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| Somalia's President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed came into office in 2017 vowing to combat corruption which permeates evert aspect of life (AFP Photo/Michele Spatari) |
Mogadishu (AFP) - Somalia's President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed on Saturday signed an anti-graft bill into law, a long-awaited piece of legislation in one of the world's most corrupt nations.
The
president, better known by his nickname Farmajo, came into office in 2017
vowing to combat the scourge which permeates evert aspect of life.
The new law
will pave the way for the formation of independent anti-corruption commissions
both on the federal and regional level, according to a statement from the
president's office.
"Corruption
is worse than cancer because cancer kills only the individual, but corruption
kills the whole society. I hope those who will be selected to be members of the
committees will be decent, religious and patriotic," the president said in
a statement released Saturday after the signature.
In 2018,
Somalia fell in last place in Transparency International's perception of
corruption index, and graft has hampered efforts to rebuild the nation after
decades of chaos including civil war and an Islamist insurgency.
Farmajo's
government is keen to improve its image and win the confidence of the
International Monetary Fund and World Bank in a bid to secure formal debt
relief.
"Good
governance is the responsibility of the government and we are mandated to
improve the different levels of the government. It is true that all cannot be
corrected at once since the country was in chaos for so long, and that chaos
created bad cultures in our society."

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