Virtually all of the governments in the Arab region have taken important steps to
combat corruption, which is internationally recognized to be one of the principal
obstacles to sustainable development, and representatives from 17 Arab States declared
the establishment of the Arab Anti-Corruption & Integrity Network (ACINET) on 30
July 2008.
Many of these governments have already signed two major United Nations conventions,
the Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, originally signed in Palermo
in December 2000, and the Convention against Corruption, signed in Merida in December
2003.
Most of the states in the Arab region have also joined the Middle East and North
Africa Financial Action Task Force, established on 30 November 2004 as a voluntary
regional association to combat money laundering and terrorist financing.
A few of them have enabled their civil societies to form active chapters of Transparency
International to take the lead in exposing corruption and obstacles to combating
it. Most governments have taken some initiatives in their own right, notably in
the international campaign against money laundering. Some of them have also subjected
their public procurement procedures to more transparent and rigorous supervision.
Many of them have also engaged in sporadic campaigns against public officials alleged
to be corrupt, but few governments have permitted their respective civil societies
to make officials more accountable. Consequently their scores on Transparency International's
Corruption Perception Index tend to be low, the best scores being obtained by some
of the smaller and wealthier Gulf Cooperation members.
For information on work in anti-corruption, see these brochures:
UNDP’s work in anti-corruption
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The Arab Anti-Corruption & Integrity Network
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