Cuban's Diaz-Canel calls on countrymen to fight corruption

Miguel-Diaz-Canel

Díaz-Canel

Díaz-Canel

President Miguel Diaz-Canel of Cuba has called on his countrymen to fight corruption and crimes in the country.

In his closing speech at the ordinary session of the National Assembly of People’s Power, Diaz-Canel said that “fighting corruption is not only a task of the government and the police force, but a mission for the whole society.”

The president insisted that the “unity” of citizens would be the main tool against corruption in the
island nation.

Cuban authorities consider corruption as a major threat to the country, with the potential to undermine its socialist ideology to a greater degree than the current financial crisis.

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The Office of the Comptroller General reported in May that a national audit of 361 state-owned entities had discovered economic damage worth over one billion U.S. dollars.

The office added that 1,251 people had been sanctioned as a result.

“There will be no impunity for the offenders,” Comptroller General of Cuba Gladys Bejerano
told newsmen.

The office was founded by former President Raul Castro in 2009 to bolster anti-corruption measures,
especially in the state-run entrepreneurial sector.

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