Russia fights corruption with booklet on bribes

By Staff
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MOSCOW, Sep 28 (Reuters) A 16-page booklet unveiled tells Russians what to do when faced with a corrupt official bent on extracting a back-hander.

''Over the past 10 years the number of bribes has increased by 10 times,'' said Andrei Przhezdomsky, the booklet's author and a member of Russia's Public Chamber, set up by President Vladimir Putin to improve links between government and society.

''If you don't oil the wheels you get nowhere,'' he added, reflecting on the everyday reality of life for millions of Russians forced to reach into their pockets to steer their way through officialdom.

Putin has made fighting corruption a key priority and analysts say privately that the crackdown on corruption and official privileges is emerging as a major issue ahead of the 2008 presidential elections.

The booklet says it is a citizen's moral obligation to report anyone asking for a bribe to police or security services and provides advice on what details to report. It also gives an example of the statement to fill out at the police station.

The publication adds that those facing corrupt officials can either end all discussion once a bribe is mentioned or hear the official out, carefully remembering and then recording the details of the demand.

CARS, FLATS AND FOOD It also warns readers that officials fishing for a back-hander often hide behind vague or complicated phrases.

The booklet begins with quotes from the Bible, the Prophet Mohammad and the Torah and then gives a detailed description of bribes, which it says range from money to shares, cars, flats, houses, cottages, plots of land and even food.

Traffic police rank among the most obvious bribe-takers and few Russians manage to get away after being stopped by a patrol car without parting with at least 100 roubles (3.73 dollar).

But at a higher level, millions of dollars are paid out to corrupt civil servants to get them simply to shift paperwork on a project from their in-tray to their out-tray.

''How can we break out of this vicious circle? We think that if we arm every citizen with knowledge of their rights and possible actions, it is an opportunity society must of course use. This booklet serves this,'' Przhezdomsky said yesterday.

The booklet has a first run of just 100,000 copies in a country of 142 million people.

Officials acknowledged the slender publication was a very modest first stab at tackling corruption.

''We must ask ourselves: do we live in a society where corruption is a moral perversity to the normal flow of things or is it the main part or even the spinal cord of the system of administrative management in the country?'' Human Rights Ombudsman Vladimir Lukin told reporters at the presentation.

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