Berlin, 16 March 1999
Transparency International has welcomed the resignation of the EU Commission
but has called for a sweeping review of the European Union's anti-corruption
system. "The EU as well as the IOC corruption scandals show that
the issue of corruption has finally aroused European public indignation,"
said the chairman of the international anti-corruption organisation, Dr
Peter Eigen.
Corruption can no longer be viewed as being simply a problem of the South and East, and
which has long been fuelled by the activities of Western European exporters but is a
problem, too, at the very heart of Western Europe. "Having systematically fed the
monster for generations, Europe is now falling victim to it," Eigen said.
The EU Commission has correctly insisted that the candidates for EU member-ship
effectively tackle their own corruption problem. For this request to be credible, the EU
must ask itself whether its own integrity system is sound and viable.
"Frying 'big fish' is a necessary start, but is only a beginning," Eigen
said. "The real challenge is to focus on the structural issues which gave rise to the
present scandals. We must now tackle a root and branch overhaul of the EU's structures so
as to render an increasingly powerful and influential Commission fully transparent and
accountable to the elected parliament, which alone has the legitimacy of being directly
elected by the people. The European Parliament must be strengthened as the guardian of
transparency and accountability and there must be an ethos of openness and freedom of
information," he continued.
"The introduction of legally binding codes of conduct for EU Commissioners and the
establishment of a whistleblower protection system are absolutely indispensable,"
said Eigen. He cited the case of Paul van Buitenen, whose revelations of mismanagement and
corruption had helped trigger the recent scandal. Eigen called for a full investigation
into the propriety of disciplining a civil servant who so clearly acted in the public
interest.
"Any public institution that fails to protect those civil servants who in good
faith and for just cause promote the public interest ultimately fails to protect itself
and so has to weather the storm," he concluded.
For further information: please contact
Mr. Jeremy Pope,
Executive Director,
tel./fax 44-181-748 7405
Mr. Carel Mohn,
Press Officer,
tel. 49-30-343 82 00, fax 49-30-3470 3912,
email: [email protected]
About TI:
Transparency International was founded in 1993. It is the only global non-governmental
and not-for-profit organisation devoted solely to containing corrup-tion and increasing
government accountability. There are currently more than 60 National Chapters in all
continents, and TI's International Secretariat is in Berlin, Germany.
Transparency International (TI)
Otto-Suhr-Allee 97-99, D-10585 Berlin, Germany
Tel. (49-30) 343 820-0, Fax (49-30) 34 70 39 12
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet: http://www.transparency.org
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