May 19, 2016
BBC News Africa

[image: David Cameron (L) greets Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari during
the Anti-Corruption Summit London 2016, at Lancaster House in central
London on May 12, 2016]AFP
Image caption Mr Cameron welcomed President Buhari to the conference after
earlier calling his country "fantastically corrupt"

In our series of letters from African journalists, Ghanaian writer and
opposition politician Elizabeth Ohene looks at what we mean when we speak
of corruption.

UK Prime Minister David Cameron probably assumes there is an uncontested
definition of the word corruption.

The big anti-corruption summit he hosted in London last week was held on
the understanding that we all agree on what is meant by corruption and the
only difference of opinion is about who or which country is more corrupt
than another.

There has therefore been much excited coverage of Mr Cameron being caught
on camera <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-36260193> telling Queen
Elizabeth that leaders of two "fantastically corrupt" countries -
Afghanistan and Nigeria - were going to be at the conference.

I wish, though, that the conference had spent some time defining exactly
what the participants understood as corruption. I have been exploring some
different definitions of the word.
Bribes?

The World Bank definition is straightforward and calls it "the abuse of
public office for private gain".

The Danish International Development Agency defines it as the "misuse of
entrusted power for private gain".

The definition goes further to state that it might or might not involve the
taking of bribes. In other words, the critical ingredients in the
definition would seem to be public office, or entrusted power, and the
abuse of that position for private gain.
[image: John Dramani Mahama in Berlin on 19 January 2015]AFP
Image caption John Mahama stumbled when asked an apparently straightforward
question

So it was interesting that when my president, Ghana's John Mahama
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-18980639>, was asked a
straightforward question in a BBC Focus on Africa
<https://www.facebook.com/bbcafrica/videos/10154237375155229/> interview on
whether he had ever taken a bribe, he stuttered and wanted to know if the
question referred to him in his position as president.

The president obviously believed there was a difference between the entity
of "John Mahama" and that of "President John Mahama".

It should have been clear to President Mahama that the audience was
interested only in the entity called President Mahama.

He was being interviewed on the subject because he is president of Ghana.
We have no interest in his exploits as a Ringway Estate boy, nor in his
role as an employee of the Japanese Embassy in Accra.

We might be interested in how he performed as a member of parliament, a
minister of state and as a vice-president - but the question posed to him
in the interview unambiguously referred to him in his role as a public
officer, a man entrusted with power.
Sanitised

We can take it from the way the interview went that Mr Mahama has not taken
a bribe before and we will have to pursue questioning about the situation
with President Mahama.

The accepted definition of corruption involves the holding of public
office, and if the president wants to make a distinction between John
Mahama as a private entity and John Mahama as president, we should be
interested in his answer only in so far as it refers to his position of
entrusted power.
Nigeria's billions

   - Missing money ($bn) Government spending ($bn)




[image: Inline image 2]
Source: Nigeria government figures

The difficulty we have surely is the reluctance to call thievery in public
life by its proper name of stealing and calling it corruption instead. If
the world wants to deal with corruption, we should start by probably
abandoning the term corruption altogether.

Corruption simply does not carry the same odium as stealing or thievery.
The word has been sanitised.

And yet corruption is stealing, corruption is thievery done by public
officials - except the amounts involved are large and instead of
prosecutions, we deal with the phenomenon by holding conferences and
commissions of inquiry.

If Mr Cameron had been overheard saying Nigeria and Afghanistan have more
thieves, dishonest and fraudulent people than anywhere else in the world,
there would have been an almighty uproar and it would have taken some doing
to pacify Presidents Buhari
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-36265998> and Ghani
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-36275326>.

I suspect that if BBC interviewer Peter Okochwe had asked President Mahama
if he had ever stolen money, he would not have asked whether as president
or whatever other identity he thinks he has, and he would have received a
straightforward answer.

So let's call thieving by its proper name and stop beating about the bush.
Corruption is stealing.
Most corrupt countries in 2015

Rank Score out of 100
Somalia 167 8
North Korea 166 8
Afghanistan 165 11
Sudan 164 12
South Sudan 163 15
Angola 162 15
Libya 161 16
Iraq 160 16
Venezuela 159 17
Guinea-Bissau 158 17
------------------------------




-- 
Ann Marie

"The art of living consists of knowing what to pay attention to and what to
ignore."  -- Mardy Grothe

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