Transparency International Hungary: More civil control over public procurement would reduce graft

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Budapest, June 11 (MTI) – More control by civil groups over public procurement would increase transparency around the utilisation of community funds, and reduce the cost of projects and corruption, the head of Transparency International Hungary said on Thursday.
TI has repeatedly warned about the risk of corruption involved in the rules and implementation of Hungary’s public procurement processes, Jozsef Peter Martin said, referring to the European Union’s 2015 Hungary report, which said that a lack of competition and transparency was especially worrying.
The European Commission has requested the Hungarian government to participate in a pilot project involving civil supervision of EU-financed projects. This pilot would offer a good opportunity to demonstrate that “public procurement can be completed without corruption”, Martin said.
Zoltan Keri, department head at the cabinet office, said that by now public procurement has “nearly become a swear word” suggesting “graft, underhand practices, theft”, even if there exists public procurement without corruption. He added that it is a “sober, common interest” that public funds should be legitimately disbursed and those monies should really serve development.





