Home Politics PF ACC AND TI-Z PRE-LAUNCH THE 2024 ZAMBIA BRIBE PAYERS INDEX SURVEY

ACC AND TI-Z PRE-LAUNCH THE 2024 ZAMBIA BRIBE PAYERS INDEX SURVEY

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ACC AND TI-Z PRE-LAUNCH THE 2024 ZAMBIA BRIBE PAYERS INDEX SURVEY

The Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) and Transparency International Zambia (TI-Z) last week Friday, officially launched the 2024 Zambia Bribe Payers Index (ZBPI) Survey, under the theme “Corruption in the Decentralization Process with a Focus on CDF Implementation.”

Speaking at the launch, ACC Acting Director General Mrs. Monica Chipanta Mwansa highlighted the importance of research in shaping evidence-based anti-corruption strategies. She affirmed the Commission’s readiness to collaborate with stakeholders to generate empirical data that supports the fight against corruption across all sectors.

Mrs. Mwansa underscored the critical role of the ZBPI survey in assessing the prevalence of bribery in public institutions and evaluating the effectiveness of anti-corruption interventions. “This year’s survey will focus on corruption within the implementation of the Constituency Development Fund (CDF) program, investigating issues such as bribery, transparency, and community participation in selected constituencies nationwide.”

The acting DG called upon all stakeholders, including the general public, to support the survey by cooperating with research assistants collecting data across 20 districts.

And speaking at the same venue, TI-Z Executive Director Mr. Maurice Nyambe reiterated the longstanding partnership between TI-Z and the ACC in combating corruption. He described the ZBPI as a vital tool for measuring bribery and public perceptions of governance in Zambia. “The 2024 survey, will gather data from 2,000 respondents across all ten provinces. The findings will be instrumental in developing targeted anti-corruption interventions and promoting transparency and accountability,” He said.

The ZBPI is a corruption measurement tool that measures the probability and extent of bribery behavior in public and private sector service provision and indicates the public’s perceptual and experiential observations of governance, stakeholder anti-corruption actions, and the state of bribery in the country.

The Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) and Transparency International Zambia (TI-Z) last week Friday, officially launched the 2024 Zambia Bribe Payers Index (ZBPI) Survey, under the theme “Corruption in the Decentralization Process with a Focus on CDF Implementation.”

Speaking at the launch, ACC Acting Director General Mrs. Monica Chipanta Mwansa highlighted the importance of research in shaping evidence-based anti-corruption strategies. She affirmed the Commission’s readiness to collaborate with stakeholders to generate empirical data that supports the fight against corruption across all sectors.

Mrs. Mwansa underscored the critical role of the ZBPI survey in assessing the prevalence of bribery in public institutions and evaluating the effectiveness of anti-corruption interventions. “This year’s survey will focus on corruption within the implementation of the Constituency Development Fund (CDF) program, investigating issues such as bribery, transparency, and community participation in selected constituencies nationwide.”

The acting DG called upon all stakeholders, including the general public, to support the survey by cooperating with research assistants collecting data across 20 districts.

And speaking at the same venue, TI-Z Executive Director Mr. Maurice Nyambe reiterated the longstanding partnership between TI-Z and the ACC in combating corruption. He described the ZBPI as a vital tool for measuring bribery and public perceptions of governance in Zambia. “The 2024 survey, will gather data from 2,000 respondents across all ten provinces. The findings will be instrumental in developing targeted anti-corruption interventions and promoting transparency and accountability,” He said.

The ZBPI is a corruption measurement tool that measures the probability and extent of bribery behavior in public and private sector service provision and indicates the public’s perceptual and experiential observations of governance, stakeholder anti-corruption actions, and the state of bribery in the country.

ACC AND TI-Z PRE-LAUNCH THE 2024 ZAMBIA BRIBE PAYERS INDEX SURVEY

The Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) and Transparency International Zambia (TI-Z) last week Friday, officially launched the 2024 Zambia Bribe Payers Index (ZBPI) Survey, under the theme “Corruption in the Decentralization Process with a Focus on CDF Implementation.”

Speaking at the launch, ACC Acting Director General Mrs. Monica Chipanta Mwansa highlighted the importance of research in shaping evidence-based anti-corruption strategies. She affirmed the Commission’s readiness to collaborate with stakeholders to generate empirical data that supports the fight against corruption across all sectors.

Mrs. Mwansa underscored the critical role of the ZBPI survey in assessing the prevalence of bribery in public institutions and evaluating the effectiveness of anti-corruption interventions. “This year’s survey will focus on corruption within the implementation of the Constituency Development Fund (CDF) program, investigating issues such as bribery, transparency, and community participation in selected constituencies nationwide.”

The acting DG called upon all stakeholders, including the general public, to support the survey by cooperating with research assistants collecting data across 20 districts.

And speaking at the same venue, TI-Z Executive Director Mr. Maurice Nyambe reiterated the longstanding partnership between TI-Z and the ACC in combating corruption. He described the ZBPI as a vital tool for measuring bribery and public perceptions of governance in Zambia. “The 2024 survey, will gather data from 2,000 respondents across all ten provinces. The findings will be instrumental in developing targeted anti-corruption interventions and promoting transparency and accountability,” He said.

The ZBPI is a corruption measurement tool that measures the probability and extent of bribery behavior in public and private sector service provision and indicates the public’s perceptual and experiential observations of governance, stakeholder anti-corruption actions, and the state of bribery in the country.

1 COMMENT

  1. This shop talking that bears no fruit. Workshops where you collect allowances and chit chat and like Sausande “file it” on and resolutions.
    You have OP on the ground. Your agents at ACC are there. It doesnt take a genius to know and see CDF money is being lost by collusion. All this shoptalking is not the solution

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