Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Corruption Perceptions Index 2009



Corruption Perceptions Index 2009

  • The Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) table shows a country's ranking and score, the number of surveys used to determine the score, and the confidence range of the scoring.
  • The rank shows how one country compares to others included in the index. The CPI score indicates the perceived level of public-sector corruption in a country/territory.
  • The CPI is based on 13 independent surveys. However, not all surveys include all countries. The surveys used column indicates how many surveys were relied upon to determine the score for that country.
  • The confidence range indicates the reliability of the CPI scores and tells us that allowing for a margin of error, we can be 90% confident that the true score for this country lies within this range.

Rank

Country/Territory

CPI 2009 Score

Surveys Used

Confidence Range

1

New Zealand

9.4

6

9.1 - 9.5

2

Denmark

9.3

6

9.1 - 9.5

3

Singapore

9.2

9

9.0 - 9.4

3

Sweden

9.2

6

9.0 - 9.3

5

Switzerland

9.0

6

8.9 - 9.1

6

Finland

8.9

6

8.4 - 9.4

6

Netherlands

8.9

6

8.7 - 9.0

8

Australia

8.7

8

8.3 - 9.0

8

Canada

8.7

6

8.5 - 9.0

8

Iceland

8.7

4

7.5 - 9.4

11

Norway

8.6

6

8.2 - 9.1

12

Hong Kong

8.2

8

7.9 - 8.5

12

Luxembourg

8.2

6

7.6 - 8.8

14

Germany

8.0

6

7.7 - 8.3

14

Ireland

8.0

6

7.8 - 8.4

16

Austria

7.9

6

7.4 - 8.3

17

Japan

7.7

8

7.4 - 8.0

17

United Kingdom

7.7

6

7.3 - 8.2

19

United States

7.5

8

6.9 - 8.0

20

Barbados

7.4

4

6.6 - 8.2

21

Belgium

7.1

6

6.9 - 7.3

22

Qatar

7.0

6

5.8 - 8.1

22

Saint Lucia

7.0

3

6.7 - 7.5

24

France

6.9

6

6.5 - 7.3

25

Chile

6.7

7

6.5 - 6.9

25

Uruguay

6.7

5

6.4 - 7.1

27

Cyprus

6.6

4

6.1 - 7.1

27

Estonia

6.6

8

6.1 - 6.9

27

Slovenia

6.6

8

6.3 - 6.9

30

United Arab Emirates

6.5

5

5.5 - 7.5

31

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

6.4

3

4.9 - 7.5

32

Israel

6.1

6

5.4 - 6.7

32

Spain

6.1

6

5.5 - 6.6

34

Dominica

5.9

3

4.9 - 6.7

35

Portugal

5.8

6

5.5 - 6.2

35

Puerto Rico

5.8

4

5.2 - 6.3

37

Botswana

5.6

6

5.1 - 6.3

37

Taiwan

5.6

9

5.4 - 5.9

39

Brunei Darussalam

5.5

4

4.7 - 6.4

39

Oman

5.5

5

4.4 - 6.5

39

Korea (South)

