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Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia - Ethiomedia

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224 <strong>Diagnos<strong>in</strong>g</strong> <strong>Corruption</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Ethiopia</strong><br />

of the other examples, this could not be checked, but it does fit with<br />

another common belief that woreda judges, because they are less experienced,<br />

younger, and more susceptible to executive <strong>in</strong>terference, are<br />

among the most problematic. Earlier studies did report that local<br />

(woreda) adm<strong>in</strong>istrators seemed to regard judges as virtual executive staff<br />

(World Bank 2004a; NJI 2008).<br />

If civil cases are the most susceptible to corruption, the forms taken<br />

do not appear to be terribly complicated. Many of the possible corruption<br />

sites listed <strong>in</strong> table 5.4 seem unnecessary <strong>in</strong> the <strong>Ethiopia</strong>n context<br />

where, if corruption occurs, it is most likely to be the purchase of a<br />

judgment or some f<strong>in</strong>agl<strong>in</strong>g of the execution process (where the federal<br />

courts admit there are still problems but largely with nonjudicial<br />

experts and enforcement agents, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g those runn<strong>in</strong>g auctions).<br />

Two former sites—staff’s misplacement of files and excessive and<br />

lengthy adjournments—have become less feasible because of new judicial<br />

policies, but it still may be possible for staff to collect fees for<br />

perform<strong>in</strong>g other regular duties. 23<br />

Compared with other countries with<strong>in</strong> and outside the region, where<br />

<strong>in</strong>formants could state the price for a judgment at different levels, it<br />

appears that, whatever its <strong>in</strong>cidence, corruption <strong>in</strong> the civil justice process<br />

is less common <strong>in</strong> <strong>Ethiopia</strong>. In some sense, this is also the bad news<br />

because sporadic corruption is more difficult to combat than the more<br />

systemic and systematic type. The courts, hav<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>troduced practices to<br />

combat the more <strong>in</strong>stitutionalized vices, are now faced with combat<strong>in</strong>g<br />

corruption as they would ord<strong>in</strong>ary, unorganized crim<strong>in</strong>al actions—and<br />

do<strong>in</strong>g so without revers<strong>in</strong>g their simultaneous efforts to make judges<br />

more <strong>in</strong>dependent and less fearful of political <strong>in</strong>terventions.<br />

Conclusions on Justice Sector <strong>Corruption</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Ethiopia</strong><br />

Compared with other regional and nonregional examples (the Lat<strong>in</strong><br />

American countries cited previously for comparison), <strong>Ethiopia</strong>’s justice<br />

sector, if not corruption-free, is hardly a worst-case scenario. In terms of<br />

frequency, police may be the worst offenders, but we are largely talk<strong>in</strong>g<br />

about relatively petty corruption perpetrated by <strong>in</strong>dividuals <strong>in</strong> response<br />

to monetary offers, ties of friendship or k<strong>in</strong>ship, or occasionally political<br />

<strong>in</strong>fluence (<strong>in</strong> cases where an ally or enemy of political authorities is<br />

<strong>in</strong>volved). 24 Some of the most egregious practices identified <strong>in</strong> the most<br />

corrupt countries (for example, police <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> crim<strong>in</strong>al activities,<br />

their availability as thugs-for-hire, or their regular receipt of protection

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