Dragonfly

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Overcrowded passenger ferry capsized in the Padma River in Munshiganj, Bangladesh

The World Cup Goal-E Project

This street in Bangladesh has a colorful world cup celebration

New Chum Hill Ruins

Remnants of Kiandra gold mine at New Chum Hill, #nsw #australia

Showing posts with label corruption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corruption. Show all posts

July 26, 2010

Power And Money

This is a story of any developing country where the rich and powerful reign and the the people do not exercise or do not have their equal right.

I was surprised to see some street vendors trying to sell a photocopy version of an edition of Tempo news magazine (in Bahasa) . I did not understand what the vendor was saying but the news was allover in the media in the following days. It turned out that on 28th of June Tempo published a report on huge bank balances of certain high police officials and the cover showed a caricature of a policeman holding ropes tied around three pigs. The report titled "Fat Account Police Officers" analyzed central financial transaction reports and found that there are tens of billions of Indonesian Rupiah transferred from unspecified third parties in the accounts of at least seven high-ranking police officials.

The officers implicated in the article include Insp. Gen. Budi Gunawan, the head of internal affairs and a former adjutant to the president during the Megawati Soe-karnoputri administration; former Mobile Brigade chief Insp. Gen. Sylvanus Yulian Wenas and lecturer at the Police Leadership School Insp. Gen. Bambang Suparno and former National Police chief detective Comr. Gen. Susno Duadji.

What followed can be the plot of a thriller: the magazine publications were purchased outright by groups making the edition unreachable to readers and the police threatened to sue Tempo (which they dismissed later) on charges of disrespectfully making caricatures of them. The police interpreted the Tempo report as depicting the police force as animals especially swine, which is forbidden to Muslims. But people are cleverer than them - the photocopy editions were in circulation in the following weeks and Tempo decided to reprint the edition. Widespread protests followed and the president was under pressure to announce an investigation.

On 6th of July the corruptors divulged their power by throwing a number of Molotov Cocktails in Tempo office. The National police spokesman said that the attack was intended to shine a bad light on the police as if the staffs orchestrated the attack. Later in the month four 'Tempo" staffs were interrogated by the police as if they were the suspects. One staff received threat from a third party.

Not only that Tama Satrya Langkun of Indonesian Corruption Watch, who contributed to the report was brutally assaulted and stabbed.

According to public demand the police investigated into 23 suspicious bank accounts of police officers and only found 2 problematic accounts. Indonesian police also claimed that they have made progress in the investigation of the attack on Tempo magazine and the anti-corruption activist.

However people are calling for independent police probe to authenticate such claims. The president said there is no need to involve other organizations such as anti-corruption commission (KPK).

The conclusion of the story can be perceived by many. You can fill in the gap with your experience. Unless there are a radical upheaval of people asking for accountability, justice and equality, the rich and powerful will continue to do what they do and get away with their crimes.

March 15, 2010

Most Corrupt Country In Asia Pacific

According to Hong Kong-based Political & Economic Risk Consultancy (PERC), Indonesia is the most corrupted country among 16 countries in the Asia Pacific. Here is the list.

If you have any doubts, I can vouch from my personal experiences.

January 31, 2009

Gallup Poll: Corruption in Bangladesh is still widespread but decreasing

"Gallup asked Bangladeshis about their views on corruption, finding a majority saying that the level of corruption in the country is lower (73%) than it was five years ago."




Here is the complete poll information.

Survey Methods:

Results are based on face-to-face interviews with 1,000 adults in Bangladesh, aged 15 and older, conducted May 28-June 13, 2008. For results based on the total sample of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error is ±3.5 percentage points.

(Graph courtesy Gallup)

October 21, 2008

Toiletgate

When 122 labourers can be paid to fix a single toilet pan and no one could tell it that its out of the ordinary, you get a country on top of the world's most corrupt list.

September 23, 2008

Almost no improvement

The Transparency International (TI) Corruption Perception Index (CPI) report-2008 has been published today and Bangladesh slipped down to the 10th position from below with a score of 2.1.

Last year, Bangladesh was in the 7th position with a score of 2.

So there is no major change in the score and position although the caretaker (interim) government had taken measures against corruption including establishing charges against the most corrupt politicians. Many politicians arrested (with faulty procedures) on charges of corruptions are now getting bails and will be ready for the election and possibly next tenure(s) for more power and corruption.

The chief of Police recently said that the proposed new police ordinance (for reforming the police department) is yet to be enacted due to lack of political will. (BDNews24.com)

Except string political will corruption can never be reduced in Bangladesh.

September 04, 2007

UNICEF helps

I came across this information that UNICEF constructed wells for clean drinking water for Bangladeshis under one of its hygiene projects. But one article of Fred Pearce published by UNESCO states:
Tens, perhaps hundreds of thousands will die.

Why? Because nobody tested for the natural poison, arsenic, widely found in underground water. And when a doctor did find traces of the metal, and when Bangladeshi villagers did start turning up at doctors' surgeries with the tumours and telltale signs of arsenic poisoning, the results were swiftly buried so that nobody made the connection.
Anyone has more info on this?

Via Notes on Civil Society.

August 23, 2007

YouTube Videos of the Day

Two videos from Jago Bangladesh (Total duration: about 20 minutes).

