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Scandal-hit Spain plummets 10 places in global corruption index

(Reuters) – Spain has slumped 10 places to a rank of 40 in a global index of perceived official corruption after a spate of scandals in its ruling center-right ruling party and the royal family, watchdog Transparency International (TI) said.

An anti-eviction activist holds an envelope in reference to the corruption case involving Former People’s Party treasurer Luis Barcenas during a protest in front of Madrid’s Town Hall August 23, 2013. REUTERS/Juan Medina

In its Corruption Perceptions Index for 2013, the anti-graft organization said Spain was the second biggest loser of points alongside Gambia, Mali, Guinea-Bissau and Libya. The only country to tumble further was Syria, rocked by civil war.

Spain’s five-year economic slump, which has forced it to adopt tight austerity laws, exposed how cozy relations between politicians and construction magnates fed a disastrous housing bubble.

The former treasurer of the governing People’s Party (PP) told a judge that he had channeled cash donations from construction magnates into leaders’ pockets, and he was found to have 48 million euros in Swiss bank accounts. The king’s son-in-law, Inaki Urdangarin, was also charged this year with embezzling six million euros in public funds.

What the economic crisis has done is allow more public debate about corruption … It is being exposed more and that affects perceptions. In Spain every sector – politics, the royal family and companies – was implicated in graft at a time when the country is really suffering,” said Anne Koch, TI’s director for European and Central Asia.

The scandals also highlighted a lack of accountability in political parties and even the watchdogs charged with keeping them clean. This prompted lawmakers to react to public outrage and draw up Spain’s first freedom of information law.

Spain had been the only European Union nation without a law guaranteeing citizens a right to information on how public funds are spent. Koch said the new law was still inadequate.

TI ranked 177 countries in 2013, placing New Zealand and Denmark joint first. The duo were also deemed the world’s least corrupt in 2012, alongside Finland. Somalia, North Korea and Afghanistan tied at last place, unchanged from last year.

NOBODY RESIGNS

The Berlin-based institute measures perceptions of graft rather than actual levels due to the secrecy that surrounds most corrupt dealings. It uses a scale where 100 stands for the most clean and 0 for the most corrupt. For a factbox on the index click on

Greece remained the European Union state with the highest perceived level of corruption, although its four-point gain to 40 points helped it rise to 80th place from 94th in 2012.

The biggest improver on points was Myanmar, which emerged from 49 years of military rule in 2011. The Southeast Asian state gained 6 points, taking it to 157 from a previous 172.

Among the major global economies, the United States ranked 19 and China 80, both unchanged from last year, Russia improved slightly to joint 127th place, from a previous 133 and Japan slid one spot to 18.

Allegations that leaders of Spain’s PP, including Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, took backhanders and the investigation into a member of the royal family are particularly damaging to Spain’s reputation as they involve such central institutions, according to Fernando Jimenez, lecturer in political sciences at Murcia University.

The problem in Spain is the political reaction … Very few people resign here, he said.

He contrasted the Madrid government’s slow response to the illegal financing scandal in the PP with Germany, where cabinet ministers stepped down after much less serious allegations that they had plagiarized their academic theses decades earlier.

(Additional reporting by Sarah Morris in Madrid; Editing by Stephen Brown/Mark Heinrich)

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