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One in 10 'forced to pay bribes'

London, December 7, 2007

More than one in 10 people has paid a bribe in the past 12 months, a survey by global anti-corruption body Transparency International has found.

The report, cited by the BBC, added that the world's poor were the hardest hit by bribery.

The police and judiciary were the worst offenders, with one quarter of those who come into contact with the police paying a bribe.

About half believe corruption is on the rise and 70 per cent said political parties were the most corrupt institutions.

'The police and the judiciary in many countries around the world are part of a cycle of corruption, demanding bribes from citizens,' said Transparency International managing director Cobus de Swardt.

While the police may get the worst criticism on a global basis, within Europe people are most likely to pay bribes for medical services.

The popular perception may be that bribes are paid by wealthy people to gain influence and oil the wheels of power, but they are mostly paid by poor people to ensure they get basic public services.

'Extortion hits low-income households with a regressive tax that saps scarce household resources,' the report said

Corruption levels vary across the globe.

In Africa, 42 per cent of people paid a bribe to obtain a service, though this figure is down from 47 per cent in 2006.

Elsewhere, petty bribery was on the rise, with 22 per cent of people in the Asia Pacific region paying a bribe in 2007, up from 15 per cent in 2006. In south-east Europe, 12 per cent paid a bribe, up from 8 per cent.

While Africa is the region most affected by bribery, Africans, particularly Ghanaians and Nigerians, were optimistic about their government's anti-corruption efforts.

But half of those interviewed globally think their government's efforts to fight corruption are ineffective.

The institutions which fared best were religious bodies and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) - though the perception of NGOs has worsened since the last survey.

Transparency International's Global Corruption Barometer 2007 interviewed 63,199 people in 60 countries and territories between June and September 2007.




Tags: Transparency International |

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