The Institute for Ethics and Economic Policy (IEEP).

Fordham is a renowned Jesuit institution with over 165-year history of emphasis on ethics.

To promote Governance with Respect Ethics Accountability and Transparency (GREAT)

News items of worldwide relevance

 

 

 

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WHAT IS NEW? Top two lines of corruption stories from various individual country pages from countries around the world.  Please visit individual country pages to read the full story. 

News items of worldwide relevance:

2006 Bribe Payer Index by Transparency International shows hypocrisy by many countries where multinational corporations pay bribes directly or through their lawyers and other outsourced employees.  See latest ranking along with BPI published by Transparency International.  Note that a higher BPI number means that the country is less corrupt.  Switzerland has the highest BPI score meaning that the Swiss businesses have the least tendency to pay bribes.  However, there is one problem with this stellar performance.  But their banking secrecy laws do allow bribes being paid into secret numbered accounts.

GLOBAL:  WOLFOWITZ’S CORRUPTION AGENDA

Paul Wolfowitz, President of the World Bank, has joined with the heads of several regional development Banks in an anti-corruption effort, which has provoked a staff backlash within the World Bank itself.  The Bank has held up funding, canceled contracts, blocked loans, interrupted projects, and postponed debt relief for several countries, including India, Chad, Bangladesh, Kenya, Argentina and Congo, which are involved in various forms of corrupt practices.  (The Washington Post, Feb. 20, 2006, summary by Marg Reynolds)

 

World Bank Leader Expects to Step Down. It was reported that the president of the World Bank, James D. Wolfensohn,   has said that he expects the White House will select a new World Bank leader this year. This year Wolfensohn will retire as chief of the World Bank. Wolfensohn’s future has been a subject of speculation. His second five-year term expires in June 2005. (The New York Times, January 3, 2005, summary Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

ANNIVERSARY OF THE UN ANTI-CORRUPTION CONVENTION.  December 7, 2004 is the one year anniversary of the signing of the UN Convention against Corruption (UNCAC) by 114 nations.  To date, 14 nations have ratified the convention, all from emerging economies.  There has been a call for all nations, especially wealthy nations, to ratify the convention.  The World Bank supports the UNCAC initiative and is working to find more interested donors to fund these anti-corruption efforts.  The World Bank has also committed to continue to work with many other international and national organizations and institutions to continue the fight against fraud and corruption.  (www.worldbank.org, December 7, 2004, summary by Andrew Myerberg).

APEC Leaders Commit to Fight Corruption and Ensure Transparency.  The White House  have issued a fact sheet at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meetings in Santiago, Chile, where President Bush and other APEC leaders launched the “Santiago Commitment to Fight Corruption and Ensure Transparency” and the “APEC Course of Action on Fighting Corruption and Ensuring transparency.” Leaders also commenced the “APEC Anticorruption and Transparency Capacity Building Program” to help developing economies meet their anticorruption commitments. (USINFO, November 23, 2004, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

Survey finds rampant global corruption, hobbling poverty fight. According to a Transparency international report, corruption is crippling the battle against poverty and robbing oil-rich countries such as Iraq of their development potential. Haiti and Bangladesh were perceived as the world’s most corrupt nations in the survey of 146 countries closely followed by Nigeria, Myanmar and Chad. (Yahoo News (AFP), October 20, 2004, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

Iraq: Contractors for U.N.-Iraq aid AGREES to congressional inquiry.  It was reported that two contractors for the United Nations oil-for-food programme in Iraq have agreed to cooperate with congressional panels investigating allegations that the government of Saddam Hussein had siphoned billions of dollars from it. Congressional investigators said that Cotecna Inspection SA, the Switzerland-based company the United Nations hired in 1999 to monitor and authenticate goods shipped to Iraq, and Saybolt International BV, the Dutch company that monitored oil exports from Iraq, have arranged to cooperate with House and Senate committees examining accusations of corruption in what was the United Nations' largest relief programme. (The New York Times, 13 August 2004, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

