Thursday 9th of February 2012 06:49:43 AM
 
 
 
Home Column Insight Uganda's most corrupt

Uganda's most corrupt

E-mail Print PDF

No bribe? Don't expect service at URA, police, UMEME, Mulago

If you plan to seek the services of the Uganda police, prisons service, Mulago Hospital, any court, or UMEME, be warned '" you must be ready to bribe.

According to the East African Bribery Index, a governance tool developed to measure bribery levels in the private and public sectors in the region, no service is offered in these places unless a bribe is offered.

The index registers the firsthand experiences of the residents of the region with regard to service delivery and corruption. It seeks to establish the extent of bribery by seeking information on where the respondents were asked to pay bribes, if they acceded to bribery demands and the amount of bribe paid.

The Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) is slightly different than other national services

surveyed. Not many bribes are paid there but when they are, they are quite big. For example, according to the survey, police tops the list of institutions where one is expected to bribe, but the money involved, Shs 56,000 is relatively small compared to the average Shs 1,100,000 bribe at URA.

The survey interviewed people in the East African Community member states of Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi. Respondents were asked about the purpose of the bribe, how often bribes are demanded, paid, reported to the authorities, the amount of money exchanged, and their perception on how pervasive bribery is. The findings were then aggregated to rank the country and institutions with the highest rate of bribery. The survey was carried out by Transparency International, an anti-corruption watchdog.

In Uganda, URA was found to be the institution with the highest aggregate index of all indicators, which means it performed worst on the bribery index. It replaces the Uganda police, which was worst in the survey last year, but moved up to the second worst position this year. Regionally, Uganda is the second worst performer on the bribery index after Burundi.

Rwanda is by far the best performer with a corruption prevalence of only 6.6 percent. The second best performer, Tanzania, has a prevalence of 28.6 percent. Uganda, Kenya, and Burundi have bribery prevalence of 33 percent, 31.9 percent, and 36.7 percent respectively.

The report does not provide much information about why there is so little corruption in Rwanda. However, it shows that the Rwandan Ombudsman enforces the government's zero tolerance against corruption. It regularly exposes cases of fraud, malpractice and corruption at the top, middle and bottom levels of the public sector.

In 2009, the Finance Director at the Presidency of Rwanda was suspended from office and sentenced to four years in prison following corruption allegations. He was also fined more than one billion Rwandan Francs(US$ 1.72 million). A former top civil servant in the Rwandan infrastructure ministry was given a similar fine and was sentenced to seven years in jail for involvement in corruption-related offences related to government contracts. Over 20 of the 30 district mayors in Rwanda were removed from office for alleged mismanagement.

Aggregate for top corrupt organizations in Uganda

Moreover, in Rwanda, the Ombudsman's office is

responsible for reviewing the revenue declarations submitted by top

government officials including the president. Compare that to Uganda where relatively low ranking offenders are arraigned before the anti-corruption court and convictions, even in the most glaring cases, are rare.

In Rwanda only 6 percent of respondents said that they had actually paid a bribe. For this reason, the compilers of the report wrote: 'With these limited numbers of reported bribery incidents, the index for Rwanda could not be formulated. The responses of the general perceptions on the corruption trends, both present and future, further builds on the plausibility of this outcome. No other East African country registered high optimism in corruption perceptions compared to Rwanda.'

A common new form of corruption used by top

government officials in Uganda involves delaying the execution of services to create a crisis that, in turn, necessitates urgency and justifies the waiving of the

prescribed procurement procedures. This was the case during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in 2007 where colossal amounts of public funds were stolen in hurried procurements.

Source Transparency International East African Bribery Index(EABI) survey

'It is clear that the anti-corruption legislations in Uganda have had little impact thus strengthening the cause to review them,' says the report.

The government's point man in the anti-corruption fight, Minister for Ethics and Integrity, James Nsaba Buturo, gets defensive when presented with the figures.

'The problem I have with Transparency International's surveys is I don't know what safe way they use to arrive at these figures and comparisons,' he says.

Chart showing reasons for not reporting bribery

But Jasper Tumuhimbise, an anticorruption activist, has no doubt about the malaise. 'Uganda might top the region in next year's survey because of the new revelations from the CHOGM and NSSF probes by parliament,' he says.

Tumuhimbise adds that Uganda ranks high on corruption because in spite of the numerous anti-corruption laws and institutions, there is lack of political will to fight the vice.

