Thursday, December 9, 2010 - 1:02 AM

To mark "International Anti-Corruption Day" on Dec. 9, Secretary Clinton released a statement yesterday in which she said, "Corruption stunts economic growth, damages confidence in democracy, and fosters a culture of graft and impunity that undermines the ability to operate in our interconnected world. Every country has a role to play as we work to advance our collective anticorruption agenda and institutionalize the highest standards of transparency."
The complete statement:
On behalf of President Obama and the people of the United States, I join with our partners around the world to recognize December 9 as International Anti-Corruption Day. As we continue our common fight against corruption and recommit ourselves to the work ahead, we also recognize the significant achievements of the past year.
Last month, G20 Leaders adopted a landmark Anti-Corruption Action Plan to promote an open, rules-based environment worldwide. Implementing this plan will require cooperative efforts among our G20 partners, the private sector, and civil society organizations. The participation of emerging G20 economies is particularly important as they lay the foundation for generations of sustainable growth and prosperity.
The United States has made unprecedented strides over the past year to enforce our anticorruption laws and ensure our companies do not practice bribery or unfair practices in countries where they operate. This year, the States Parties of the United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNCAC) also launched a process to review implementation of the treaty. The United States is proud to be among the first nations to undergo a peer review, and we look forward to working with our partners in the UNCAC process to translate this global commitment to root out corruption from promise to practice.
Corruption stunts economic growth, damages confidence in democracy, and fosters a culture of graft and impunity that undermines the ability to operate in our interconnected world. Every country has a role to play as we work to advance our collective anticorruption agenda and institutionalize the highest standards of transparency. Together, we can ensure the integrity of our markets, improve our government institutions, and increase opportunity and prosperity for all our citizens.
SIA KAMBOU/AFP/Getty Images
Thursday, August 13, 2009 - 5:13 PM
Secretary Clinton took on corruption in Nigeria yesterday, saying that Nigeria had the potential to become a G-20 country, "but -- a big but -- the corruption reputation … it is a problem."
Clinton also took on Nigeria's "flawed electoral system." (Foreign Policy named the "comically flawed" 2007 election of President Umaru Yar'Adua -- with hands raised in the photo above -- as one of the world's ugliest elections.) In an invitation-only town-hall meeting that included democracy activists, business leaders, and state governors, she drew a big laugh when she said, "I know a little bit about running in elections, and I have won some elections and I have lost some elections. And in a democracy there have to be winners and losers."
Referring to her home country, Clinton went on to say: "Our democracy is still evolving. You know we've had all kinds of problems in some of our past elections, as you might remember. In 2000, our presidential election came down to one state where the brother of the man running for president was the governor of the state, so we have our problems, too."
U.S. conservatives pounced on those words. A spokesman for former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, brother of former President George W. Bush, referred to them as "ill-advised comments," in an ABC News report. Meanwhile, The Guardian called it a "gaffe."
As usual, the State Department's P.J. Crowley clarified in order to calm the right-wing hysteria: "The point she is making is that it's about a disputed result and then the willingness of the candidates to accept a flawed result rather than, say, resort to violence."
Photo: EMMANUEL WOLE/AFP/Getty Images