State Minister for Follow-up Affairs, Mohammed bin Ibrahim Al Mutawa, stressed support of Bahrain’s leadership to good governance out of a strong belief in the need to boost the state of law and institutions, enhance public management performance, protect public money and upgrade performance in the public sector.
He was speaking at a meeting with MENA-OECD Governance Programme General Coordinator Carlos Conde, on the sidelines of a high-profile meeting of the Steering Group of The Good Governance for Development (GfD) in Arab Countries Initiative, being held in Paris, France.
He said the Bahraini government, under the leadership of His Royal Highness Prime Minister Prince Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa, has placed good governance high on its agenda by working out mechanisms to follow up and assess the Public sector’s performance and fight corruption.
The meeting spotlighted setting up a regional centre for training, concerning governance, so as to improve performance of public establishments in the region.
Minister of State for Follow-up Affairs Mohammed bin Ibrahim Al-Mutawa met with Moroccan Minister in charge of civil service and administrative modernization Abdul Adhim Kerooj and discussed efforts undertaken in both countries to promote good governance.
The meeting was on the sidelines of the high-profile meeting of the Steering Group of The Good Governance for Development (GfD) in Arab Countries Initiative, being held in Paris, France.
The two sides discussed means of bolstering bilateral relations and promoting cooperation in all fields.
Al-Mutawa outlined Bahrain’s administrative development strides, citing the Cabinet’s endorsement of the good governance guide last September.
He highlighted the efforts of the Civil Service Bureau (CSB) to promote a legal framework for the public service as well as the training schemes undertaken by the Bahrain Institute of Public Administration (BIPA).
A specialized technical committee will be set up to draw up the general framework for a joint agreement on promoting good governance, the civil service, administrative reform, the e-Government, training and competence building.