Nigerians angered by soaring fuel prices and decades of ingrained government
corruption protest following the removal of fuel subsidy by the government in
Lagos in January 2012
Almost one in five Africans were forced to pay a
bribe in the past year just to get basic public services, a major survey said
Thursday.
In Sierra Leone -- the worst affected country -- almost two
thirds of people said they had given money to public officials for permits,
access to health care and school, according to the "Let the People Have Their
Say" report by Afrobarometer.
Morocco, Guinea and Kenya were close
behind. To compile the report, Afrobarometer surveyed 51,000 Africans across 34
countries.
The institution rated most corrupt across the whole continent
was the police. Alex Vines, head of the Africa Program at Chatham House, said
the figures displayed a policing "crisis" in Africa. Nigeria, Kenya and Sierra
Leone rated the worst for police corruption.
"If you were to take a group
of young people in Africa and say, 'Someone has burgled your house,' the
majority would not phone the police," he said. "They would rather go to someone
else they might know who could sort it out.
"Policing across much of
Africa is in crisis. So you get informal police forces in place of the official
ones which aren't doing their job. Vigilante policing provides the protection
that the police fail to do."
In terms of dealing with corruption, the
Nigerian and Egyptian governments came out worst in the survey, with 82 percent
of people saying it was doing a "fairly bad, or very bad" job tackling the
problem.
Bribery was said to be least problematic in Namibia, Mauritius,
Cape Verde and Botswana, with between just 4 and 6 percent of people in those
countries reporting paying a bribe in the past year.
Although market
economies are booming in countries such as Kenya, prompted by oil and gas finds,
according to the report endemic corruption has a crippling effect on wealth
equality and the poor.
It also said that corruption appeared to be bad
for democracy, with people who said their country was corrupt also reporting
their governments were undemocratic.
"The research suggests African
governments need to step up their efforts to curb corruption, in the interests
of both reducing poverty and advancing democracy," the report said.
-naij
No comments:
Post a Comment