Dialogos

Impunity and Institutional Deficit

Published January 14, 2026, 06:03
Impunity and Institutional Deficit

Cyprus faces a structural problem of impunity, which affects institutions, political figures, and democracy. Major scandals, such as the 'golden passports' and banking scandals, rarely lead to criminal responsibility for those involved. Delays in the Justice system undermine its credibility, while the conflict of roles of the Attorney General questions its independence. The political cost of taking responsibility is almost non-existent, with resignations being rare and under pressure. Institutions often react rather than prevent and function effectively only under external pressure. This has led to the normalization of corruption, with society accepting impunity as part of the system. However, there is a glimmer of hope for change if the confusion of roles in the Justice system is broken and the auditing institutions gain real independence. Transparency and accountability must become the norm, not the exception, and this requires determination from society to stop being silent.