(April 9, 2007) Paul Wolfowitz claims he acted on the advice of the Board’s Ethics Committee to work out an agreement that balanced the interests of the institution and the rights of Shaha Riza in an “exceptional and unprecedented situation.” World Bank
External assignment of Shaha Riza
(April 1, 2007) World Bank documents regarding an alleged conflict of interest on the part of World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz in relation to Shaha Riza, a former staff member and personal companion […]
Bank Information Center
(April 1, 2007) An independent multilateral bank watchdog presents its monitor of news and opinion on the Paul Wolfowitz debate.
World Bank anti-corruption drive blunted as China threatens to halt loans
(March 27, 2007) China, the World Bank’s second-biggest customer, warned that it might halt future borrowings if Paul Wolfowitz did not rein in the Bank’s anti-corruption investigative practices.
Beware the big, bland wolf
(June 5, 2006) The first year of Paul Wolfowitz at the World Bank.
Wolfowitz’s ‘saber rattling’ against corruption raises eyebrows
(May 13, 2006) Chad, India, Kenya and Congo have all felt the sting of the cuts aimed at demonstrating how serious World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz is about fighting corruption.
Wolfowitz’s new comb
(May 11, 2006) Is the spit and comb guy from Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 using corruption as a smoke screen to stall debt relief?
World Bank’s war on corruption
(March 7, 2006) "Corruption is the biggest threat to democracy since communism," says World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz, who plans to make reducing graft in the countries where the bank does business a priority.
Paul Wolfowitz’s statement to the Media Centre in Aceh, Indonesia
(April 5, 2006) I think for Indonesia from the things I hear and read, most Indonesians agree that the country’s biggest development problem is corruption. . . . What {is encouraging} is that so many people in Indonesia are taking this problem seriously.
Corruption made-in-west: Wolfowitz
(May 24, 2006) "For every bribe-taker, there’s a bribe-giver, and often that comes from a developed country." – Paul Wolfowitz.
Wolfowitz’s Move to the World Bank
(May 31, 2005) Presidency and the sharpening of economic policy as a weapon of mass impoverishment.
Wolfowitz sets Africa poverty aim
(April 1, 2005) Paul Wolfowitz, the new head of the World Bank, has said his main goal will be to achieve "real success" in cutting poverty, particularly in Africa.
Bigger obstacles ahead for World Bank’s Wolfowitz
(March 31, 2005) Paul Wolfowitz’s appointment as the new head of the World Bank has underlined some of the institution’s inherent weaknesses but has also made clear a need to reform the existing framework for development assistance.


