INSTIFIN
joins Transparency International

04 01 2010
INSTIFIN has become a corporate member of the Belgian chapter of
Transparency International. More information ...
INSTIFIN is corporte member geworden van het Belgische
chapter van Transparency International.
Transparency International, the global civil society organisation leading the fight
against corruption, brings people together in a powerful worldwide coalition to end the
devastating impact of corruption on men, women and children around the world.
TI’s mission is to create change towards a world free of corruption.
Transparency International challenges the inevitability of
corruption, and offers hope to its victims. Since its founding in 1993, TI has played a
lead role in improving the lives of millions around the world by building momentum for
the anti-corruption movement. TI raises awareness and diminishes apathy and tolerance of
corruption, and devises and implements practical actions to address it.
Transparency International is a global network including more than 90 locally
established national chapters and chapters-in-formation. These bodies fight corruption in
the national arena in a number of ways. They bring together relevant players from
government, civil society, business and the media to promote transparency in elections,
in public administration, in procurement and in business. TI’s global network of chapters
and contacts also use advocacy campaigns to lobby governments to implement
anti-corruption reforms.
Politically non-partisan, TI does not undertake investigations of alleged corruption
or expose individual cases, but at times will work in coalition with organisations that
do.
TI has the skills, tools, experience, expertise and broad participation to fight
corruption on the ground, as well as through global and regional initiatives.
Now in its second decade, Transparency International is maturing, intensifying and
diversifying its fight against corruption.
Corruption is the abuse of entrusted power for private gain. It hurts
everyone whose life, livelihood or happiness depends on the integrity of people in a
position of authority.
Corruption hurts everyone, and it harms the poor the most. Sometimes its devastating
impact is obvious:
- A father who must do without shoes because his meagre wages are used to pay a bribe
to get his child into a supposedly free school.
- The unsuspecting sick person who buys useless counterfeit drugs, putting their health
in grave danger.
- A small shop owner whose weekly bribe to the local inspector cuts severely into his
modest earnings.
- The family trapped for generations in poverty because a corrupt and autocratic
leadership has systematically siphoned off a nation’s riches.
Other times corruption’s impact is less visible:
- The prosperous multinational corporation that secured a contract by buying an unfair
advantage in a competitive market through illegal kickbacks to corrupt government
officials, at the expense of the honest companies who didn’t.
- Post-disaster donations provided by compassionate people, directly or through their
governments, that never reach the victims, callously diverted instead into the bank
accounts of criminals.
- The faulty buildings, built to lower safety standards because a bribe passed under
the table in the construction process that collapse in an earthquake or hurricane.
Corruption has dire global consequences, trapping millions in poverty and misery and
breeding social, economic and political unrest.
Corruption is both a cause of poverty, and a barrier to overcoming it. It is one of
the most serious obstacles to reducing poverty.
Corruption denies poor people the basic means of survival, forcing them to spend more
of their income on bribes. Human rights are denied where corruption is rife, because a
fair trial comes with a hefty price tag where courts are corrupted.
Corruption undermines democracy and the rule of law.
Corruption distorts national and international trade.
Corruption jeopardises sound governance and ethics in the private sector.
Corruption threatens domestic and international security and the sustainability of
natural resources.
Those with less power are particularly disadvantaged in corrupt systems, which
typically reinforce gender discrimination.
Corruption compounds political exclusion: if votes can be bought, there is little
incentive to change the system that sustains poverty.
The conclusion - Corruption hurts everyone.
More information on www.transparencybelgium.be or contact Evert-Jan Lammers
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