WORLD / EUROPE
More Europeans turn to fraud
COVID-19 crisis worsened corruption in EU: watchdog
Published: Jun 15, 2021 07:08 PM
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen attends a press conference in Brussels, Belgium, on Feb. 17, 2021. The European Union (EU) on Wednesday stepped up its efforts to detect and fight COVID-19 variants by bringing together various stakeholders to develop new and adapted vaccines. Photo: Xinhua

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen attends a press conference in Brussels, Belgium, on Feb. 17, 2021. The European Union (EU) on Wednesday stepped up its efforts to detect and fight COVID-19 variants by bringing together various stakeholders to develop new and adapted vaccines. Photo: Xinhua

The pandemic has worsened corruption across the European Union (EU), Transparency International said Tuesday, with citizens at times needing personal connections to get medical care and some governments using the crisis for their own gain.

The anti-graft watchdog surveyed more than 40,000 people in the EU's 27 member states between October and December 2020.

On average, it found that 29 percent had relied on favors or well-connected friends and family to access public sector health services in 2020. 

Six percent of respondents resorted to paying an outright bribe.

"Healthcare, in particular, has been a corruption hotspot as governments struggled to manage the COVID-19 pandemic," Transparency said in its annual report of people's experiences and perceptions of graft in the EU.

Bribery rates in the health sector were highest in Romania (22 percent) and Bulgaria (19 percent), while leaning on personal connections happened most often in the Czech Republic (54 percent) and Portugal (46 percent). 

Many respondents also said their governments weren't handling the pandemic in a transparent manner.

In France, Poland and Spain, 60 percent of respondents or more felt that way.

Transparency International called the findings "particularly worrying in the current context."

"Not only are COVID-19 sufferers in need of medical support, but governments across the EU are rolling out vaccinations to protect those most vulnerable to the virus and are creating plans to allocate billions of euros for post-pandemic recovery," said the watchdog.

The report's authors singled out Hungary and Poland as countries using the crisis as "an excuse to undermine democracy" by imposing regulations that weaken democratic institutions. 

Other politicians saw it as a "chance to make a profit," they said, pointing to lobbying for face-mask procurement and lobbying scandals that have ensnared several German lawmakers.

Looking beyond the health crisis, the survey found that a third of EU residents think corruption as a whole is getting worse in their country, although there were huge regional differences. 

AFP