Subpoena seeks Iraqi oil records. It was reported that congressional committee investigating alleged corruption in a United Nations humanitarian program for Iraq has issued a subpoena for financial records from the French bank. According to the chairman of the House Committee on Government Reform Thomas Davis, the subpoena was necessary because the bank could not produce the documents voluntarily. A report that was released in April by the U.S. Government Accounting Office said that officials in the government of Saddam Hussein received $10.1 billion in illegal revenues over the course of the six-year program. The United Nations started the program in 1997 so that Iraqi oil revenues could be used to pay for food, medicine and other goods, easing the effects of the economic sanctions imposed on Iraq after its 1990 invasion of Kuwait. (International Herald Tribune, 16 July 2004, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

Corruption arrests in World Bank project.  The World Bank said Tuesday that Guinea has convicted three people involved in corrupt activities related to bank projects.  The international agency said the convictions come after Guinea’s justice minister followed up on an investigation by the World Bank on suspect activities by contractors to the project which was reported to the government last October. According to the bank vice president for Africa Callisto Madavo, "These convictions show that fraud and corruption will not be tolerated on World Bank-financed projects. (Washington Times, June 29, 2004, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

World Bank, IDB Say Need To Do More To Fight Corruption. According to World Bank and IDB officials, the World Bank and Inter-American Development Bank are making progress fighting corruption at multilateral development banks. According to Hector Morales, acting US executive director to the Inter-American Development Bank, the IDB has "accelerated" its progress in fighting corruption, "but still has much work to do." Morales further went on to say that The World Bank has instituted reforms to eliminate conflicts of interest and possible corrupt practices among its staff. (World Bank Press Review, May 14, 2004, summary Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

World Corruption May Top $100 Bln. According to Sen. Richard Lugar, an Indiana Republican, corruption has cost the lives of uncounted individuals contending with poverty and disease. Lugar commended World Bank President James Wolfensohn for bringing greater attention to the issue, but also said that, Corruption remains a serious problem. (Yahoo News (Reuters), May 13, 2004, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

UN chief hits out at fraud claims.  The United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan has rejected allegations of corruption in the UN-administered oil-for-food programme in Iraq. Annan described reports that UN officials had colluded in smuggling Iraqi oil through Turkey to evade sanctions as “outrageous and exaggerated”. Anna told a news conference that “We had no mandate to stop oil smuggling,” (BBC News, April 30, 2004 summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

Study finds 25 nations hindered by corruption. A survey of government accountability and openness in 25 countries around the globe has found that each one is challenged by corruption and lacks sufficient protections against electoral abuses, including developed democracies such as the United States, Germany and Japan. The resulting report produced a ranking of nations in which none was labeled "very strong" on integrity of key institutions and accountability to the public. (The Washington Post 30 Apr 2004 summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

U.N. Under Probe, Annan Assails CRITICS.  Secretary-General Kofi Annan accused critics of the U.N. oil-for-food program of treating allegations of corruption as fact and ignoring the programmes role of providing aid to nearly every Iraqi family.  Annan said that he met Wednesday with Benon Sevan, who headed the oil-for-food program and has been accused of receiving kickbacks from Saddam Hussein’s government, to discuss the allegations and cooperation with the investigation. The U.N. chief also said that any U.N. official found guilty of accepting bribes or kickbacks would be dealt with very severely. (The New York Times, April 23, 2004, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

Corruption survey singles out ex-leaders. A global watchdog has identified what it said were the world’s most corrupt former heads of government, singling out leaders of Indonesia, the Philippines and the former Zaire. The transparency international found that widespread political corruption undermines the stability of developing countries and damages the global economy. (The Guardian 26 Mar 2004 summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

South Korean IOC vice president indicted on corruption charges. International Olympic Committee vice president Kim Un-yong has been indicted on charges of taking bribes and embezzling funds from South Korean sports organizations. Kim is charged with embezzling 3.84 billion won (US$3.28 million) in funds from the World Taekwondo Federation, the World Taekwondo Headquarters, which issues taekwondo credentials as well as other sports organizations. (Associated Press 13 Feb 2004 summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

