proved insufficient. While the department has launched many court cases, only
a few people have been sentenced. Additionally, those who were convicted and sentenced
have usually retained ownership of their illegally acquired assets through legal
loopholes.

Legislation lacking

Legal experts say the courts have been unable to remedy this basic deficiency because
they lack a specific law that would entitle them to requisition such assets. “We
sorely need a law that would allow the seizure of illegally acquired assets,” Transparency
International's spokesperson, Srdjan Blagovcanin, told IWPR. “It could be a very
efficient way to combat organized crime and other acts of crime.” The existing regulations
in Bosnia on the issue are either ignored, unexplored or are not used efficiently.
For example, the country is a signatory to the Council of Europe convention on money
laundering, obliging the authorities to seek out and confiscate property acquired
through crime. But the obligation is rarely implemented. Similarly, the new Bosnian
criminal code states, “No one can retain illegally acquired property.” But, in the
two years since that law has been in place, only 500’000 KM of such assets have
been seized in a handful of cases. Lawyers say the existing regulations are not
sufficient and that the lack of a precise law on the matter is a hindrance. “If
we had the legal possibilities to act, we could seize €5 million of assets in real
estate and cash from just one man now under investigation,” a source close to the
Bosnian judiciary told IWPR. The source added, “We know that this man can’t prove
the origin of his property but it’s hard for us to prove this under the current
regulations.”

Targeting assets

Several European countries possess special guidelines or laws designed to ensure
that illegally acquired assets do not remain in the hands of the people who have
been found guilty of committing crimes. With this in mind, opposition parties in
the Bosnian state parliament put forward draft legislation based on an existing
law in Ireland, which would have set up a special agency to receive assets acquired
through criminal activities. If the owner was found unable to establish a legal
title to the property, the law would permit the agency to retain control and assess
its value. It would then decide how to use the money or property and whether to
sell it. The Socialist Democratic Party (SDP), the Alliance of Independent Social
Democrats (SNSD), and the National Croat Initiative (NHI), presented the draft law
to the Bosnian parliament in late 2003. “We wanted to secure a tool that would help
the fight against one of the greatest evils facing [Bosnia] today – crime and corruption,”
Jozo Krizanovic, head of the SDP group in the Bosnian assembly, told IWPR. “Before
we proposed the law and the forming of the agency, we reviewed one of the annual
reports on the work of the state prosecutor, which said the prosecution had processed
some 30 acts of crime and seized just over 50’000 KM under the [current] rules.
We noted that even when a crime was dealt with and the perpetrators sentenced, their
property remained in their hands. It is in the interest of citizens for those assets
not to remain in the hands of the people who acquired it in an illegal manner.”

Reform gets nowhere

The proposed reform has got nowhere, though. It was rejected twice by deputies of
the governing nationalist parties, namely, the Party of Democratic Action (SDA),
the Serbian Democratic Party (SDS), and the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ). “The
reaction in parliament from the ruling parties was very negative even before they
looked at the law,” Krizanovic said. They said this law was not needed because there
were other laws that enabled the same thing. Some said it recalled the “dark days
of the previous [communist] system”. The SDA’s Mirsad Ceman, chair of the Constitutional
Legal Commission of the Bosnian Parliamentary Assembly House of Representatives,
said the failure to adopt the proposed law was “not a catastrophe”. Cerman rejected
the need to adopt this or any similar law, insisting that the existing laws afforded
ample possibilities for the courts to combat crime and corruption. Even when reminded
that the state prosecutor himself this year told parliament of the need to adopt
such a law, Cerman remained adamant. The state prosecutor, he said, had “voiced
a political, not an expert, stand”. “Obviously, the people who made the proposal
think they are the image of honesty while all the others are the image of thievery.
I say that there are thieves…among both,” he went on.

