A country or territory’s score indicates the perceived
level of public sector corruption on a scale of 0 - 100, where 0 means that a
country is perceived as highly corrupt and 100 means it is perceived as very
clean.
A country's rank indicates its position relative to the other countries
and territories included in the index. This year's index includes 177 countries
and territories (see the map below). This year Nigeria is ranked 144th, scoring 25 / 100. This result is worse as compared to the year 2012, when Nigeria scored 27 points and was placed 139th out of 176 countries.
In 2013 corruption level in Nigeria is equal with
crisis-torn Central African Republic, neighbour, Cameroon, boiling Ukraine,
nuclear Iran, Oceania’s Papua New Guinea.
Denmark and New Zealand are the cleanest countries in
the world, sharing the first spot in the index, with scores of 91.
Finland, Sweden, Norway, Singapore, Switzerland,
Netherlands, Australia and Canada emerged in the top ten of least corrupt
nations in the world.
South Sudan, Sudan, Afghanistan, North Korea and
Somalia are at the end of the list, occupying the last 5 places.
Botswana is rated the cleanest
African country, scoring 64 points which equals 30th result in the world.
Public sector corruption threatens to undermine global
initiatives.
Corruption within the public sector remains one of the
world’s biggest challenges, Transparency International said, particularly in
areas such as political parties, police, and justice systems.
Public institutions need to be more
open about their work and officials must be more transparent in their
decision-making. Corruption remains notoriously difficult to investigate and
prosecute. Future efforts to respond to climate change, economic crisis and
extreme poverty will face a massive roadblock in the shape of corruption,
Transparency International warned. International bodies like the G20 must crack
down on money laundering, make corporations more transparent and pursue the
return of stolen assets.
Transparency International
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