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World Bank announces strategy to combat corruption

ISSUE 221
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This Week's Somaliland News

Headlines

How An Australian Company ‎Deceives Its Shareholders

Al-Itihad Military Leader Paid Clandestine ‎Visit To Somaliland Last Month‎    

Rayale Rescinds Agreement With House ‎Leaders On The Amino-Weris Issue

Somaliland Convention 2006 ‎To Be Held Washington D.C.‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

First Transit Office Opens In Somaliland‎

Militias From Majeerteenya On A Killing Spree‎‎

‎“Africa’s bondage of boundaries: it is time to loosen the chains”‎

Somalia: Losing Livelihoods As Drought Bites in Juba Valley

Regional Affairs

Somalia Govt to mediate fighters over Mogadishu control

Somali Militia Says Negotiating Over S. ‎Korean Ship

Fossils discovered in Ethiopia fill evolution gap‎

AU condemns coup attempt by Chad rebels

US praise for SA peace efforts in Africa‎‎‎

Man Working For German Aid Group Killed ‎In Somalia‎‎‎‎

Trade deal boost Ethiopia's exports to China‎‎

Chad breaks diplomatic relations with Sudan

Museveni Urges West On Somalia

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Iran warns against US attack

Arab countries tell Hamas gov't to adopt Saudi peace initiative

World Bank announces strategy to combat corruption‎‎‎

Minnesota Aggressively Educating ‎Immigrants On Tax Laws

Keeping Al-Qaeda in His Grip
Al-Zawahiri Presses Ideology, Deepens Rifts ‎Among Islamic Radicals‎

Speech Of Prof. Suleiman Ahmed Gulaid ‎President Of Amoud University At THET NHS ‎Links Conference 2006‎‎‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

THIS GUN FOR HIRE‎

Official: U.S. Backing Somali Militants

Sudan’s Turabi - Muslim Women Can ‎Marry Christian Or Jew

In Somalia, A Different Kind Of Medicine

Food for thought

Opinions

Somaliland Budget 2006: The Blind ‎Leading The Blind‎

Modernization Versus Tradition‎‎‎‎

Is The President Of Puntland Playing ‎With Fire?

IS NON COLLECTION OF CUSTOMS ‎DUTIES FROM MS Total Red Sea Over 8 ‎Years,
Be Classified As CORRUPTION Or ‎GROSS NEGLIGENCE By The Authority?

Siadist Writers And Somali Website’s ‎Cyber War‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

Balkanization & The Ghost Of Greater Somalia



Paul Wolfowitz

World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz on Wednesday outlined a comprehensive ‎strategy for tackling corruption, a serious impediment to development and effective ‎governments.

Speaking in Jakarta, Indonesia, Wolfowitz laid out a three-prong plan for expanding ‎the World Bank Group's work on governance and anti-corruption at the country ‎level, in Bank projects, and through partnerships with various stakeholders. ‎

‎ ‎"Corruption is often at the very root of why governments don't work," said ‎Wolfowitz. "It weakens the systems and distorts the markets. In the end, ‎governments and citizens will pay a price, in lower incomes, lower investment and ‎more volatile economic swings. But when governments do work - when they tackle ‎corruption and improve their rule of law - they can raise their national incomes by ‎as much as four times." ‎

‎‎At the country level, Wolfowitz said that governance and anti-corruption measures ‎will be strengthened in all Bank instruments, including loans, grants, research and ‎technical assistance. Bank investments in areas such as judicial reform, civil service ‎reform, the media and freedom of information and decentralization of public service ‎delivery will be increased, and progress will be measured through tools like the ‎‎"Doing Business" report issued annually by the International Finance Corporation ‎and global governance indicators. In addition, the Bank will continue to work closely ‎with Civil Society to enable these groups to provide checks and balances and ‎promote accountability in their governments. ‎

‎‎‎"Fighting corruption is a long-term commitment and we cannot expect results ‎overnight," continued Wolfowitz. "It requires a long-term strategy that ‎systematically and progressively attacks the problem, and it requires the ‎commitment and participation of government, citizens and the private sector." ‎

‎In projects, the Bank is implementing a new system for minimizing the risk of ‎corruption in World Bank-funded projects. Anti-corruption teams will be deployed in ‎country offices to work with local government institutions, such as audit units and ‎anti-corruption commissions, to protect Bank-supported projects and strengthen ‎public procurement systems. Anti-corruption strategies are being developed for ‎World Bank projects and will be published on the internet to enable stakeholders to ‎see what steps are being taken to ensure resources are not diverted. ‎

‎The Bank is strengthening it own investigation unit with the necessary staff, skills ‎and resources to detect fraud and to follow up on allegations of corruption in Bank- ‎financed projects, particularly on high-risk projects. ‎

‎"We are changing the way we design our projects, so that they address the ‎incentives and opportunities to fight corruption right from the start," said Wolfowitz. ‎‎"Enforcement alone will not cure corruption. How much we do, and how much ‎progress we make, depends on the desire of both governments and civil society to ‎create the right setting for sound, strong, sustainable development." ‎

The Bank will also expand partnerships with various groups that have a stake in ‎improving governance. The Bank will work with rich countries to seek ways to ‎prevent stolen cash from being moved to foreign bank accounts and to hold private ‎firms accountable for exporting corruption to emerging economies. Wolfowitz is ‎working with the heads of multilateral development banks (MDBs) on a common ‎approach to fighting corruption and on a common strategy for "blacklisting" firms ‎that engage in corruption in MDB Bank projects and for sharing information on ‎these firms. The Bank will also partner with the private sector, which experiences ‎enormous losses when corruption is pervasive and the rule of law is not respected, ‎it was learnt. ‎

Source: Addis Reporter April 14 ‎ 2006


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