Opposition seeks OHR support

After the ruling parties refused to budge, the opposition sought support from the
OHR. Their initial hopes were high. The previous High Representative, Wolfgang Petritsch,
prior to leaving, had drafted a document entitled Work and Justice, which concluded
that the authorities “have to draft and adopt a law which orders the seizure of
assets acquired through acts of crime”. But the current High Representative, Paddy
Ashdown, has refused to take the same stand. Sources close to the OHR say this is
partly because the OHR prefers to have its own legal team drafting laws, which it
then imposes. However, a second reason may be that most of the existing laws, which
the prosecution complains about, have been imposed or drafted by people that the
OHR itself engaged. When the OHR did voice an opinion on the draft law, it demanded
major changes and amendments. For example, the OHR wanted changes to the part of
the law that stated that it would be enough for the state to keep illegally obtained
assets if the owner could not prove their legality, rather than requiring the state
prosecutor to prove their criminal origin. When the initiators of the law declined
to change this section of the wording, the OHR refused to give its support, saying
that adoption of a law like this would be “premature”. This decision by the OHR
went effectively in favor of the ruling parties and their refusal to adopt the law
or give it another hearing. To Cerman, a leading opponent, the arguments that many
European countries have such laws and agencies is no reason for Bosnia to follow
suit. “Nothing can convince me that we need this law,” he said. “All of this is
aimed at creating political tension.”

Nidzara Ahmetasevic is a freelance journalist based in Sarajevo and a regular IWPR
contributor

This article originally appeared in Iraqi Crisis Report, produced by the Institute
for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR). Iraqi Crisis Report is supported by the UK Foreign
Office and the US State Department.

Corruption in Education and Role of Education System in Combating Corruption

Transparency International BiH (TI BiH) publish NEW survey “Corruption in Education and Role of Education System in Combating...

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Corruption in Education and Role of Education System in Combating Corruption

Transparency International BiH (TI BiH) publish NEW survey “Corruption in Education and Role of Education System in Combating Corruption””. Promotion of this program will be on 07. December (Wednesday) 2005, on University of Banjaluka, Faculty of Law (amphitheater), at 11 A.M. This program was initiated through TI BiH “Advocacy and Legal Advice Centre” project (supported by German government). Pilot phase was financed by Local Government, City of Banja Luka, with assistance of TI “Accountability program in the Western Balkans (Finland)” and Ministry of Education and Culture, Secretariat of Youth and Sport, Government of Republic of Srpska. Main goal of this program is education, ethic and corruption. This study includes quantitative and qualitative survey of corruption in education in BiH.

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Corruption in Education and Role of Education System in Combating Corruption

Corruption still rampant in 70 countries, says Corruption Perceptions Index 2005

London / Berlin, 18 October 2005 - More than two-thirds of the 159 nations surveyed in Transparency International’s 2005 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) scored less than 5...

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Corruption still rampant in 70 countries, says Corruption Perceptions Index 2005

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Global Corruption Perceptions Index
Corruption still rampant in 70 countries, says Corruption Perceptions Index 2005

Fraud Office looks into British energy firm's role in Balkans

Company denies any wrongdoing as investigators follow up special audit report ordered by Bosnian administrator Lord Ashdown. A British energy company has been accused of...

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Fraud Office looks into British energy firm's role in Balkans

Company denies any wrongdoing as investigators follow up special audit report ordered by Bosnian administrator Lord Ashdown

David Leigh and Rob Evans
Tuesday February 15, 2005
The Guardian

A British energy company has been accused of exploiting poverty-stricken countries in the Balkans and is being investigated by the Serious Fraud Office for alleged corruption, the Guardian can disclose.

This is the first significant attempt by the SFO to enforce the anti-bribery law, introduced three years ago, which has not yet led to a prosecution. If it brings charges, they could be tried in either London or Bosnia.

The company denies breaking the law and says it is the victim of political in-fighting, It says it has suffered “misstatements, innuendos and false allegations” in a special auditors’ report.

EFT Ltd is an electricity trading enterprise with its headquarters in Wigmore Street, London. It is alleged to have gained a stranglehold on power deals and dam-building projects in Bosnia, Serbia and Montenegro.

The UN's High Representative in Bosnia, Paddy Ashdown, claims that possible corruption by politicians in the region may be helping to finance renegade war criminals, and he is determined to stamp any such corruption out.

He commissioned a series of special audits which allege that kickbacks may have been solicited by state power company officials to write advantageous electricity-swap contracts with private companies.

“The public utilities have been used as cash cows to line the pockets of politicians and others,” Lord Ashdown told the Guardian. He has dismissed the head of the Republika Srbska state power company for mismanagement. “I have no doubt that illegal, corrupt money is used to protect war criminals,” he said.

