Nigeria’s Civil Servants Took $3B Bribe Last Year | Welcome to Linda Ikeji's Blog

LI_Mobile_Leaderboard_1

Sunday 6 November 2011

Nigeria’s Civil Servants Took $3B Bribe Last Year

Again, Nigeria’s corruption rating has taken a leap for the worse as Transparency International (TI) has said that Nigerian civil servants alone took bribes worth over N450 billion ($3b) in the last one year.
The TI report on Bribe Payers Index for this year released just in time for the G20 summit also assessed 28 countries and territories including most of the G20 countries excluding Nigeria, from its annual Bribe Payers index.


Although Nigeria was not included in the countries selected for review this year, the TI however conducted additional studies of corrupt behaviours in public and private sectors in the world, where Nigeria’s civil servants were mentioned.

According to the studies of corrupt behaviours in various public and private sectors of the economy done by the TI, it was confirmed that “previous findings showed that bribery is particularly widespread in the construction, energy and extractive industries, “ according to Deutsche Welle, Germany’s international broadcaster that produces television, radio and online content in 30 languages, which reported the study this week.

According to the publication, in Nigeria, which is one of the countries with dominant extractive industries, “corrupt civil servants in oil-rich Nigeria pocketed some $3.2 billion (2.3b euros) in bribes in the 2010/11 financial year alone.”

Essentially, the TI Briber Payers Index this year focused on Australia, Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, Taiwan, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom and United States.

The reports said: “Inter-company corruption is as popular as the practice of offering bribes to civil servants,” adding that this year’s “findings indicate that corruption is not only a problem of the public sector but also of private companies because it exposes them to financial and reputational risks.”

The Briber Payers Index, BPI, released by the TI, global NGO on corruption earlier in the week ranks the likelihood of companies from 28 leading export countries and territories to bribe abroad and measures the perceived propensity of firms from 19 business sectors to engage in corrupt practices.

It scores and ranks countries on a scale of 0 to 10, where a maximum score of 10 corresponds with a view that companies from that country never engage in bribery when doing business abroad.

Leaders of international companies confess that they keep offering bribes to public officials to win public procurement contracts, sidestep regulatory regimes, fast-track managerial processes or secure influence over decision making.

In its concluding observations, TI urges both governments and companies to take steps to ensure effective implementation of anti-bribery policies and procedures.

Culled from The Guardian.

5 comments:

  1. Transparency International must have miniature cameras in every Nigerian civil servants' pockets! Otherwise, how can they, without blinking an eye, give such an accurate figure (N450 billions worth)of corruption money? Do civil servants issue receipts which are then filed and audited?

    ReplyDelete
  2. No. The figure is more than $3billion. The actual figure is $13 billion. Who removed the one before the three? Linda, was it you? I want a recount, please. lol

    ReplyDelete
  3. I think we're more corrupt than given credit for. $3billion is too small

    ReplyDelete
  4. linda duncan mighty just bought a rolls royce!:P pls post:)

    ReplyDelete
  5. what is $3billion? that is pocket money for nigeria politician.

    ReplyDelete

Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in comments are those of the comment writers alone and does not reflect or represent the views of Linda Ikeji.

Recent Posts