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Feb 11th, 2008 • Posted in: News

Police-corruption problems range from Canada to Mexico; issues flare in Eastern Europe and Asia; and Bangladesh prosecutors say an assistant making $100 per month netted $145 million in bribes

VARIOUS DATELINES
Graft was the focus of news stories from three continents last week. Among them:

  • Officials in Ontario, Canada, may make changes in the judicial system following the termination of what is thought to be the biggest police-corruption case in the nation’s history. Charges against six Toronto drug squad officers were stayed two weeks ago when a court ruled that the multimillion-dollar, decadelong investigation had taken too long, thereby violating the defendants’ rights. The detectives where charged with various counts of falsifying records and failing to account for money and drugs seized from crime scenes. In turn, charges in more than 200 cases against alleged drug dealers were dropped after the police were charged, according to CTV. Premier Dalton McGuinty said the controversy could “serve as a catalyst for us to look at the broader system,” CTV reports.
  • Mexico’s federal government and army are cracking down on corruption in local police forces. USA Today reports that the move is part of president Felipe Calderón’s crackdown on drug trafficking. Mexican federal agents have arrested about a dozen city and state police officers on drug charges in the past month.
  • A European Union report issued last week was lukewarm on Bulgaria’s efforts to fight corruption, but said that some democratic reforms had been introduced and appeared to be somewhat effective, according to the Sofia Echo. Bulgaria was admitted to the EU in 2007 but as part of the deal was required to clean up corruption. EU officials said that despite the lack of much progress, it is better to have Bulgaria inside the organization than outside in order to speed peaceful democratization, according to the International Herald Tribune.
  • The former second-in-command of the Communist Party in China’s Shangdong province last week was sentenced to life in prison for graft, according to the official news agency Xinhua. Du Shicheng faced the death penalty but was given a lighter sentence in recognition of his confessions to crimes of which prosecutors weren’t aware.
  • The AFP reports that a low-level employee of Bangladesh’s largest state-owned gas company has been accused of using his position to pocket $145 million in bribes over the past 12 years. Prosecutors say Abdul Kader Mollah, a former sales assistant who earned about one hundred dollars a month, took bribes in return for covertly lowering gas prices, reports the Agence France-Presse. Mollah, who is still under investigation and had not been arrested as of late last week, took out ads in top newspapers throughout the country claiming he made his fortune legitimately after leaving the gas business in 1997. Police, though, counter that at least 80 percent of the employees of the firm in question, Titas Gas Distribution Company, have profited from rampant corruption. “Almost everyone in the company is a millionaire,” said the head of Bangladesh’s anticorruption agency, reports AFP. As of late last week, some employees had opted to return their ill-gotten gains and sign a no-corruption pledge in order to escape prosecution, reports the Bangladesh Daily Star.

Sources: Bangladesh Daily Star, Feb. 1 — CTV, Feb. 8 — Xinhua, Feb. 8 — USA Today, Feb. 8 — Sofia Echo, Feb. 8 — AFP, Feb. 8 — International Herald Tribune, Feb. 6.

For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Feb. 4 — Related Newsline story, Feb. 4 — Related Newsline story, Jan. 28 — Related Newsline story, Jan. 28 — Related Newsline story, Jan. 22.

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