The single dialogue table for Panama continued this Thursday with the rounds of questions by social organizations to the representatives of the Executive on the subject of corruption and transparency.
This point has been under discussion since last Saturday and after a three-day recess, the debate resumed on Wednesday, but the proposals for consensus and dissent have not yet been reached.
The requests of the social groups have to do with reforms to transparency laws, the creation of a Constituent Assembly, the creation of a corruption truth commission, which would be made up of citizen members of the alliances and the creation of a council social audit.
According to the lawyer and political analyst, Alfonso Fraguela, there must be the will of both parties, both the Executive and the social groups, in order to reach consensus.
He added that this table also obliges the government to rectify the errors that it has allowed to prolong on this issue at the time.
“Here there must be a will on both sides, a will on the part of the government, which is the one that exercises power in order to alleviate the discomfort felt by the Panamanian people when talking about corruption,” he said.