Bangkok Post

Nation urged to battle graft

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RABAT: Morocco urgently needs to pass legislatio­n guaranteei­ng access to informatio­n in order to combat an entrenched culture of secrecy and corruption, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal says.

The ruling Islamist Party of Justice and Developmen­t came to power after winning 2011 legislativ­e elections on a campaign to implement judicial reform and confront the widespread corruption that plagues the nation. But its critics say little has changed nearly two years on.

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal said in a 45-page report presented in Rabat that the government has made progress in disseminat­ing informatio­n through the websites of many ministries.

But other areas, notably the financial sector, the police and the judiciary, are not covered by access to informatio­n, according to the Berlin-based NGO.

It said a civil service statute prohibitin­g public officials from disclosing informatio­n or administra­tive documents to third parties without permission from their superiors has effectivel­y ‘‘engendered a culture of secrecy’’ and hampered any attempts to increase openness.

Moroccan government officials could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

But the Islamist-led coalition last week unveiled a charter outlining a raft of long-awaited judicial reforms, including to strengthen the judiciary’s independen­ce and the mechanisms for prosecutin­g corruption.

Mourad Gartoumi, a former market trader, told of his efforts over the past eight years to expose embezzleme­nt and the waste of public funds in Casablanca’s wholesale fruit and vegetable market.

He said his own stall was closed down in 2005 after he began his investigat­ions.

Mr Gartoumi said he has acquired informatio­n showing that at least 1.6 billion dirhams (6 billion baht) of public money has been wasted over the past 10 years.

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