5.5

9

5.3 - 5.7

42

Mauritius

5.4

6

5.0 - 5.9

43

Costa Rica

5.3

5

4.7 - 5.9

43

Macau

5.3

3

3.3 - 6.9

45

Malta

5.2

4

4.0 - 6.2

46

Bahrain

5.1

5

4.2 - 5.8

46

Cape Verde

5.1

3

3.3 - 7.0

46

Hungary

5.1

8

4.6 - 5.7

49

Bhutan

5.0

4

4.3 - 5.6

49

Jordan

5.0

7

3.9 - 6.1

49

Poland

5.0

8

4.5 - 5.5

52

Czech Republic

4.9

8

4.3 - 5.6

52

Lithuania

4.9

8

4.4 - 5.4

54

Seychelles

4.8

3

3.0 - 6.7

55

South Africa

4.7

8

4.3 - 4.9

56

Latvia

4.5

6

4.1 - 4.9

56

Malaysia

4.5

9

4.0 - 5.1

56

Namibia

4.5

6

3.9 - 5.1

56

Samoa

4.5

3

3.3 - 5.3

56

Slovakia

4.5

8

4.1 - 4.9

61

Cuba

4.4

3

3.5 - 5.1

61

Turkey

4.4

7

3.9 - 4.9

63

Italy

4.3

6

3.8 - 4.9

63

Saudi Arabia

4.3

5

3.1 - 5.3

65

Tunisia

4.2

6

3.0 - 5.5

66

Croatia

4.1

8

3.7 - 4.5

66

Georgia

4.1

7

3.4 - 4.7

66

Kuwait

4.1

5

3.2 - 5.1

69

Ghana

3.9

7

3.2 - 4.6

69

Montenegro

3.9

5

3.5 - 4.4

71

Bulgaria

3.8

8

3.2 - 4.5

71

FYR Macedonia

3.8

6

3.4 - 4.2

71

Greece

3.8

6

3.2 - 4.3

71

Romania

3.8

8

3.2 - 4.3

75

Brazil

3.7

7

3.3 - 4.3

75

Colombia

3.7

7

3.1 - 4.3

75

Peru

3.7

7

3.4 - 4.1

75

Suriname

3.7

3

3.0 - 4.7

79

Burkina Faso

3.6

7

2.8 - 4.4

79

China

3.6

9

3.0 - 4.2

79

Swaziland

3.6

3

3.0 - 4.7

79

Trinidad and Tobago

3.6

4

3.0 - 4.3

83

Serbia

3.5

6

3.3 - 3.9

84

El Salvador

3.4

5

3.0 - 3.8

84

Guatemala

3.4

5

3.0 - 3.9

84

India

3.4

10

3.2 - 3.6

84

Panama

3.4

5

3.1 - 3.7

84

Thailand

3.4

9

3.0 - 3.8

89

Lesotho

3.3

6

2.8 - 3.8

89

Malawi

3.3

7

2.7 - 3.9

89

Mexico

3.3

7

3.2 - 3.5

89

Moldova

3.3

6

2.7 - 4.0

89

Morocco

3.3

6

2.8 - 3.9

89

Rwanda

3.3

4

2.9 - 3.7

95

Albania

3.2

6

3.0 - 3.3

95

Vanuatu

3.2

3

2.3 - 4.7

97

Liberia

3.1

3

1.9 - 3.8

97

Sri Lanka

3.1

7

2.8 - 3.4

99

Bosnia and Herzegovina

3.0

7

2.6 - 3.4

99

Dominican Republic

3.0

5

2.9 - 3.2

99

Jamaica

3.0

5

2.8 - 3.3

99

Madagascar

3.0

7

2.8 - 3.2

99

Senegal

3.0

7

2.5 - 3.6

99

Tonga

3.0

3

2.6 - 3.3

99

Zambia

3.0

7

2.8 - 3.2

106

Argentina

2.9

7

2.6 - 3.1

106

Benin

2.9

6

2.3 - 3.4

106

Gabon

2.9

3

2.6 - 3.1

106

Gambia

2.9

5

1.6 - 4.0

106

Niger

2.9

5

2.7 - 3.0

111

Algeria

2.8

6

2.5 - 3.1

111

Djibouti

2.8

4

2.3 - 3.2

111

Egypt

2.8

6

2.6 - 3.1

111

Indonesia

2.8

9

2.4 - 3.2

111

Kiribati

2.8

3

2.3 - 3.3

111

Mali

2.8

6

2.4 - 3.2

111

Sao Tome and Principe

2.8

3

2.4 - 3.3

111

Solomon Islands

2.8

3

2.3 - 3.3

111

Togo

2.8

5

1.9 - 3.9

120

Armenia

2.7

7

2.6 - 2.8

120

Bolivia

2.7

6

2.4 - 3.1

120

Ethiopia

2.7

7

2.4 - 2.9

120

Kazakhstan

2.7

7

2.1 - 3.3

120

Mongolia

2.7

7

2.4 - 3.0

120

Vietnam

2.7

9

2.4 - 3.1

126

Eritrea

2.6

4

1.6 - 3.8

126

Guyana

2.6

4

2.5 - 2.7

126

Syria

2.6

5

2.2 - 2.9

126

Tanzania

2.6

7

2.4 - 2.9

130

Honduras

2.5

6

2.2 - 2.8

130

Lebanon

2.5

3

1.9 - 3.1

130

Libya

2.5

6

2.2 - 2.8

130

Maldives

2.5

4

1.8 - 3.2

130

Mauritania

2.5

7

2.0 - 3.3

130

Mozambique

2.5

7

2.3 - 2.8

130

Nicaragua

2.5

6

2.3 - 2.7

130

Nigeria

2.5

7

2.2 - 2.7

130

Uganda

2.5

7

2.1 - 2.8

139

Bangladesh

2.4

7

2.0 - 2.8

139

Belarus

2.4

4

2.0 - 2.8

139

Pakistan

2.4

7

2.1 - 2.7

139

Philippines

2.4

9

2.1 - 2.7

143

Azerbaijan

2.3

7

2.0 - 2.6

143

Comoros

2.3

3

1.6 - 3.3

143

Nepal

2.3

6

2.0 - 2.6

146

Cameroon

2.2

7

1.9 - 2.6

146

Ecuador

2.2

5

2.0 - 2.5

146

Kenya

2.2

7

1.9 - 2.5

146

Russia

2.2

8

1.9 - 2.4

146

Sierra Leone

2.2

5

1.9 - 2.4

146

Timor-Leste

2.2

5

1.8 - 2.6

146

Ukraine

2.2

8

2.0 - 2.6

146

Zimbabwe

2.2

7

1.7 - 2.8

154

Côte d´Ivoire

2.1

7

1.8 - 2.4

154

Papua New Guinea

2.1

5

1.7 - 2.5

154

Paraguay

2.1

5

1.7 - 2.5

154

Yemen

2.1

4

1.6 - 2.5

158

Cambodia

2.0

8

1.8 - 2.2

158

Central African Republic

2.0

4

1.9 - 2.2

158

Laos

2.0

4

1.6 - 2.6

158

Tajikistan

2.0

8

1.6 - 2.5

162

Angola

1.9

5

1.8 - 1.9

162

Congo Brazzaville

1.9

5

1.6 - 2.1

162

Democratic Republic of Congo