Nations sign UN anti-graft pact. According to UN reports more than 100 United Nations’ members are meeting in Mexico to sign a landmark convention against corruption. The first legally-binding international agreement on the issue is aimed at making it easier to hunt down corrupt officials and to recover illicit funds. Mexico and the United States were among the first to sign. The terms of the treaty were agreed in October, but will only enter into force when it is ratified by 30 countries. (BBC News, December 10, 2003 summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

UK: Special investigation: BAE accused of hiding cash paid to win deals. It was reported that Britain’s biggest arms company stands accused of running an international system of secret commission payments, using Swiss banks and a tiny island in the Caribbean. The allegations, by sources involved in the transactions, are based on Swiss bank records. BAE has denied any illegality or wrongdoing. (The Guardian 05 Dec 2003 summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY APPROVES FIRST GLOBAL TREATY AGAINST CORRUPTION On 31 Oct, 2003, a landmark anti-corruption treaty which requires politicians to disclose their campaign finances and countries to return tainted assets to the nation they were stolen from was adopted by the UN General Assembly. As scheduled, the signing conference will be held in Merida, Mexico on Dec. 90-11, and the treaty will enter into force on the 90th day after 30 nations have formally ratified it. (AP, 31 Oct 2003, summarized by Hanh Vu).

 

Global Competitiveness Raanking

http://www.weforum.org/pdf/Gcr/GCR_2003_2004/Competitiveness_Rankings.pdf

World Economic Forum ranks are a useful indicator.

 

 

GLOBAL: GLOBAL CORRUPTION INDEX HIGHLIGHTS ENDEMIC SLEAZE 2003’s CPI’ reported by TI reveals that most of developing countries now facing high corrupt epidemic while several other developed countries slip their ranks on the list. The head of a global graft watchdog called for further assistance from rich nations in a bid to tackle endemic corruption in developing countries. According to him it’s the mutual support not penalty should be considered an effective method to curb ill practices there.  (AFP, 07 Oct 2003, summarized by Hanh Vu).

 

UN treaty against transnational organized crime enters into force. The United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, the first legally binding treaty to fight crime on a worldwide scale, has entered into force. This requires the member states to cooperate on issues ranging from money laundering to human trafficking. (United Nations, September 30, 2003, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

Engineering & Construction Industry Tackles Global Corruption. The World Economic Forum today announced a major breakthrough in the fight against corruption in the engineering and construction industry. Leading members of the industry, who make up the World Economic Forum’s Governors for Engineering & Construction, have established a multinational task force to develop anti-corruption principles to guide companies that participate in engineering and construction procurements around the world. According to the report, strong anti-corruption policies within the E&C industry will promote the principles of transparency, accountability and responsibility for the long-term benefit of all stakeholders. (World Economic Forum, July 31, 2003 summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

UNODC Strengthens Cooperation Among International Organizations to Fight Corruption. Following a two day meeting hosted by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, representatives of a number of UN programmes and other intergovernmental and nongovernmental organizations, agreed to formalize their interagency coordination mechanisms and to set up a functioning coordinating group to oversee the regular exchange of information and experiences as regards their anti-corruption work. Participants also stressed the need to take a more proactive approach to corruption by identifying high-risk areas, such as procurement, and concentrating efforts in those fields to strengthen the culture of prevention, thereby moving away from a reactive culture. (UNIS Press Release, July 29, 2003, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

Convention AgainSt CORRUPTION. The final round of negotiations on a United Nations treaty aimed at fighting the proliferation of corruption has begun in Vienna, with more than 110 Member States expected to discuss remaining areas of divergence in order to reach consensus. The sixth session of the Ad Hoc Committee for the Negotiation of the UN Convention against Corruption will focus on areas where divergence still exists, which include the search for a definition of corruption, assets recovery and the question of whether to sanction only public, or also private, corruption. Finalizing the text would allow the new instrument to be submitted to the General Assembly at its 58th session this September and to the High-level Signing Conference scheduled to take place in Merida, Mexico. (The Accra Daily Mail, July 23, 2003, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

