Upper House lashes out at civil servants following complaints

By PETER AUNG
Published: 8 February 2013
parliament
Burma's Parliament, Naypyidaw. (DVB)

The Upper House’s Public Complaints and Appeals Committee announced that punishments have been handed out to more than 17,000 civil servants.

During the Parliament’s Upper House session on Tuesday, the committee’s chairperson Aung Nyein read out a report concerning an investigation that looked at complaints that were filed against civil servants since the country’s new government took the reigns of power in April 2011.

The statement said 15,723 government workers and 1,229 Home Affairs Ministry personnel, including 689 police officers, have been disciplined in the wake of official complaints filed by the public.

Punishments varied from formal reprimands to salary cuts to delaying potential promotions, while others were handed jail time.

Min Oo, Upper House representative and member in the Public Complaints and Appeals Committee, said the parliamentary body is not satisfied as the government has only dealt with about one-fifth of the complaints filed.

“According to the report, the government has only responded to 104 of the 529 cases we passed on so that’s only about 19.66 percent of the overall cases and not very satisfactory,” said Min Oo.

“There are still 425 cases left to respond to.”

Under President Thein Sein’s quasi-civilian government, the notoriously corrupt country appears to be making moves to shed its kleptocratic image.

In late January, the government launched a probe into alleged corruption in the Ministry of Communication and Information Technology. The government is investigating the conduct of eight officials from the ministry who are set to go on trial soon, including the former minister Thein Tun.

Ye Htut, presidential spokesperson and deputy-information minister, said the Office of the Auditor General, following an inquiry into the ministry, filed complaints with the Ministry of Home Affairs against personnel suspected of partaking in corruption.

According to the state press, Thein Tun resigned in January on his own accord.

In early January, President Thein Sein announced the formation of a committee to tackle corruption in the country’s myriad government bodies.

The nine-member committee, which is being led by Vice-President Dr Sai Mauk Kham, will coordinate efforts to eliminate bribery and promote good governance, according to a report in The New Light of Myanmar.

Burma is currently ranked 172 out of 176 countries measured in Transparency International’s 2012 corruption perception index.

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Author:              Category: News, Politics

Comments


  1. anti-colonist says:

    Now members of Burmese diplomatic missions, especially those with power to renew or issue Burmese passport, abroad must be shaking in their boots. They always demanded ‘tea money’ , as extortion, from hardworking Burmese migrants. the sum is around $360. Unless the applicant paid the extortion money, they delayed or refuse renewal or issue of passports.
    that had been going on for years. The media and political activists attributed this ugly practice to the Burmese government, not understanding that the corrupt were the civil servants. All the ills of the government employees were heaped on the government. that was wrong, we had been told by Crown Prince Shwebomin, who openly supports the Parliament, President U Thein Sein and his cabinet.
    civil Service corruption in Burma had existed since the days of independence. The civilian government of U Nu- very close friend of U Thaw (ICS of Monywa),granduncle of Crown Prince Shwebomin- could not stop the systemic corruption 1948-1958.
    This civil service corruption was replaced with outright robbery at gunpoint but the soldiers of Ne Win (ShuMaung, according to Crown Prince Shwebomin)

  2. Bamar says:

    Corruption is the cancer of the country. We have to stop this asap and punish those crooked thieves and croonies (croonism of same category like corruption) if we want our country to prosper.

  3. anti-colonist says:

    Bamar Myanmar all the same. Not an issue. Corruption serious issue. Theft comes in many guises. Oligarchy is theft. Has the Lady (Lackey) become a crony? Think about it. For all the pretensions of saintliness Buddhist stoicism ( that all good people of Burma understand and practise) the ultimate aim is power. without considering the welfare of the poor.
    Just laws must be made. And enforced to get rid of corruption and unfair competition.
    Be warned about the linkages of politics and business: NLD and people of Tay Za.
    It was the military elite with Tay Za. Now The Woman and Tay Za.

    Burmese must unite for justice, unity and nobility.
    To be Burmese is to be kind, generous, friendly, moral and polite.

    That we have been told by the Crown Prince Shwebomin.
    Anyone to to pull Burmese people and their personification – the Crown Prince – down?
    Go ahead!





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