Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Corruption in the context of COVID-19

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Dear Editor,

Corruption is criminal, immoral, and the ultimate betrayal of public trust.

It is even more damaging in times of crisis — as the world is experienci­ng now with the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

The response to the virus is creating new opportunit­ies to exploit weak oversight and inadequate transparen­cy, diverting funds away from people in their hour of greatest need.

Government­s may act in haste without verifying suppliers or determine fair prices.

Unscrupulo­us merchants peddle faulty products such as defective ventilator­s, poorly manufactur­ed tests, or counterfei­t medicines.

And collusion among those who control supply chains has led to outrageous costs of much-needed goods, skewing the market, and denying many people life-saving treatment.

We must work together to stop such thievery and exploitati­on by clamping down on illicit financial flows and tax havens, tackling the vested interests that benefit from secrecy and corruption, and exercising utmost vigilance over how resources are spent nationally.

Together, we must create more robust systems for accountabi­lity, transparen­cy, and integrity without delay.

We must hold leaders to account. Businesspe­ople must act responsibl­y.

A vibrant civic space and open access to informatio­n are essential.

And we must protect the rights and recognise the courage of whistle-blowers who expose wrongdoing.

Technologi­cal advances can help increase transparen­cy and better monitor procuremen­t of medical supplies.

Anti-corruption bodies need greater support and empowermen­t.

The United Nations itself continues to prioritise transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in and beyond the COVID-19 response.

For many people in all regions, corruption has been a long-standing source of distrust and anger against their leaders and government­s.

But corruption in the time of COVID-19 has the potential to seriously undermine good governance around the world, and to send us even farther off-track in our work to achieve the sustainabl­e developmen­t goals.

I urge all government­s and all leaders to be transparen­t and accountabl­e, and to use the tools provided by the United Nations Convention Against Corruption.

As an age-old plague takes on new forms, let us combat it with new heights of resolve.

António Guterres Secretary general United Nations

 ??  ?? Collusion among those who control supply chains has led to outrageous costs of much-needed goods, skewing the market, and denying many people life-saving treatment.
Collusion among those who control supply chains has led to outrageous costs of much-needed goods, skewing the market, and denying many people life-saving treatment.

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