The Borneo Post

From Panama Papers to impeachmen­ts: 2016 rocked by corruption scandals

-

PANAMA CITY: From the Panama Papers to the impeachmen­ts of the presidents of Brazil and South Korea, 2016 was a year marked by corruption scandals, and by rising public outrage over graft.

The question is, will that translate into a lasting demand for cleaner politics?

'A new phenomenon' is being seen, said Jose Ugaz, a renowned Peruvian lawyer and the chairman of Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, a Berlin- based anti- corruption watchdog, who expressed cautious optimism.

“What we are facing today is very different to what we were facing 27 years ago,” when Transparen­cy Internatio­nal was founded, he told AFP.

“Around the world we are seeing this kind of corruption that affects the people — and we are seeing a mobilizati­on of the people against it,” he said.

“I think it has been a difficult year -- but at the same time it gives hope for the future.” The Panama Papers leak in April — an unpreceden­ted data dump — triggered much of the outrage early in 2016.

Offshore companies used by many of the world's famous, wealthy or powerful, or kin or aides close to them, were exposed.

Among them were the leaders, or relatives of the leaders, of Saudi Arabia, China, Malaysia, Syria, Pakistan, Argentina and Ukraine. Also implicated was a close friend of President Vladimir Putin, as well as current or former government officials in Europe, Africa, Asia and the Middle East — more than 140 politician­s and public officials in all.

The revelation­s forced Iceland's prime minister to resign and embarrasse­d Britain's then-prime minister David Cameron.

China, although in the midst of an anti- corruption drive that has netted more than a million officials, suppressed the Panama Papers informatio­n relating to Xi's family in domestic media and online forums.

That bolstered suspicions among observers that relatives of the Communist Party elite remained untouchabl­e in the crackdown on graft.

“There is a double standard,” said Willy Lam, professor of politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

“The publicatio­n of the Panama Papers reminds us of the rapid expansion and power of transparen­cy,” the head of the World Bank, Jim Yong Kim, told a London anti-corruption summit in May.

He urged more transparen­cy, stressing that 'corruption is, quite simply, stealing from the poor.' — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows demonstrat­ors protesting along Paulista Avenue in Sao Paulo, Brazil against corruption and in support of the Lava Jato anti-corruption operation that investigat­es the bribes scandal of Petrobras. — AFP photo
File photo shows demonstrat­ors protesting along Paulista Avenue in Sao Paulo, Brazil against corruption and in support of the Lava Jato anti-corruption operation that investigat­es the bribes scandal of Petrobras. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia