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ドイツの民間団体のTransparency International(国際情報公開の会)は、ギリシア、ポルトガル、スペインでは、汚職非効率·腐敗·職権乱用が経済·財政危機の主な原因と分析
La corrupción alimenta la crisis, alerta Transparency International
"España, Grecia y Portugal son casos claros de cómo la ineficacia, los abusos y la corrupción no están suficientemente controlados o sancionados”, señala el informe
Corruption feeds the crisis, warning Transparency International
"Spain, Greece and Portugal are clear cases of how inefficiency, corruption and abuse are not adequately controlled or punished," the report
Ricardo Martinez of Brussels Rituerto 6 JUN 2012 - 10:00 CET
"Spain, Greece and Portugal are clear cases of how inefficiency, corruption and abuse are not adequately controlled or punished," the report
Ricardo Martinez of Brussels Rituerto 6 JUN 2012 - 10:00 CET
Corruption and a sense of corruption in public authorities exasperates the Spanish have two in three believe that Spain is the most corrupt country in Europe and 81% think that political parties are corrupt or very corrupt. Others have a similar view of themselves (65% of Italians give his country a gold medal in corruption, the same criterion that the Spanish on their games). Everyone makes right Transparency International (TI), the nonprofit entity geared to combat corruption, which in its latest report notes that Spain, along with their cousins in Greece, Italy and Portugal, suffers from a serious lack responsibility of public authorities and inefficiency, neglect and corruption so entrenched as lack of control or sanction. "You can no longer ignore the links between corruption and financial and budgetary crises in these countries," said Transparency.
more informationWhy is there so much corruption in Spain?The PSOE will go to the Constitutional if the PP is vetoing the explanations of Divarhttp://ccaa.elpais.com/ccaa/2012/06/05/andalucia/1338893570_683831.htmlAccused the mayor of Valladolid for trespass"What's wrong with having Swiss bank account? Is not the same as Zaragoza? "
The organization, based in Germany, has made a name for his studies and revelations about political and economic sewers worldwide. The report, made public today, titled Money, Politics and Power: Corruption Risks in Europe (Money, politics and power. Dangers of corruption in Europe), Transparency focuses on the lack of clarity with which decisions are made in the European countries.
Since earlier this year a Eurobarometer revealed that three out of four Europeans believe that corruption is a serious problem in your country and how half of them believe corruption has done nothing but go further in the past three years. The vast majority of Europeans consider that whatever the political institutional level (local, regional or national) is undermined by corruption and that politicians and public tenders lord of pleasure that Monipodio yard, only on the facet of public contest moves on the order of 1.8 billion euros a year at Community level. A few days ago, the Pew Research Center, a U.S. study, revealed that Italians (65%), Spanish (63%) and Greeks (52%) must themselves for the most corrupt in Europe.
In 2011 there were outstanding corruption cases in France and Italy and scandals that shook public opinion in the United Kingdom (Parliamentary expenses charged private and public), Norway (pension fraud), Czech Republic and Romania (pure patronage drive) and Bulgaria, Finland and Slovenia (conflicts of interest). Corruption and the probable cause of corruption have spent years walking free in Spain, without saving powers and institutions. 80.8% of the Spanish have to do that political parties are corrupt or extremely corrupt, according to TI. The same as in Italy, both slightly overwhelmed by frustration and a lot of Romanians for the afflicted Greeks (87.9%).
Transparency says, referring to the countries of southern Europe, which they "corruption is often in legal but unethical practices" fruit of the opacity in the rules governing lobbyists, influence peddling or permeability between the public and private sectors.
The report stresses that funding of political parties is not properly regulated in Europe, despite being a high risk area for corruption, and that codes of conduct that have given some parliaments (not all) are full of holes . Those who make the law do the trick, it says Transparency in the juicy business of public procurement notes that national laws conform to EU directives "although it is an open secret that in many countries routinely flouted these rules and that this is done with impunity. "
"Too many governments to sneak their responsibility in the management of public finance and public tenders," says TI. "Worse still, only two countries [Norway and the UK] adequately protected from retaliation to those who choose to report suspected offenses or unethical conduct."
Transparency notes how popular frustration with the management of public affairs launched in 2011 thousands of young people into the streets "outraged (...) by incompetence and corruption of politicians" in Spain, Greece, Italy and Portugal. "The government of these countries lack the legislative framework to account for their actions and integrity mechanisms and ways for effective implementation," said TI. "Spain, Greece and Portugal are clear cases of how inefficiency, corruption and abuse are not adequately controlled or punished."
more informationWhy is there so much corruption in Spain?The PSOE will go to the Constitutional if the PP is vetoing the explanations of Divarhttp://ccaa.elpais.com/ccaa/2012/06/05/andalucia/1338893570_683831.htmlAccused the mayor of Valladolid for trespass"What's wrong with having Swiss bank account? Is not the same as Zaragoza? "
The organization, based in Germany, has made a name for his studies and revelations about political and economic sewers worldwide. The report, made public today, titled Money, Politics and Power: Corruption Risks in Europe (Money, politics and power. Dangers of corruption in Europe), Transparency focuses on the lack of clarity with which decisions are made in the European countries.
Since earlier this year a Eurobarometer revealed that three out of four Europeans believe that corruption is a serious problem in your country and how half of them believe corruption has done nothing but go further in the past three years. The vast majority of Europeans consider that whatever the political institutional level (local, regional or national) is undermined by corruption and that politicians and public tenders lord of pleasure that Monipodio yard, only on the facet of public contest moves on the order of 1.8 billion euros a year at Community level. A few days ago, the Pew Research Center, a U.S. study, revealed that Italians (65%), Spanish (63%) and Greeks (52%) must themselves for the most corrupt in Europe.
In 2011 there were outstanding corruption cases in France and Italy and scandals that shook public opinion in the United Kingdom (Parliamentary expenses charged private and public), Norway (pension fraud), Czech Republic and Romania (pure patronage drive) and Bulgaria, Finland and Slovenia (conflicts of interest). Corruption and the probable cause of corruption have spent years walking free in Spain, without saving powers and institutions. 80.8% of the Spanish have to do that political parties are corrupt or extremely corrupt, according to TI. The same as in Italy, both slightly overwhelmed by frustration and a lot of Romanians for the afflicted Greeks (87.9%).
Transparency says, referring to the countries of southern Europe, which they "corruption is often in legal but unethical practices" fruit of the opacity in the rules governing lobbyists, influence peddling or permeability between the public and private sectors.
The report stresses that funding of political parties is not properly regulated in Europe, despite being a high risk area for corruption, and that codes of conduct that have given some parliaments (not all) are full of holes . Those who make the law do the trick, it says Transparency in the juicy business of public procurement notes that national laws conform to EU directives "although it is an open secret that in many countries routinely flouted these rules and that this is done with impunity. "
"Too many governments to sneak their responsibility in the management of public finance and public tenders," says TI. "Worse still, only two countries [Norway and the UK] adequately protected from retaliation to those who choose to report suspected offenses or unethical conduct."
Transparency notes how popular frustration with the management of public affairs launched in 2011 thousands of young people into the streets "outraged (...) by incompetence and corruption of politicians" in Spain, Greece, Italy and Portugal. "The government of these countries lack the legislative framework to account for their actions and integrity mechanisms and ways for effective implementation," said TI. "Spain, Greece and Portugal are clear cases of how inefficiency, corruption and abuse are not adequately controlled or punished."
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