Sign petition here
New Zealand may not have a very good cricket team but in addition to the world rugby rankings there is another ladder on which it is consistently on the highest few rungs – and quite often top.
Yes New Zealand is one of the least corrupt countries in the
world!
Since 1995, Transparency International (TI) has
published the Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI)
annually ranking countries ‘by their perceived levels of corruption, as
determined by expert assessments and opinion surveys.’
The CPI generally defines corruption as ‘the misuse of
public power for private benefit’.
The CPI currently ranks 176 countries ‘on a scale from 100
(very clean) to 0 (highly corrupt).’ The 2013 ranking is here and
illustrated above. The more yellow the less corrupt; the more red the more
corrupt.
Well, now that I have taken the opportunity to plug New
Zealand, it so happens that today is International Anti-Corruption Day and
there is a chance to put your signature to a petition against
corruption. It only takes a minute.
The campaign is being run by Micah Challenge and I have
pasted the letter from director Joel Edwards below.
Please sign the International Anti-Corruption Day petition
Today is International Anti-Corruption Day and a chance
for Christians around the world to shine a light on the scourge of corruption.
Jesus came into a world of greed and corruption to turn it upside down - and I
believe he wants the Church to do the same.
The reality is that today over 1 billion people live on
the edge of survival with poor sanitation, no healthcare and little chance of
education. There are many causes for poverty but the single greatest obstacle
to overcoming this crippling poverty is corruption.
Every day well over $3 billion goes missing from the
global economy - stolen through bribes, money laundering, tax evasion and other
illegal payments in business and government. Money lost through bribery alone
adds up to $1 trillion in a year [1]. This affects us all but it’s the world's
poorest who suffer most. This is more than just a depressing statistic; it's
devastating. Corruption kills. A recent report from Christian Aid estimates
that if we addressed illegal corporate tax evasion we could save the lives of
230 children under the age of 5 every single day [2].
That's why we at Micah Challenge are part of EXPOSED,
which we believe to be the first ever global campaign by Christians to stand
for integrity and honesty in financial dealings in business, government and
church. Corruption leads to injustice and broken relationships, while the Bible
calls us to restore relationships with each other and with God.
Today I'd like to ask that you join us in calling on the
leaders of the world’s powerful nations (the G20) to step up efforts to combat
bribery and tax avoidance. Governments are already considering anti-corruption
measures and we can encourage them to ensure tighter systems are in place to
plug the holes in financial flows, making it harder for corrupt practices to
flourish.
We really need your voice to help shine a light on
corruption and protect the poorest in our world.
For many Christians around the world speaking out against
corruption is not a safe option - Pope Francis himself was named a mafia target
after making a strident assault on corruption and bribery during a recent
Monday morning mass. But there are positive signs of hope. As Joyce Thong who
heads up the Malaysian EXPOSED programme reported: ‘It is risky to speak out,
and the problem of corruption is overwhelming but I have never seen the Church
so receptive, so ready to act.’
The more we join together in speaking out to governments,
the greater the impact we have. We need 50,000 signatures on our global
petition by Christmas and are aiming for a million by June next year as we
prepare to hand over our petition with a whole host of churches and NGOs.
Please join your light and stand with thousands of others around the world. It
only takes a minute to sign the petition, but your voice is important.
Just click this link.
[1] Interview with Daniel Kaufman, Global Governance
Director, The World Bank Institute, "Six questions about the cost of
corruption" 8 April, 2004
[2] Christian Aid report: 'Who
Pays the Price? Hunger: The Hidden Cost of Tax Injustice' p.10
This petition is worth supporting.
ReplyDeleteI agree. At least we did contribute a little to stop corruption by just signing and supporting it.
ReplyDeleteI hope everybody will join this . to stop the corruption .
ReplyDeleteI hope corruption will really stop.
ReplyDeleteCorruption is no good.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you. Corruption should stop!
ReplyDelete