Corruption ‘impoverishes and kills millions’ (BBC and ‘ONE”)

2 September 2014 Last updated at 23:58 GMT, BBC News

Pile of dollars (file picture) The ONE group says money lost because of corruption would otherwise be spent on school and medicine
[See the original at the BBC-site:
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-29040793]
An estimated $1trillion (£600bn) a year is being taken out of poor countries and millions of lives are lost because of corruption, according to campaigners.

A report by the anti-poverty organisation One says much of the progress made over the past two decades in tackling extreme poverty has been put at risk by corruption and crime.

Corrupt activities include the use of phantom firms and money laundering.

The report blames corruption for 3.6 million deaths every year.

If action were taken to end secrecy that allows corruption to thrive – and if the recovered revenues were invested in health – the group calculates that many deaths could be prevented in low-income countries.

Corruption is overshadowing natural disasters and disease as the scourge of poor countries, the report says.

One describes its findings as a “trillion dollar scandal”.

“Corruption inhibits private investment, reduces economic growth, increases the cost of doing business and can lead to political instability,” the report says.

“But in developing countries, corruption is a killer. When governments are deprived of their own resources to invest in health care, food security or essential infrastructure, it costs lives and the biggest toll is on children.”

The report says that if corruption was eradicated in sub-Saharan Africa:

  • Education would be provided to an additional 10 million children per year
  • Money would be available to pay for an additional 500,000 primary school teachers
  • Antiretroviral drugs for more than 11 million people with HIV/Aids would be provided

One is urging G-20 leaders meeting in Australia in November to take various measures to tackle the problem including making information public about who owns companies and trusts to prevent them being used to launder money and conceal the identity of criminals.

It is advocating the introduction of mandatory reporting laws for the oil, gas and mining sectors so that countries’ natural resources “are not effectively stolen from the people living above them”.

It is recommending action against tax evaders “so that developing countries have the information they need to collect the taxes they are due” and more open government so that people can hold authorities accountable for the delivery of essential services.

Have you been affected by the issues raised in this story? Email your experiences to haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

And please copy that message to me michelvanhulten@planet.nl (www.corruptie.org). I collect already for a year all data on illicit money handling in all forms to write a summary report in 2015. I want to pay special attention under that subject-line to those dealing in all kinds of ‘illicit money’ in particular as they are known as ‘good leaders’, ‘upright’ people, caring for their neighbours, honest, free from ‘influence trading’, and all the likes of these. Special attention for those that stay within the borders of the law of their own country but are nevertheless the ones that profit most from the tax evasion. ‘Legal’ but ‘criminal’.

 *****

 

Geef een reactie

Het e-mailadres wordt niet gepubliceerd. Vereiste velden zijn gemarkeerd met *

Nieuwsbrief