By Sarah Steingrüber

It was never a question of if, but when, and now here we are. What’s worse is that we were warned. We are in the midst of a major global pandemic with nations all over the world declaring national emergencies, health systems struggling to cope or bracing themselves for the onslaught, and ordinary people trying to make sense of a barrage of sometimes conflicting information. The World Health Organization and national governments around the world recognize that slowing the spread of the coronavirus (more accurately, the SARS-CoV-2 virus) and helping those who are already suffering—both physically and economically—will require swift and bold action.

Unfortunately, that urgency significantly increases the risk that the response to the coronavirus pandemic will unleash a wave of corruption, one that not only threatens to undermine the effectiveness of the response thus ensuring greater loss of life, but could persist much longer than the outbreak itself, debilitating health systems long term.

In emergency situations, when lives are at stake, it is all too easy to rationalize the subordination of concerns about things like accountability and transparency, and to disregard or ignore any anticorruption infrastructure that may currently be in place. It’s hard to focus on holding leaders accountable when government action is desperately needed to save lives. But ignoring the risks of abuse of power during a crisis would be a grave mistake, and in the context of the current coronavirus pandemic, at least three such risks are especially serious:

  • The first and most immediate risk is the corrupt diversion or outright theft of the resources that are being allocated to fight the pandemic. Examples from Ebola outbreak responses give us some sense of the risks to expect. In the case of the 2013-2016 Ebola crisis in West Africa, after-the-fact audits conducted by donors and humanitarian organizations found numerous serious violations of procurement rules, fraudulent documentation, failure to pay healthcare workers’ salaries and outright embezzlement. From the Red Cross alone, 5% of total disbursements was lost. And just days ago, the former Minister of Health in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and his financial advisor, were sentenced to five years in prison for misuse of funds allocated for their Ebola response of which $400K was personally embezzled. That’s bad enough, but the problem is likely to be much greater in the case of the coronavirus. The 2013-2016 Ebola outbreak was mostly confined to three countries, and the standard treatment for Ebola mostly involves products that are included as part of standard essential medicines lists and readily available (for rehydration, pain management, and co-infection). SARS-CoV-2 is less deadly but more contagious than Ebola, and it has also spread to nearly every country in the world; already more people have died in a three month period than in the nearly four years of the Ebola outbreak. In addition to standard support, the management for severe cases of Covid-19, the advanced disease caused by the virus, requires intensive care units equipped with proper ventilators, and the personnel with the skills to operate them. It is projected that at least 1% of all cases will need ventilators, 2% intensive care and 5% hospitalization. On its own a standard ventilator costs at least US$25,000. Countries and even private individuals are now scrambling to acquire these machines cutting corners and in some cases ignoring standard procurement procedures.
  • A second corruption risk relates to the behavior of the private sector. For example, research institutes and pharmaceutical companies are moving fast to find a treatment or vaccine. Already, Gilead Sciences was granted FDA “orphaned drug status” for an experimental drug to treat Covid-19, a label that comes with market exclusivity, tax breaks, and the waiving of regulatory fees. The company has since rescinded the orphaned drug status following outcry. Under normal circumstances the business practices of this industry are suspect, and it should be expected that other private companies will use this opportunity to enrich themselves at the expense of the public interest.
  • The third corruption risk is less direct but no less important. While responding to this sort of public health emergency may require governments to make use of extraordinary powers, we must be vigilant against the possibility that corrupt leaders will use this emergency as a pretext to eliminate potential checks on their power and undermine institutions that might hold them accountable. There are signs that this has already started to happen. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, for example, succeeded in pushing legislation through that appoints him to oversee the outbreak response and declares an indefinite state of emergency that can be revoked by parliament of which Orbán’s party constitutes two thirds; this has been described as an attempt at establishing an outright dictatorship. And Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, whose position is currently precarious due to pending corruption cases against him, has used the opportunity to incapacitate the Israeli parliament and the courts, which were supposed to start his corruption trial this month.

We are indeed facing a global heath emergency the likes of which we haven’t seen in a century. But the future integrity of our institutions cannot be sacrificed on the altar of swift response. Failure to buttress anticorruption institutions, civil society organizations, and anticorruption enforcement mechanisms guarantees further loss of life, depreciation in public trust, and dysfunction in society—dysfunction that will persist much longer than the crisis itself. We in the anticorruption community must raise our collective voices to ensure that our agenda is not ignored.


For more information on COVID-19, head to the Ministry of Health website.

This blog was originally published on the GAB | The Global Anticorruption Blog and was republished with permission.

Disclaimer: The ideas expressed in this article reflect the author’s views and not necessarily the views of The Big Q. 

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