1.9

5

1.7 - 2.1

162

Guinea-Bissau

1.9

3

1.8 - 2.0

162

Kyrgyzstan

1.9

7

1.8 - 2.1

162

Venezuela

1.9

7

1.8 - 2.0

168

Burundi

1.8

6

1.6 - 2.0

168

Equatorial Guinea

1.8

3

1.6 - 1.9

168

Guinea

1.8

5

1.7 - 1.8

168

Haiti

1.8

3

1.4 - 2.3

168

Iran

1.8

3

1.7 - 1.9

168

Turkmenistan

1.8

4

1.7 - 1.9

174

Uzbekistan

1.7

6

1.5 - 1.8

175

Chad

1.6

6

1.5 - 1.7

176

Iraq

1.5

3

1.2 - 1.8

176

Sudan

1.5

5

1.4 - 1.7

178

Myanmar

1.4

3

0.9 - 1.8

179

Afghanistan

1.3

4

1.0 - 1.5

180

Somalia

1.1

3

0.9 - 1.4

Canadian linked to Mumbai attacks, PM confirms

Back to Canadian linked to Mumbai attacks, PM confirms

Canadian linked to Mumbai attacks, PM confirms

November 17, 2009

Rick Westhead

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Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his wife Laureen throw flower petals onto the memorial of Mahatma Gandhi during a ceremony in New Delhi, India.(November 17, 2009)

ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS

New Delhi–Canadian authorities are co-operating with the U.S. and India to investigate a Canadian terrorism suspect who may have been in Mumbai days before last year's attacks, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said.

Speaking at a news conference Tuesday on the second day of his three-day visit to India, Harper confirmed he and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh discussed the case of Tahawwur Hussain Rana, a Pakistani-born Canadian, during their meetings here.

India has increased security measures at its 17 nuclear installations amid concerns that Rana, 48, and an alleged accomplice may have monitored them during visits to India.

"We worked very closely with our American friends in this matter and Prime Minister Singh and I certainly discussed the case and are resolved to co-operate closely in the future on these matters," Harper told reporters.

Singh declined to comment on the case specifically. "We had a very fruitful discussion in expanding areas of co-operation between our two countries in dealing with this scourge of international terrorism," he said.

Rana was charged in October with conspiring to murder a Danish newspaper cartoonist whose work depicted the Prophet Muhammad in a disrespectful manner.

Rana, who owns a Chicago immigration concern and a meat processing plant, was arrested after FBI agents found DVDs in his apartment that featured Osama bin Laden and promoted al-Qaida. He has not been charged in connection with the allegations of spying on India's nuclear installations.

U.S. prosecutors have said Rana and David Coleman Headley, an alleged co-conspirator also from Chicago, had also planned to target the National Defence College, a military school in New Delhi.

Rana has denied any wrongdoing.

Singh also assured Canadians that if Canada decides to allow its companies to sell uranium and nuclear technology to India, it will be used appropriately.

"We have entered into civil nuclear cooperation agreements with three counties: the U.S., Russia and France and we will do all that is within our power to ensure safety and security of our nuclear installations," Singh said. "There should be no doubt about that."

Canadian companies have been barred from selling nuclear materials or related services to India because it secretly used Canadian technology to develop its nuclear weapons program in 1974.

Harper insisted Canada has "great faith in our Indian friends and partners. We are not living in the 1970s. We are living in 2009."

The prime minister also met with a number of top India government officials Tuesday, including the foreign minister, the vice-president, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, and Sonia Gandhi, leader of the Indian National Congress Party.

In between, Harper and his wife Laureen visited the memorial site to Mahatma Ghandi, the father of modern India.

The prime minister inscribed the visitor's book calling Ghandi a "model for all humanity," then he and Laureen tossed rose petals on the spare, black marble monument.

With files from The Canadian Press