Sunday, July 6th, 2008
Businesses & Consultants
Business Councils
NGOs
Academic Networks
Research Institutes
Journals
english
german
french
Events
Call for Papers
New Publications
Podcast
New York Times
Washington Post
Times online
more >>>
WBCSD
Eldis
GreenBiz
more >>>




Transparency International and Montenegrin ngo MANS join forces against corruption in Montenegro


Thursday, June 1st, 2006


Berlin / Podgorica, 1 June 2006 - MANS, leading Montenegrin anti-corruption NGO has signed a Partnership Agreement with Transparency International (TI), the global coalition against corruption. TI and MANS will cooperate on projects to combat conflict of interest in the public sector, increase transparency of privatisation processes, and advance freedom of information.

“This kind of partnership is particularly important in a country where there’s been little movement in the political class the last 20 years”, said Vanja Calovic, Executive Director of MANS. “An unreformed police force and judiciary make it difficult if not dangerous for civil society organisations to operate in Montenegro at the moment.”

“MANS has already achieved excellent results by raising awareness about corruption in one of the countries which regionally speaking is among the most prone to this problem”, said Catherine Woollard, Programme Manager at TI Secretariat. “This can only be achieved with the help of bold Civil Society Organisations like MANS.” The agreement is vital in addressing the interrelated issues of corruption, poverty, organised crime, economic development and democratisation in this transition state.

Corruption in Montenegro not only threatens a fledgling democracy, it can deepen poverty and widen the gap between rich and poor by misdirecting public resources. Montenegro has the greatest wealth gap in the region according to the 2004 Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper. While the Government has proclaimed poverty eradication as their primary objective the number of poor has risen recently in spite of an increase in GDP. This indicates that only the richest are benefiting from development, while the poor are getting poorer. In its reports on Montenegro, the World Bank recognises corruption as a significant constraint on growth. It concludes that a modern public administration system characterised by efficient, transparent and non-discretionary processes and has yet to be installed.

To achieve EU accession the rule of law needs to be strengthened further in Montenegro. Links between organised crime and segments of the political and institutional system persist, underlining that the fight against organised crime and corruption represent key challenges for EU integration.

For further information contact:

Conny Abel, Transparency International Secretariat, Media Relations, cabel@transparency.org
Vanja Calovic, The Network for the Affirmation of the NGO Sector – MANS, mans@cg.yu




INFORMATION DESK
PRINT
SAVE AS PDF
TELL A FRIEND

AUTHOR
Christoph Schank (editor)

Christoph Schank, MA is editor at CSR NEWS and project manager at the "Institut Unternehmensführung".

EMAIL TO THE AUTHOR

CATEGORIES: Transparency International | english

RELATED ARTICLES
  • Transparency International and Montenegrin ngo MANS join forces against corruption in Montenegro
  • Montenegrin Parliament continues to avoid
  • May 2006 Transparency Watch
  • Transparency International and Romania’s Foreign Minister to discuss anti-corruption measures
  • Tomorrow marks World Press Freedom Day
  • Transparency International (TI)
  • Blackwater Carves No-Man’s Land Free From Accountability
  • Poortman appointed Director of Global Programmes at Transparency International
  • Transparency International to present anti-corruption recommendations to the OAS
  • Transparency International stands behind its chapter in Kenya
  • Putin urged to promote accountability
  • Stepping up the fight against corruption in Cameroon
  • TI Chair Huguette Labelle appointed by Annan
  • Transparency International: Accession is not the end of the line
  • Tackling corporate corruption with the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises
  • Transparency International’s work made a world of difference in 2005
  • Transparency International strongly condemns continuing rights abuses by corrupt Burmese government
  • Strong words on global fight against corruption, treading water on Africa and oil
  • Keeping water clean: First sector-initiated coalition forms to fight corruption
  • Ratification of Anti-corruption Convention will show governments’ political will in Middle East/North Africa


  • OTHER ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
    105 other articles by Christoph Schank (editor)



    <


    © 2005-2007 | CSR NEWS GmbH | CSR NEWS is a project of the Corporate Responsibility Foundation
    Contact: editors@csr-news.net | Phone: +49 (0) 2192 – 877 0000 (German speaking countries) | +1 514 – 661 0519 (international)
    Disclaimer | Legal Notice | Powered by WordPress | 0.955 seconds | web design by kollundkollegen.