Wednesday, May 27, 2009

-Iraq's Commission on Public Integrity has announced that it is issuing approximately 1,000 arrest-warrants for government officials on corruption-related offenses. This massive purge is said to include upwards of 53 senior officials (director-general level or above), and is largely centered around the Ministry of Trade. The trade minister, Abdul Falah Sudani, resigned on Monday ahead of a no-confidence vote in parliament. Obviously, warrants and investigations are far easier to announce than actual convictions, particularly of high-ranking officials. But I find this announcement stunning on two levels: for one, its sheer scale is incredible. Never mind the anti-corruption records of (post-sectarian conflict) developing countries; in what developed country can you find such broad accountability in government? Britain is the only country that comes to mind in recent years, and even there the current expenses scandal is defined by public shame and resignation, rather than actual corruption charges (remember, MPs never actually "broke the law"). Second, the Ministry of Trade is dominated by the Dalawi faction of Prime Minister Nuri al-Malaki; the Iraqi PM is leading a massive anti-corruption investigation centered on his own political fiefdom. That is perhaps the most remarkable aspect of all.

-How concerned should we be that Russia is currently preparing for nuclear conflict on the Korean peninsula?

-Hizbollah is reportedly in talks with both the IMF and EU to safeguard Lebanon's external funding in the event of an election victory by the Shia group on June 7.

-The Economist examines the Obama Administration's first climate-change bill.

-The next big foreign target of Chinese investors is...LeBron James?

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