bangladeshi 'begum para' and chinese naked officials

3
Bangladeshi 'Begum Para' and Chinese naked officials M S Siddiqui Publish Date : 2014-06-27, Publish Time : 00:00, View Count: 11 11 hours ago http://www.observerbd.com/details.php?id=28102 According to survey conducted by organizations such as Transparency International (TI INDEX), Political Risk Service (ICRG Index), and the World Economic Forum (GCR Index), Bangladesh ranks among the most corrupted nations in the world. There is no universal or comprehensive definition as to what constitutes corrupt behaviour, the most prominent definitions share a common emphasis upon the abuse of public power or position for personal advantage (ADB, 1998). United nations' Dictionary of social science defines as "corruption in public life is the use of public power for private profit, preferment of prestige or for the benefit of group or class, in a way that constitutes a breach of law of standards of high moral conduct" (1978). Bureaucratic corruption has been defined as the sale of government property--goods or services--by public servants for personal gain. This definition--the use of public office for private benefit--includes extracting bribes for permits, non-payment of taxes, avoidance of custom duties for speeding up one's work, or for currying other illegal special favors by the private citizens. Such payments or rents allow private citizens to pursue economic activity they would not pursue otherwise. Since the bureaucracy has monopoly or discretionary power over the issue of licenses, permits, passports, visas and other documents necessary for doing business, they can collect bribes from the private agents. A government Task Force Report identified a few years back a number of areas where corruption was likely to manifest itself. These areas include: procurement of goods and services including award of contracts by the government; administration of taxes and prevention of smuggling, disposal, sale and allotment of government property include disinvestments of industries and other commercial units; administration of loans by public financial institutions, outright embezzlement of government fund and all kinds of shop- floor malpractices. Some 'petty' corruption takes many forms. Payments are required simply to obtain an application form or a signature, to secure a copy of an approved sanction, to ensure proper services and billing from telephone, natural gas, electric power and water employees. Project corruption permeates both public and private sector contracting. A substantial commission must be paid to secure large public sector contracts in Bangladesh. Programmatic corruption involves 'Food for Work' and relief programmes". Bangladesh has different perceptions of corruption. The society is very kind towards bureaucratic corruption. The researchers and civil society tag other stakeholders by saying "one should not blame the bureaucrats alone for the existence of corruption. The

Upload: mohammad-shahjahan-siddiqui

Post on 19-Jan-2016

17 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Most of the Bangladesh government officials send their children abroad for higher study and immigration, and their wives live there to look after the children. They prefer some cluster areas of USA, Canada, Australia etc. Government officials use to buy property in the name of their wives. These overseas clusters have become 'Begum Para'.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Bangladeshi 'Begum Para' and Chinese Naked Officials

Bangladeshi 'Begum Para' and Chinese naked officialsM S SiddiquiPublish Date : 2014-06-27,  Publish Time : 00:00,  View Count: 11   11 hours ago

http://www.observerbd.com/details.php?id=28102

According to survey conducted by organizations such as Transparency International (TI INDEX), Political Risk Service (ICRG Index), and the World Economic Forum (GCR Index), Bangladesh ranks among the most corrupted nations in the world.There is no universal or comprehensive definition as to what constitutes corrupt behaviour, the most prominent definitions share a common emphasis upon the abuse of public power or position for personal advantage (ADB, 1998). United nations' Dictionary of social science defines as "corruption in public life is the use of public power for private profit, preferment of prestige or for the benefit of group or class, in a way that constitutes a breach of law of standards of high moral conduct" (1978). Bureaucratic corruption has been defined as the sale of government property--goods or services--by public servants for personal gain. This definition--the use of public office for private benefit--includes extracting bribes for permits, non-payment of taxes, avoidance of custom duties for speeding up one's work, or for currying other illegal special favors by the private citizens. Such payments or rents allow private citizens to pursue economic activity they would not pursue otherwise. Since the bureaucracy has monopoly or discretionary power over the issue of licenses, permits, passports, visas and other documents necessary for doing business, they can collect bribes from the private agents.A government Task Force Report identified a few years back a number of areas where corruption was likely to manifest itself. These areas include: procurement of goods and services including award of contracts by the government; administration

