Monday, 31 October 2016

Sierra Leone Scores Least In Criminal Justice And Corruption, But Highest In Rights, Order And Security: Report Claims


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The World Justice Project on the Rule of Law Index has ranked Sierra Leone 95 out of 113 countries, a  three place rise from last year. Sierra Leone ranks 12 out of 18 countries in Africa scoring 0.45.




World Justice Project's sixth annual report on countries around the world was released on 20 October and is based on perceptions of the general public and in-country experts. It puts Sierra Leone ahead of Nigeria, Cameroun, Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia, but the country lags behind Liberia (94), Cote D’Ivoire (87) and Burkina Faso (79). 
Ranked 43, South Africa tops the continent on 0.59. It is followed by Ghana (44), Botswana (45), Senegal (46), Malawi (69) and Burkina Faso (79). 

The report says Sierra Leone’s best area of performance(0.66 - with 1.0 being the maximum) is in the area of order and security, and 0.57 in that of fundamental rights
adherence. The former ranks countries largely based on the presence of armed or civil conflict, crime and violent redress.
Sierra Leone however scored its lowest in corruption (0.30) and criminal justice (0.40). Corruption is perceived to be most prevalent in Parliament, followed by the security forces, judiciary and the executive, says the report.
The report warns that “effective rule of law reduces corruption, combats poverty and disease, and protects people from injustices large and small”. That, it goes on to say, “is the foundation for communities of peace, opportunity, and equity – underpinning development, accountable government, and respect for fundamental rights”.

The 194-page report on the whole looks at eight benchmarks: constraints on government powers, corruption, open government, fundamental rights, order and security, regulatory enforcement, civil justice, and criminal justice. It also includes informal justice, but that does not make up the aggregted scores and rankings. 
Edited  from Politico



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