Myanmar’s opening up hasn’t loosened graft in courts
[Facilitator’s note: Thank you to Shervin Majlessi, Regional Anti-Corruption Adviser, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Regional Office for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, Thailand, for sharing this information.]
"Lawyers in Myanmar are well accustomed to paying out a stream of bribes to clerks and judges as part of a widely acknowledged culture of graft. But when word spread last year about a judge’s wife demanding $150,000 for a favorable decision, even the most jaded lawyers took notice."
Read the story by Thomas Fuller in International New York Times.
"Lawyers in Myanmar are well accustomed to paying out a stream of bribes to clerks and judges as part of a widely acknowledged culture of graft. But when word spread last year about a judge’s wife demanding $150,000 for a favorable decision, even the most jaded lawyers took notice."
Read the story by Thomas Fuller in International New York Times.