of taxes and prevention of smuggling, disposal, sale and allotment of government property include disinvestments of industries and other commercial units; administration of loans by public financial institutions, outright embezzlement of government fund and all kinds of shop-floor malpractices.Some 'petty' corruption takes many forms. Payments are required simply to obtain an application form or a signature, to secure a copy of an approved sanction, to ensure proper services and billing from telephone, natural gas, electric power and water employees. Project corruption permeates both public and private sector contracting. A substantial commission must be paid to secure large public sector contracts in Bangladesh. Programmatic corruption involves 'Food for Work' and relief programmes".  Bangladesh has different perceptions of corruption. The society is very kind towards bureaucratic corruption. The researchers and civil society tag other stakeholders by saying "one should not blame the bureaucrats alone for the existence of corruption. The politicians who fail to implement the rule of law, members of the civil society who tolerate a high level of corruption and fail to condemn it, the business people who more often than not willingly pay the bribe, sometimes even initiating the transaction, all share the blame for the existence of bureaucratic corruption". According to others-- the prevalence of corruption is simply a reflection in the behavior of private businesses and civil servants to the laws and their enforcement. When the laws are full of loopholes, the courts are not responsive, the existing anti-corruption laws are not enforced, bribery and corruption flourish. The bureaucrats are most fortunate citizens in Bangladesh. There is hardly any study on their corruption. An backdated reports revealed that information obtained from the Finance Division of the Ministry of Finance show that over a period of twenty-two years, i.e. between 1971 and 1993, taka 18,000 crore were lost in the public sector due to misappropriation of public funds and theft.The corruption rooted deep in the country that drained down the government wealth estimated at TK 11,534,98 core or US$ 2.1 billion during the first half of 2000 (January - June). The report was made on the basis of the news scan Database, which includes 9 national and 6 regional dailies published during the study period.The bureaucrats in China are not that fortunate and privileged like ours. They don't get special status in the society. The Chinese President Xi Jinping crackdown on pervasive corruption, China's so-called "naked officials," those who have moved their spouses, children and assets overseas while they remain at home, will not be considered for promotion, state media reported. Chinese government is taking action against officials whose spouse and children are living abroad and even there is no corruption proof even a corruption allegation.Also, China's anti-graft body has asked newly promoted officials to disclose their assets and any foreign residency, while late last month, about 2,000 village leaders in Guangzhou had to hand over their passports to stop corrupt officials from fleeing, Hong Kong's

Page 2: Bangladeshi 'Begum Para' and Chinese Naked Officials

South China Morning Post reported.As some of the most despised officials in China are those who send their wives and children to live overseas while preparing for their own eventual departure, they are known 'luo guan' or naked officials. "Naked officials" ( luo guan) is a term used to describe cadres who stash money and relatives overseas, and when the law begins to catch up with them they flee China ,"naked" with just the shirts on their back. Some of typical corruption in China is as described: In the town of Pensghui in Chongqing corruption was so bad that money allocated for a bridge, middle school and hotels produced only half of a bridge before running out. Construction had not even begun on the school. The hotel hadn't even made into the planning stages. Corruption has been linked to disasters that have killed scores of people. In January, 1999, two bridges collapsed in different areas, killing 47 people and injuring more than 30 others. In Chongqing in Sichuan a footbridge collapsed killing 40 people. An investigation uncovered faulty welding, $12,000 in bribes given to officials to overlook problems and allow project to exceed its budget. Some of the siphoned-off money was used to build a karaoke parlour with scantily clad girls. Less than a week later, another bridge collapsed in Fujian Province, killing seven people. In both cases government officials were arrested on charges of corruption and using shoddy materials.Ministers were forced to resign in October 2003 after only seven months on job for taking $619,000 in bribes. In January 2005, 44 officials in Gansu Province were accused of misusing $930 million funds intended for improving roads and water works. In 2005, a Chinese official was caught after three months on the run for gambling away $420,000 of public money. In November2005, Yuan Jingao, an official in charge of fighting corruption was himself found guilty of accepting $715,000 worth of bribes.Bangladesh authorities used to initiate case against contractors in case of such collapse of bridge or building but kept the responsible bureaucrats out of legal and administrative jurisdiction. Party and government officials whose spouse and children have emigrated overseas are to be subject to strict examination when applying for private passports and going abroad, according to a new regulation. A statement from the CPC Central Committee General Office said the new regulation is "an important anti-corruption measure" to make officials self-disciplined, clean, reliable and people of integrity.  "The regulation not only stresses education, management and supervision of civil servants whose spouse and offspring live aboard, but also focuses on the protection of their interests and working enthusiasm," it said.Most of the Bangladesh government officials send their children abroad for higher study and immigration, and their wives live there to look after the children. They prefer some cluster areas of USA, Canada, Australia etc. Government officials use to buy property in the name of their wives. These overseas clusters have become 'Begum Para'. 

The writer is a Legal Economist and can be reached at [email protected]

- See more at: http://www.observerbd.com/details.php?id=28102#sthash.oauf0EVh.dpuf