Transparency International Pakistan says report does not reflect increase in corruption.

ISLAMABAD -- The Transparency International Pakistan issued a clarification on Sunday about its recent report, stating that it did not reflect that corruption had increased or decreased in Pakistan. The response comes a few days after the government criticised the NGO and raised question marks over its credibility.

TI Pakistan Chairman Sohail Muzaffar issued a press release in which he said that Pakistan's decline in the overall score in the report does not mean that corruption has seen a rise in the country.

"Lowering of Pakistan Score by one does not reflect any increase or decrease in corruption as it is within the standard margin of error which is 2.46% , and is the case of score lowered from 88 to 87 for Denmark, which is least corrupt country in 2018 as well as 2019," read the report.

The press release said certain channels, newspapers and politicians had misreported the Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) report "to damage the reputation of Pakistan".

The press release said that the media had not taken data from the Bertelsmann Stiftung Transformation Index 2020 instead it quoted the data from the CPI 2018 index. The NGO's chairman rejected reports that it had claimed Musharraf's government was the most corrupt and the Nawaz Sharif one was the cleanest.

"Reality is that CPI 2019 has not given any such rating for Pakistan, nor for any other country. TI does not have its own data input in CPI, and TI Pakistan has not role in...

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