Oil-producing countries rank high on corruption index

Published: 21 October 2004 y., Thursday
Most oil-producing nations are rife with corruption, and oil companies should provide more information about their operations to help clean up the market, a global watchdog group said today in an annual report. Angola, Azerbaijan, Chad, Ecuador, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Libya, Nigeria, Russia, Sudan, Venezuela and Yemen scored very low in clean government practices, said Transparency International chairman Peter Eigen in releasing 2004's Corruption Perceptions Index. "In these countries, public contracting in the oil sector is plagued by revenues vanishing into the pockets of western oil executives, middlemen and local officials," he said. Eigen said oil companies could help stamp out corruption by publishing details of the fees, royalties and other payments made to governments and state oil companies. Transparency International said 146 countries were surveyed for the report — not just oil-producers — and it found that corruption was rampant in 60 nations. The survey found that 106 scored lower than a 5, with a top score of 10 being the least corrupt. Bangladesh, Haiti, Nigeria, Chad, Myanmar, Azerbaijan and Paraguay were perceived to be the most corrupt, all scoring lower than 2. The United States ranks number 17, with a score of 7.5, tied with Belgium and Ireland, better than France but worse than Canada.Finland, New Zealand, Denmark, Iceland, Singapore, Sweden and Switzerland were rated the least corrupt, all scoring higher than 9 out of 10 on the index.
Šaltinis: thestar.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Europe falls silent to mourn wave victims

Millions of Europeans observed three minutes of silence at noon Wednesday more »

Europe pays silent tribute to Asian tsunami victims

Europe fell silent for three minutes as leaders and ordinary people in the streets paid a poignant tribute to the 146,000 victims of southern Asia's tsunami disaster. more »

Reverse immigration to Russia falls by 20%

Recent data indicate a 20 percent drop in reverse immigration to Russia in 2004 compared to 2003 more »

A Rising Population

Ireland forecast to have bigger population than Scotland by 2019 more »

Wincor World 2005: Vision at Work

This year on January 25-27 annual traditional and already 12th retail trade and banking equipment exhibition “Wincor World 2005” will take place in Padeborn, Germany. Lithuanian company "Penkiø kontinentø bankinës technologijos" (BS/2) - the silver partner at the exhibition - will present its latest products and solutions created for the banking equipment at the exhibition. more »

Pope urges world peace through dialogue

Pope John Paul II turned his thoughts to victims of the Asian tsunami disaster in his New Year's prayers as the death toll edged towards 126,000 more »

Asians in Gulf States Mobilize Relief Assistance

The huge Asian communities in Gulf Arab states have mobilized to send aid to victims of a massive earthquake and tidal waves across Asia more »

Pope calls for international aid in Asia

Pope John Paul II appealed for swift international aid to help thousands of victims from Sunday's massive tidal waves that swamped coastal areas across southern Asia more »

Poland's Speaker Offers to Resign His Post

The speaker of Poland's Parliament, Jozef Oleksy, offered to resign on Wednesday, a party spokesman said, after a court said he had worked for the country's Communist-era secret services more »

Ukraine minister's 'suicide'

The transport minister of Ukraine was found dead with a gunshot wound yesterday — a day after the country’s election was re-run because it had been rigged more »