In fact, apart from Rwanda, all governments in the region appear to lack the will to fight corruption. As a result, most citizens do not even bother to report the vice. Although, on average, up to 80 percent of respondents perceive their country to be either corrupt or extremely corrupt, only an average 7 percent of cases are reported. At 41 percent, Uganda has the highest number of respondents saying they do not report bribery cases because 'no action will be taken'. It also has the highest number of respondents, 53 percent, saying bribery is likely to rise. In worst-performing Burundi, however, only 17 percent believe it will rise.

Stuffing the Uganda Police and URA with government cadres appears to have made the situation worse.

Even Buturo admits that corruption is a major challenge for Uganda. 'If we don't do something it will hurt all of us.'

Comments (5)Add Comment
Corrutpion has eaten Uganda to the core
written by John Muhwezi, August 05, 2010
I have had my fair share of the police brutality (call it corruption). My cousin was arrested in Entebbe for over speeding (75km/h) and dumped in Entebbe police cell. I was asked to pay Shs. 600,000 (six hundred thousand) as court fees. I promptly paid the 600,000 and my cousin was released. When I asked for the receipt, I was given a receipt of Shs. 100,000 (one hundred thou). My cousin being a sharp person he is, went to police headquarters in Kampala, and the headquarters forced the Entebbe police to give back the 500,000; the did and I took my money back to the bank. Secondly, I paid Shs. 400,00 for my civil marriage when I should have paid Shs. 80,000. I could go on and on.
...
written by Anonymous, August 05, 2010
Probe the police in eastern Uganda. I don't know about the experiences of other areas, but Tororo police are very corrupt. They take bribes in the name of putting fuel for the police. Even the civil society has to pay the police in order for them to leave their station to go out and act. The civil society too is corrupt. They have corrupted the police and they won't act unless given a bribe. Bribery has been normalised. When you report something to the police they tell you, go to such and such a civil society organisation, then they will come to us, meaning they will bring money, buy fuel, lunch, airtime, just about everything. Then comes the judiciary. They collude with the police to make court files disappear and the fines are paid directely into their individual pockets.
...
written by Alex, August 06, 2010
Then Kalyegira says Rwanda is about to erupt?! Rwanda is poor compared to Uganda but at least it has a well organised and functioning state.
Imagine if Uganda was not corrupt and resources are paid where they should be kept. It would have developed into a modern country.
...
written by Mafta Mingi, August 06, 2010
the ugandan police is just a torture organ of NRM , it functions like Hitler's Gestapo and Kayihura as Himler
It is us to eliminate it
written by Jasper, August 07, 2010
Expecting the corrupt to fight corruption is like expecting imps to work as deacons in church. I agree with one of the writers who ensured that he got his money back. On Rwanda you need insitutions that are bigger than autocratic leaders. As they cling to power they lose focus and that is why we need strong insitutions than leaders to eliminate corruption. But lets not give up.

Write comment

busy
 
 
 

Podcasts

Videos

You need Flash player 6+ and JavaScript enabled to view this video.




RECOMMENDED

Society
Forget `Angry Birds’ Now you can play `Angry Brides’ A new Facebook app created by popular matrimonial website shaadi.com lets players fight ‘greedy grooms’ who demand dowry – a practice that stubbornly persists...
 

MOST READ

LATEST COMMENTS

Ocheto Says:
2012-02-08 00:43:52
The solution to Uganda’s problem is the overthrow of Museveni's current government. It has made a mockery of the democratic wishes and aspirations of Ugandans. It is has been in power too long, but

rita Says:
2012-02-08 16:38:02
Thank u Jesus for what you have just done and you too UNEB

 
Joomla Templates and Joomla Extensions by JoomlaVision.Com
Clear

18°C

Clear

Humidity: 94%

Wind: N at 4 mph

POLL

Will KCCA's kicking UTODA out of the Taxi business improve the transport sector?
 
ON THE SHELVES
Banner
 

Cover: Besigye, supporters disagree on guns, Colonel under pressure over calls for war not words.

Special reportLicensed killers, how the state protects those who kill for it.

BusinessMore hope than fear with SIM registration..


Name:

Email:

COMMENT
A light at the end of the tunnel Eliminating the menace of Neglected Tropical Diseases Though much of the world has never heard of diseases like lymphat...
 
 

 
 
Copyright © 2012 The Independent: You get the truth We Pay the Price. All Rights Reserved.