Pakistan's 'Integrity Idol' hunts for honest bureaucrats

AFP

ISLAMABAD -- A reality TV show called "Integrity Idol" aims to tackle the scourge of corruption in Pakistan by highlighting some of the country's honest bureaucrats.

A Punjab Province official who cracked down on bribery in his district linked to land registration came out tops in the show's finale Wednesday (January 25), AFP reported.

Members of the public initially nominated some 300 government employees who were subsequently whittled down to five by a panel of official law enforcement experts who performed background checks.

"I told all of the inhabitants of the area that if any land registration official asks for even Rs. 1, you call me or send a message," winner Rai Manzoor Husain Nasir told AFP.

Nasir, who sacked 30 corrupt officials, gained almost 7,000 of the more than 20,000 votes cast online and by text to take the title of "Integrity Idol" at Wednesday's award ceremony, which was attended by leading politicians.

He also won praise for not using government perks, such as his petrol allowance, on non-official travel.

Nasir's back story, as well as those of the other four finalists, was broadcast nationally in mini-documentary form on the popular Geo News network.

Others included Fida Hussain, a lab assistant from a government school in northwest Mardan city who is revered as a student mentor, and Farrukh Attique, who brought in new transparency measures in his district in southwestern Balochistan.

Blair Glencorse, head of the US-based non-profit Accountability Lab -- which organised "Integrity Idol" -- said the organisation hoped to replicate its success in Nepal, where the first winner had gone on to become something of a celebrity and key advisor to the government on graft.

"It's about changing mindsets, celebrating integrity and really helping people push for the change that they want to see," he said.

There is, however, a long way to go.

Bribery and other forms of graft are endemic in Pakistan, with the country coming in 116th place out of 176 countries ordered from least to most corrupt by Transparency International.

The performance is a slight improvement on last year, when it ranked 117th.

Meher Un Nisa Soomro, a communications official from Sindh Province and another finalist, said it was important to change perceptions of public servants.

"Mostly there is a negative image of the government sector -- they are relaxing and they're not working," she said.

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