
TI is a Berlin based non-governmental organisation
which annually deploys metrics to rank countries on accountability
processes and transparency measures.
Going backwards are we?
In 2016, Nigeria was ranked 136th most corrupt country in the world with a score of 27/100.
In 2015, Nigeria was also ranked 136 in the world out of 168 countries surveyed at the time; with a score of 26/100.
However, TI ranked Nigeria the 148 most corrupt country out of 180 countries surveyed in 2017.
This means Nigeria slipped 12 places backwards.
TI’s ranking is called the Corruption Perception Index (CPI) and there were released on Wednesday.
Big brother...not
In Africa, Nigeria is the 32nd most corrupt, according to TI’s CPI, a ranking that deeply worries the Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC).
“On
the African continent, Nigeria ranks 32nd position in Africa out of 52
assessed countries in 2017. While Botswana leads the continent with the
record of competent and largely corruption-free public administration,
Nigeria hopelessly falls behind with 27 points.
"In West Africa, Nigeria is the second worst country out of 17 countries leaving only Guinea Bissau behind,” CISLAC said in a statement.
It added that “this
fresh setback in the fight against corruption confirms that
grand-corruption, political corruption, nepotism, favoritism and bribery
persist in Nigeria at all levels.
"It
is CISLAC’s view that the negative perception is mainly a consequence of
the inability to combat grand corruption and astronomical plundering of
public coffers costing the Nigerian tax payers around 25% of annual
GDP.
"Since the current administration
has come to power on the anti-corruption ticket, no significant
politically exposed person has been duly sentenced on anti-corruption
charges".
'Witch-hunt'
According to TI, New Zealand is the least corrupt nation on earth, as it is ranked number one with a near perfect score of 89/100.
Denmark polls a close second with a score of 88/100.
Finland, Norway and Switzerland are joined at number three with a score of 85/100.
Buhari
assumed the reins of leadership in Nigeria on the back of a campaign
promise to crack down on endemic graft in Africa’s most populous
country.
However, critics say
the administration’s anti-corruption war has been a witch-hunt at best
because it allegedly targets opposition figures.
Buhari has also been accused of shielding cronies from his anti-graft war.
The
administration is also yet to convict a high profile politically
exposed person since 2015; amid claims from government talking heads
that the judiciary has been largely compromised; thereby jeopardising
the administration's anti-graft war.
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