The spokesman of the Islamic Emirate said that Afghanistan is a corruption-free country in response to the new report of the Transparency International Organization that Afghanistan has fallen to 162nd place by 20 points in the 2023 anti-corruption index.
Since the Islamic Emirate return to power, administrative corruption has been eliminated and transparency ensured in government offices. Deputy Prime Minister for Administrative Affairs said.
Transparency International Organization has published a report based on which the Islamic Emirate has been successful in fighting corruption compared to the previous government. According to this report, Afghanistan is ranked 150th in this organization's list with 24 points.
Knowledgeable people, experts and political and social activists by participating in the big conference "Afghanistan; Achievements and Capacities, Challenges and Solutions" in Kabul stated: Establishing a uniform Islamic narrative in all government structures, fighting against Takfir, Salafism and Wahhabism and fighting moral, administrative, political,...
Afghanistan will need vast amounts of foreign funding to keep its government afloat through 2024, a US agency said yesterday, even as foreign donors are increasingly angry over the cost of debilitating corruption and the US seeks a peace deal with Taliban to withdraw its troops from the country.
The Afghan government has made progress in meeting anti-corruption benchmarks but “serious challenges remain to fighting corruption — resource shortfalls, impunity of powerful individuals, declining activity at corruption courts,” said John F. Sopko, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, in a new report released on Thursday.
A young Afghan soccer fan who shot to fame after he was photographed in a Messi shirt made from a plastic bag has been forced to flee with his family to the capital after criminal gangs and the Taliban threatened to kill or kidnap him, his mother said Friday.
The cases of five ministers sent to the attorney general office are under prosecution, said the anti-corruption special secretariat, without identifying them or providing details if they were members of the current cabinet. It also refused to disclose the crimes of these ministers.