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Nigeria, Afghanistan "fantastically corrupt": Cameron

May 11, 2016 05:08 pm | Updated 05:08 pm IST - London

The Prime Minister made the remarks before the anti-corruption summit tomorrow, at which Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari, will deliver a keynote address entitled "Why we must tackle corruption together".

British Prime Minister David Cameron. File Photo. AP.

The U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron has been caught on camera telling Queen Elizabeth II that Nigeria and Afghanistan are two of the “most corrupt” countries in the world.

The Prime Minister made the remarks before the anti-corruption summit tomorrow, at which Nigeria’s President, Muhammadu Buhari, will deliver a keynote address entitled “Why we must tackle corruption together“.

Mr. Cameron who will be the host was overheard telling the monarch that “leaders of some fantastically corrupt countries” would be attending the meeting, before singling out the two nations.

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“Nigeria and Afghanistan, possibly the two most corrupt countries in the world,” he added.

The Queen did not immediately respond but Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, who has worked in Nigeria when he was an oil executive, quickly cut in. “But this particular president is actually not corrupt,” he said, insisting that Mr. Buhari was “trying very hard”.

A spokesman for Mr. Buhari, who won elections last year vowing to fight corruption, said he was deeply “shocked and embarrassed” by the comments, which he assumed must refer to problems in Nigeria that pre-dated his presidency,

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The Guardian reported.

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An official in the Afghan embassy described the intervention as “unfair”, arguing the country had made important progress in this area.

Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani will also be attending the conference.

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