1.Nawaz Sharif
Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif (born 25 December 1949) is a Pakistani businessman and politician who served as the Prime Minister of Pakistan for three non-consecutive terms. Nawaz, the longest-serving prime minister of Pakistan, has served a total of more than 9 years.
According to the Panama Papers, documents leaked in 2016 from law firm Mossack Fonseca, Nawaz’s family holds millions of dollars worth of property and companies in the UK and around the world. Although they do not name Nawaz Sharif or his younger brother Shebaz Sharif, they link in-laws of Shebaz Sharif and children of Nawaz Sharif to numerous offshore companies
In 2018, the Pakistani Supreme Court ruled in Sami Ullah Baloch v. Abdul Karim Nousherwani that Nawaz would be disqualified from holding public office for life due to his involvement in the Panama Papers case of 2017. On 6 July 2018, the Federal Judicial Complex of Pakistan sentenced Nawaz to ten years in prison. Nawaz’s daughter Maryam Nawaz and her husband Safdar Awan were given prison sentences of seven years and one year, respectively. The two were subsequently arrested on their arrival in Lahore on 13 July and imprisoned in the Adiala jail . Nawaz and Maryam were also fined £2 million and £8 million, respectively.
2.Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson
He was the youngest serving PM of iceland but found guilty in panama papers having multiple offshore accounts with his wife. He resigned after the leaks.
3.Petro Poroshenko
Petro Poroshenko served as the president of Ukraine from 2014 to 2019, but made his fortune as Ukraine’s “chocolate king.”
As he built his business empire, he held political jobs under three out of his four presidential predecessors. He was a parliament member under Leonid Kuchma and a founding father of the powerful Party of Regions, the vehicle that Yanukovych used to gain power. He also served in top governmental posts: he was the National Security and Defense Council secretary, and then foreign minister under Viktor Yushchenko; and later became economy and trade minister under Yanukovych.
Poroshenko faced accusations of profiting from being in power, either by obtaining lucrative supply contracts, lobbying for his firms, or using the justice system to his and his partners’ benefit.
4.Kim Jong un
The ugliest form of dictatorship in north korea from generations to generations is being held by kim john un. By entering the nuclear program he ha become more than a threat for the world despite his corrupt political practices throughout his career.Despite poor condition of his people he is investing more and more in arms rather than basic human needs.
5.David cameron
His involvement in extra martial affairs and urge to get super rich speaks for itself
his involvement in Greensill Capital, given he reportedly made up to $10m (£7m).
After BBC Panorama reported on the sum he made for a part-time job over two and a half years, the former prime minister was urged to divulge what he knew about the company’s financial troubles before it collapsed this year.
6.Khalifa bin zayed al nahyan
He was portrayed as a corrupt politician by his rivals but proved innocent at last by the court of people themselves
7.Narendra Modi
Narendra Modi is not naive ! More so after he has had a long tenure as the chief minister of the State of Gujarat . He knows from A to Z how business people bribe government officials to get contracts . He knows how bank managers get cut whenever they advance money to borrowers . He knows hoe judges take money to settle cases . Politicians are known to Modiji like the palm of his hand . In other words Modiji knows how black money is generated and runs the system in India .
He has taken kashmir from its people and now doing the same with Punjab. From gujrat attacks to fake operations in neighbouring countries narendra modi has been the back bone of corruption.
8.Asif Ali Zardari
The corruption cases against Zardari escalate the legal challenges facing the leading opposition member of parliament who served as president of Pakistan from 2008 to 2013, after Pakistan’s former military ruler Pervez Musharraf was forced to resign
He is accused of having dozens of bogus bank accounts, a charge he denies, saying he has been politically victimised by Khan’s government.
The National Accountability Bureau (NAB) has filed another reference against former president Asif Ali Zardari in a fake accounts case, accusing him of corruption of more than Rs8 billion.
The reference has been filed at an accountability court in Islamabad in which Zardari and his stenographer Mushtaq Ahmed have been named as the accused.
According to the reference, an illegal transaction of Rs8.3 billion was carried out via Mushtaq Ahmed’s bank account with the money paid to a private housing society — located in a posh area of Karachi — to purchase properties.
The reference states that the properties belong to Zardari.
The accused named in the reference, Mushtaq Ahmed, worked as a government employee from 2009 to 2013 in the Presidential Palace. He was recruited as a stenographer at the request of Senator Rukhsana Bangash.
9.Volodymyr Zelenskyy
The Pandora papers, leaked to the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and shared with the Guardian as part of a global investigation however, suggest Zelenskiy is rather similar to his predecessors.
The leaked documents suggest he had – or has – a previously undisclosed stake in an offshore company, which he appears to have secretly transferred to a friend weeks before winning the presidential vote.
his arrognce is the major cause of russian ukraine war
10.Ashraf Ghani
Former Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has been named as one of the most corrupt officials of the year by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), a nonprofit investigative news reporting platform for independent media outlets around the world.
ven now, outside of his decision to abandon his country when there was still a chance to negotiate a political settlement with the Taliban, Ghani has largely been eulogized as a flawed but incorruptible visionary. This is a facade. Attributing Ghani’s failures to his professorial management style and personal cowardice allows American elites to avoid confronting the truth behind the Taliban victory. Military occupations fail because they are corrupt and brutal, and the Ghani regime, enabled by the Pentagon and its backers in Washington, was as corrupt and brutal as any.