Global rankings show Nigeria and Afghanistan are among the world’s most corrupt countries – yet both countries get millions of
pounds in aid which could actually fuel corruption.Transparency International, an
international non-governmental organisation, ranks war-torn Afghanistan as the
third worst country in the world for corruption, only better than North Korea
and Somalia, while Nigeria is 32nd from bottom.
Despite this, Britain gives
£237million a year in aid to Nigeria and £198million to Afghanistan, the latest
figures show. The total aid spending on the two countries is 35 per cent higher
than when David Cameron came to power in 2010.
Two years ago, a report from
an aid watchdog found that UK aid fuels corruption in Nigeria, with one scheme
increasing the likelihood that locals would have to pay backhanders to the
police. The Independent Commission For Aid Impact said the Department for
International Development (DfID) was not ‘up to the challenge’ of tackling
corruption, often because it was concerned about offending local politicians.
NIGERIA: CORRUPTION
Transparency International’s
corruption perception index puts Nigeria at 136 out of 168 countries.Corruption is endemic in
Nigeria, with estimates as high as 400billion US dollars lost since it won
independence from Britain in 1960.
A 2014 study by the
Independent Commission For Aid Impact found: ‘Petty corruption touches
virtually every aspect of life and is accepted throughout society as normal and
necessary. We heard stories of parents paying bribes to teachers to educate
their children, workers paying bribes to get jobs and receive their salaries,
and pensioners paying bribes to receive pensions.’
It is believed that up to
20billion US dollars have gone missing from the books of the state oil company,
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation.
Millions of dollars meant to
be spent on vaccinations and on the fight against ebola have been illegally
diverted.Surveys show that the Nigerian police is seen as the most corrupt
institution in the country, with people having to pay bribes before officers
will agree to help them.
NIGERIA’s AID GRANTS
The UK gave £237million in aid
to Nigeria in 2014. More than £1billion has been given to the country since
2010 – despite the fact that it is rich enough to afford a space programme. The DfID says the money goes
towards providing clean water, food, health and education to millions of
vulnerable people and does not go to government officials. It also claims there
are robust checks to ensure the money is safe from corruption.
A study into a
multi-million-pound aid programme to boost schools found that it had produced
‘no major improvement in pupil learning’. Researchers found teachers at
subsidised schools frequently failed to turn up and children were left to play
football all day. The Independent Commission For
Aid Impact found that after the UK spent millions on a scheme to tackle police
bribery in Nigeria, locals said they were even more likely to have to pay
backhanders.
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