There are 18 major suspected war criminals at large, including the Bosnian Serb military chief Ratko Mladic, indicted for incidents of genocide, including the massacre in 1995 of 8,000 Muslims at Srebenica, and Radovan Karadzic, the one-time Bosnian Serb president. EFT is not accused by the auditors of being involved with war criminals, and it denies paying kickbacks. The report called for its contractual relationships with the state company to be investigated.

First global convention against corruption to enter into force

Berlin, 16.September - With ratification yesterday by Ecuador of the United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNCAC), the first truly global tool in the fight against...

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First global convention against corruption to enter into force

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First global convention against corruption to enter into force

Romania : Romanian government opens police corruption hot line

BUCHAREST (AP)--Romania's Interior Ministry said Friday that it has opened a hot line where citizens can call in with tip-offs about corrupt police...

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Romania : Romanian government opens police corruption hot line

Romania is struggling to reduce corruption , which affects all walks of life and threatens the country's bid to join the European Union by 2007.

Newly elected President Traian Basescu and his government have made fighting corruption a top priority.

Basescu recently criticized police for cooperating with and protecting criminals. He said corruption endangered national security and he threatened to dismiss top officials if no progress is made in the next six months in fighting corruption and other crimes.

Copyright © 2005 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Europe : Journalist awarded for uncovering EU scandals

The former Brussels correspondent of Stern magazine Hans-Martin Tillack has been awarded for his reports on corruption and democratic deficits within the EU...

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Europe : Journalist awarded for uncovering EU scandals

The former Brussels correspondent of German magazine Stern, Hans-Martin Tillack, has been awarded the 30,000 euro Leipzig “Prize for the Freedom and Future of the Media” for his reports on corruption and democratic deficits within the EU institutions. Mr Tillack was awarded the price jointly with famous American journalist Seymour M. Hersh, reporter for Financial Times Deutschland in Afghanistan and founder of the ‘Free Press Initiative’, Britta Petersen, and Russian expert on Chechnya, Anna Politkovskaya, who was poisoned in an attempt to stop her from publishing critical reports.

Following his story on corruption in the EU statistical office, Eurostat, in March 2004 Belgian police arrested Mr Tillack for allegedly bribing officials. His office was searched while he was detained and interrogated without being allowed to contact anybody. The judicial battle between Mr Tillack and the EU authorities is still ongoing.

On 24 December, Mr Tillack appealed a decision by the EU Court of First Instance to not stop the European Commission and EU anti-fraud office from seeking to access the files that the Belgian police seized.

The Media Foundation of Sparkasse Leipzig is awarding the ‘Prize for the Freedom and Future of the Media’ for the fifth time.

The award honours journalists and media that take great risks, show personal commitment, courage and democratic convictions to protect and foster the freedom of the press.

The prizes will be handed out at a ceremony on 28 April 2005 in Leipzig.

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Presentation of the global 2005 Corruption Perception Index(CPI)

CPI is produced using the same methodology and this year it incorporated 159 countries, including Bosnia and Herzegovina for the third successive year. A similar presentation will...

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Presentation of the global 2005 Corruption Perception Index(CPI)

CPI is produced using the same methodology and this year it incorporated 159 countries, including Bosnia and Herzegovina for the third successive year. A similar presentation will be held throughout the globe simultaneously.

The annual CPI is one of the most respected indicators used by politicians, donors, analysts and many other decisionmakers in assessing risks associated with dealing with or operating in a country and it is directly proportional to economic development and poverty reduction indicators.

Presentation for Bosnia and Herzegovina will be held by Mr. Boris Divjak, Chair of the Board of Directors of Transparency International BiH on 18 October 2005 at 10:30 in Holiday Inn Hotel, Sarajevo. On this ocassion TI BiH will present its analysis of the corruption score for the BiH institutions and elaborate on the position of this country in this year’s CPI.

BiH signs UN Convention against Corruption

Banja Luka, 8 September 2005 - The second anniversary of UN Convention against Corruption adoption will be marked on 9 December this year. UN General Assembly proclaimed this date...

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BiH signs UN Convention against Corruption

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BiH signs UN Convention against Corruption

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