9 December 2016 – No country is immune, and every country bears a responsibility to end corruption, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said today, warning that corruption is a “broad barrier” in the path to world's achievement of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
“Corruption strangles people, communities and nations. It weakens
education and health, undermines electoral processes and reinforces
injustices by perverting criminal justice systems and the rule of law,
the Secretary-General said in his message to mark International Anti-Corruption Day.
By diverting domestic and foreign funds, corruption wrecks economic and
social development and increases poverty. “It harms everyone, but the
poor and vulnerable suffer most.” he added.
Mr. Ban also highlighted the theme of this year's observance: 'Corruption: An impediment to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),' adding that implementation of the UN Convention against Corruption should not be the only step taken to resolve the issue.
“On International Anti-corruption Day, let us reaffirm our commitment to
ending the deceit and dishonesty that threaten the 2030 Agenda and our
efforts to achieve peace and prosperity for all on a healthy planet,”
stated the Secretary-General.
In a separate statement Yury Fedotov, Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)
explained that the G20 estimates that $90 trillion in infrastructure
investment is required between 2015 and 2030 to support global growth
and development. “If we do not unite to successfully eliminate
corruption, we risk economic growth being slowed and prosperity
muzzled.”
He called for a “wholehearted and determined” contribution to global
anti-corruption efforts from the world's public and private sectors, and
noted that the 2030 Agenda's Goal 16,
on peaceful and inclusive societies, seeks substantial reductions in
corruption and bribery. And in that regard, UNODC has created a
comprehensive approach that includes the UN Convention and its “cutting
edge” peer review mechanism.
Mr. Fedotov said that at the local level, UNODC works with countries to
offer technical advice on invaluable legislative reform and to help
build capacities in the area of law enforcement and successful
prosecutions.
Finally, he invited all countries to join the joint UNODC-UN Development Programme (UNDP) campaign focusing on how corruption affects education, health, justice, democracy, prosperity and development.
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