Corruption Hits The Most Vulnerable Hardest - UN Chief

Corruption hits the most vulnerable hardest - UN chief

Underscoring the need to fight corruption, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called global leaders to set positive examples and restore faith in good governance

UNITED NATIONS,(APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 07th Nov, 2017 ) :Underscoring the need to fight corruption, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called global leaders to set positive examples and restore faith in good governance.

"Although corruption can strike anywhere, I have seen how it hits the poor, the weak, and the most vulnerable," the secretary-general said in remarks delivered by Yury Fedotov, the Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), at opening of the Seventh Session of the Conference of the States Parties (CoSP7) to the UN Convention against Corruption (UNCAC) in Vienna, Austria.

"It can deny people access to health services, schools and economic opportunities," the UN chief, stressing that "corruption obliterates people's faith in good governance". As such, Guterres called on leaders of all kinds� government, corporate, religious and cultural to lead by example and prove themselves trustworthy, to restore peoples faith.

"The United Nations is ready to support all efforts to create a culture of integrity and the rule of law. But we need the full engagement and support of the business and financial communities," he said.

"We need civil society to continue its valuable work. Most of all, we need young people to engage and to change minds and practices so that the corruption of today plays no role in the future." Delivering his own opening address, Fedotov said the biennial Conference is dedicated to combatting corruption and "strengthening the fight against crimes enabled by corruption and to protect lives.

" He underscored the UNCAC, the UN treaty of 183 States Parties, as a remarkable universal, legally binding instrument to fight corruption, promote accountability and support progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).� UNODC will launch an updated State of UNCAC Implementation Report, both demonstrating the progress made by the review mechanism, and presenting remaining challenges and existing good practices in anti-corruption.

As guardian of the Convention and Secretariat to this Conference, UNODC continues to provide practical support here at headquarters and on the ground through our field presence,� Fedotov said.

Moreover, UNODC is working with other international agencies to tackle corruption in wildlife crime, sports, and violent extremism. This session will take important decisions on the Implementation Review Mechanism, as well as consider resolutions addressing a number of critical areas of anti-corruption work,� Fedotov said.

Over 1,600 participants are attending the week-long COSP7, with about 45 side events and exhibitions will be held on the margins of the conference to promote discussion on anti-corruption activities.

The Convention, adopted in 2003, covers five main areas: prevention, criminalization and law enforcement measures, international cooperation, asset recovery, and technical assistance and information exchange.