Partners for Transparency issues the first report of the "Corruption Status Book"

Margaret fair

Partners for Transparency Foundation (PFT) released its first monthly report of the “Corruption Status Book Series of Reports”, which covers the period from (1-31) July 2015. Starting from July 1, 2015, the Foundation launched an observatory to track corruption incidents that are revealed through The relevant media, regulatory agencies and investigation authorities, as well as following up the procedures of the state concerned with the case
The report comes within the framework of “Partners for Transparency (PFT )’s conviction that uncovering, monitoring and tracking corruption practices is a necessary weapon in the system of war against corruption, as well as assisting decision-making authorities to adopt policies, legislative measures and implementation steps aimed at reducing the phenomenon and holding perpetrators of corruption crimes accountable.
The report reviewed the governmental measures taken during the month of July 2015, and revealed that they included the establishment of coordinating bodies to combat corruption, but they did not include specific mechanisms that guarantee the efficiency of work within these bodies, and it did not set a time limit for the completion of these bodies from their work.
The report also reviewed the President's decision that allows him to dismiss the heads of the supervisory bodies, which was the subject of great controversy in the Egyptian society, as many dealt with the decision as targeting the person of the current head of the Central Auditing Organization, and although the Presidency Institution denied targeting a specific person, it did not reveal in any way. It is clear about the dimensions and justifications for issuing the decision, especially since some see a contradiction between the decision and some provisions of the Egyptian constitution at the level of facts. The report revealed that the month of July 2015 witnessed 71 corruption incidents, among them 11 in the local authorities, 9 in the Ministry of Health, 8 in the petroleum sector. 6 in agriculture and the same in antiquities, 5 in youth and sports, 4 in Ad Dakhiliyah, and the rest is distributed to several other sectors at rates ranging from one to three incidents.
The report also revealed that the number of cases under investigation ranks first among corruption cases this month with a score of 24, and then comes the cases that have not been investigated with a score of 22 incidents, followed by the cases under trial with a score of 19, and finally the cases that have been adjudicated Last place, with 6 facts, was completed with various penalties. It is noteworthy that the Partners for Transparency Foundation (PFT) is a non-governmental organization, recognized in accordance with the provisions of Egyptian law, that takes into account independence and neutrality “politically” and “ideologically”. The Foundation works within the framework of helping society to consolidate and implement the values and practices of integrity, transparency, accountability, and access To achieve comprehensive “human” development and respect for human rights, and to construct a system of good governance, based in its work on an intellectual and legal framework closely related to the international system for the protection of human rights, the assumptions of social development, and the standards of good governance.

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