Motherland
Saturday 17 June 2017
Hoda Rashwan wrote
Partners for Transparency issued the 23rd report of the Corruption Status Book series, which dealt with monitoring and analysis of legislative and procedural developments related to combating corruption, as well as listing the facts that were uncovered during May 2017 and classifying them by sector, geography and judiciary.
The report monitored the supervisory performance of the House of Representatives this month, as it submitted a number of requests for information related to incidents of corruption and waste of public money, while the legislative role is still completely absent in this regard, and the month of May 2017 witnessed the signing of a cooperation protocol between administrative control and the World Bank in the field of strengthening governance. .
Monitoring data in May indicated that the local sector came in first place among corruption incidents, with 15 incidents, while the Ministry of Supply came in second place with 13 corruption incidents, followed by the Ministry of Health with 11 incidents, then the Ministry of Education with 5 incidents, then the Interior With 4 incidents, then the Ministry of Finance, Housing and Endowments, with 3 incidents of corruption.
On the judicial level, he indicated that the incidents under investigation still came first among the corruption incidents during the month of May 2017, as the largest percentage was recorded at 64% out of a total of 75 incidents, followed by the incidents that were registered for trial with a score of 20%, then the incidents that were judged by 9% For example, the facts for which it was not investigated ranked last with a score of 7%.
The report stated: “Cairo governorate acquired the largest share of corruption incidents during the month of May 2017, as it obtained 22 corruption incidents during May 2017, followed by Giza Governorate with a score of 13 corruption incidents, then Qaliubiya Governorate with a score of 10 incidents, followed by Alexandria Governorate with a score 8 facts.
Short link: https://pfort.org/en/?p=2368