Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has said all ministries, agencies and
localities must consider corruption prevention and detection their
central, regular and uninterrupted task.
PM Dung,
who is also Head of the Central Steering Committee for Anti-Corruption,
made the emphasis while chairing the committee’s 17 th session in
Hanoi on April 25.
“Together with the strict,
open and transparent settlement of corruption-related cases, all
ministries and localities should focus on corruption detection and
prevention, especially inspection and supervision work,” he said.
He also stressed the need to effectively implement anti-corruption
measures through the building and completion of institutions, as well as
raising the responsibilities of leaders, the role of Party cells and
each Party member in preventing and combating corruption.
It is necessary to seriously implement regulations on openness and
transparency in the operations of agencies and organisations while
strengthening supervision mechanisms of people and socio-political
organisations for the fight against corruption, waste and negative
cases, he added.
The PM also noted that authorised
agencies should continue popularisation and education on the corruption
fight as well as speed up the settlement of corruption cases,
especially serious and complex cases.
A draft
report on corruption prevention results in the first quarter and an
orientation and tasks for the second quarter of 2012 delivered at the
session showed that the fight against corruption in Vietnam has seen
positive developments, with openness and transparency in the operation
of agencies and organisations, the assets and incomes of civil servants,
as well as the creation of codes of conduct and professional ethics.
The Government Inspectorate reviewed five years of implementing the
Anti-Corruption Law and the first stage of the National Strategy on
Anti-Corruption.
In the first quarter of this year, inspections detected wrong spendings with a total sum of over 32 trillion VND.
In the period, cities and provinces nationwide concluded 310 inspections in economic and social fields.
The country took proceedings in 55 cases and prosecuted 67 cases
relating to corruption, representing year-on-year respective increases
of 12 percent and 34 percent.
In the second
quarter of this year, the Central Steering Committee for Anti-Corruption
will speed up the implementation of Project 137 on putting corruption
prevention on training programmes as well as urgently issue documents
guiding the use of the anti-corruption reward fund, in order to timely
commend and reward people with outstanding achievements in detecting and
denouncing corruption cases.
The committee will
focus on steering the discovery, inspection, prosecution and judgement
of corruption cases, especially serious and complex cases.-VNA