Taiwan gov't touts corruption conviction rate

The Taiwan government touted its record of convictions of corrupt public servants, arguing that the success in bringing them to justice proves that President Ma Ying-jeou's government is tougher on corruption than his Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) predecessor. The Ministry of Justice statistics indicate that from the time the DPP's Chen Shui-bian took office in 2000 until August of this year, there have been 7,138 indictments of corrupt officials targeting more than 20,000 individuals, with a conviction rate of 62.1 percent.

Read the story by Tsai Pei-chih and Elizabeth Hsu in Focus Taiwan.

Popular posts from this blog

The Pacific - Nepal - Eastern Europe & Central Asia

Middle East & North Africa - Ukraine - Sri Lanka

Global - Sub-Saharan Africa - Turkey & Syria