Part 1:



Part 2:



Bangladesh (1972 - 2006): A Rare Documentary of Corruption to Crakedown.

August 17, 2007

A new blog to fight corruption in Bangladesh

Freedom fighter and Blogger Shahzaman Mazumder, Bir Protik has taken a commendable step. He has opened a blog called Bangladesh Corruption Stories.

The ingenuity is that you can directly post to this blog anonymously via e-mail. The e-mail address is:

Shahzaman.mozumder.corruptionstories@blogger.com

He also advises:
Please remember that the subject line becomes the heading of the post while the body of the e-mail constitutes the text of your post. For anonymous postings, delete any signature and other identifying information.
So, what are you waiting for? Submit your stories with proof and let the world know about it.

February 10, 2004

THE DIGGING SAGA CONTINUES

If you have experience of living in Dhaka, then you know how common it is to see the newly paved road being dug out to install some utility lines. These dug out roads then wait for an indefinite period until the next round of repair adding much to the misery of city dwellers. After many sufferings and hue and cry the much awaited repair happens. Then again some other utility service provider is ready to dig out. It is really painful to see so much waste of resources in a poor country like Bangladesh.

The Daily Star tries to find out in this article why this indiscriminate digging prevails :

Some Dhaka City Corporation (DCC) engineers blamed foreign donors for such indiscriminate road digging. In many cases, donors, who sponsors new development projects suddenly release funds and ask service providers to complete the tasks in a stipulated time. In their view: "No matter how much co-ordination we maintain with one another, with the receipt of funds for work organisations concerned become desperate to obtain our permission to dig."

After carrying out recent expensive repairs, which were expected to last long, Dhaka City Corporation (DCC) is now going to allow service providers to dig up about 13,643 square metres of the newly repaired road surface.

Who said donors care about our infrastructure development? They are keen to install their own techologies and hardwares which this poor country will maintain by some other donated fund.

And the Bangladeshi Authorities are dishonest enough in endorsing such donor sponsored projects for their own benefits rather than thinking about the implications and the total mission of development.

January 08, 2004

THE AUTORICKSHAW SCANDAL

It was a bold move by the government to phase out 40,000 petrol-driven two-stroke three-wheelers to cut air pollution in Dhaka. The replacement is compressed natural gas (CNG) autorickshaws. But the government allowed only one agency Uttara Motors to import 10,000 CNG autorickshaws. They have sold 8,000 vehicles to local buyers since January 2002.

Now here's the truth. The CNG Autos made in India costs around 90000 Indian Rupees. The Showroom price of the vehicle was initially 167,000 Bangladeshi Taka ($2880). But due to increasing demand and shortage of supply the price shoot up to Tk. 367,000 ($6327) and still these are being sold.

A parliamentary body recently wanted explanations from the Communications minister as why only agency was allowed to import. Read the news here.There are reports of corruption also in the registration process. The minister refuted all such claims.

There will be committees, investigations to probe allegations but the bottomline is that the autorickshaw owners won't get back the premium amount they paid for no reason.

October 11, 2003

MOST CORRUPTED NATION-A DISCLAIMER

The Berlin-based Transparency International has named Bangladesh as the most corrupted nation in their recent Global Corruption Index, a survey of 133 nations. It has earned only 1.3 out of a 10 point index where the least corrupted nation Finland has scored 9.7. The new index lists countries in terms of the degree to which corruption is perceived to exist among public officials and politicians.

Asia as a whole fared badly in the report on corruption, with many nations in the region being counted amongst the worst in the world for graft among public officials and politicians.

Transparency International said the survey did not include all the nations in the world for want of data.

Its of no doubt that corruption exists in Bangladesh but mostly among public officials and politicians. There are a majority of people of this country who are farmers. Many are businessmen, private service holders and students and or housewives. The public officials and politicians are only of a small portion comparing to these. And I do not believe that corruption level has become that much worse; even below Nigeria (Many people including me have received the Nigerian scam emails). And I have doubts on the methodology of the survey which can be found here. The perception index stuff is really faulty. And I know that Bangladesh, a country still lacking in terms of digital divide, do not have proper records of its people. The govt. Administration is in the process of computerization. So a survey, random questionnaires can get you a trend but not a definite figure or a position.

Some points proving Bangladesh's corruption culture:

* Greed on the part of the power elite of all categories - bureaucrats, politicians, business people and others.

* Low wages of the govt. Employees which does not cover the inflation. Wages of multinational, NGOs and other private concerns are as much as 2-10 times higher than govt. wages. The govt. employees give the rational that they will not make up to the living standard if they don't take bribe.

* The Anti-Corruption Bureau the govt. initiative do not file a single corruption case against any politician or minister of the governing party. Corruption charges were brought against politicians only when they were out of power. So political acrimony and being biased has destabilized the check system.

The Bangladesh government has refuted the TIB report saying it had failed to unearth evidence of government corruption on the ground. It said the report did not reflect the government's strong political initiative to contain corruption. They are blaming the opposition party has influenced and using it to establish that ruling party is failing and to better their position.

There is a lot to be discussed on this issue; but most corrupted nation? I doubt that there is a subliminal reason behind this declaration. The TI - Bangladesh office includes trustees who are controversial figures in Bangladesh. AFP named TI as "Sleaze Watchdog".