UN CRIME CONVENTION AGAINST MAFIA STARTS SEPT.29 The UN convention against Transnational Organized Crime - the first of its kind among crime-control measures, namely the criminalization of participation in an organized criminal group, money-laundering, corruption and obstruction of justice, is set to come into force Sep. 29. According to executive director of the US Office on Drugs and Crime, Antonio Maria Costa,  the convention is so far signed on by 147 countries worldwide to counter the worldwide challenge of organized crime. (UN wire, 07 Jul,2003, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

U.N SECRETARY GENERAL ANNAN DENOUNCES CORRUPTION AS OBSTACLE  At the opening of the Executive program on Corruption control and Organizational Integrity at Harvard Universty UN Secretary General Kofi Anna said that corruption is "insidious menace" that obstructs the economic and social development worldwide. According to him, UN should be in the front line in the fight against corruption, hoping that progress against the problem would gain in December when UN member states gather in Mexico City to sign the UN Convention Against Corruption, which would criminalize diverse forms of corruption and oblige signatories to protect their institutions from it. (Vietnam News Agency, 12 Jun 2003, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

EX-UNMIK OFFICIAL JAILED FOR EMBEZZLEMENT:- Joe Trutscher, a former official with the UN Mission in Kosovo got a 3½ years jail term on Tuesday after a Court in Bochum Germany found him guilty of embezzling about $4.3 million from KEK Electrical company. The money was deposited in his accounts in Gibraltor. He had said he was going to use this money to secretly raise the salaries of UN energy workers. By the time her turned himself in late last year, he had spent $445,000 of the money. (UN WIRE JUNE 18, 2003, SUMMARY BY DAVIS J. WEDDI, STOCKHOLM SWEDEN).

 

GERMANY, GLOBAL & LESOTHO: GERMAN'S FIRM GUILTY OF LESOTHO BRIBERY Following the Canadian company Acres International's conviction which forced the company to pay price for bribing high-ranking officials in Lesotho, the international engineering company Lahmeyer of Germany recently was found guilty on giving bribes to Masapha Sole, former chief executive of the Lesotho highlands water projects, who was sentenced to 15 years in jail last year for taking grafts. (The Guardian 19 Jun 2003, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

EU BIDS TO CUT DOWN WORLDWIDE ILLEGAL TIMBER TRADE According to a draft proposal made by the European Union, once a country or regional bloc has signed up to a Forest Law Enforcement. Government and Trade (FLEGT) agreement, the EU will refuse to accept imported timber from that state unless it is certified as legal. A voluntary timber certification system that might lead to a global agreement to clean up the $150bn. global forest product trade is to be launched by the European Commission, said the draft. The EU's proposal will target southeast Asia, south America, central Africa and Russia. The EU would help less developed countries improve their judiciary, police and military to help to stop illegal logging. (Reuters 20 May 2003, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

SALK LAKE TRIAL SET TO IMPLICATE IOC CHIEFS Olympic bosses face a new round of corruption allegations when the 1998 Salt Lake City cash-and-sex-for-votes scandal set to go to trial in a Utah courtroom later this year. Tom Welch and his co-defendant Dave Johnson will face jail sentences with 15 charges of conspiracy, bribery, racketeering and fraud if they do not prove they were victims of IOC greed. After 10 low-ranking members, mostly from the developing world, were ejected in late 1998 when the scandal broke, some of the biggest names, friends of disgraced IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch can now expect to be named in the trial. (Daily Mail, 24 Apr 2003, summary by Hanh VU).

 

GLOBAL. CHOCOLATE INDUSTRY MAKES WEAK EFFORT TO END CHILD SLAVERY ON COCOA FARMS. The U.S. Agency for International Development estimates approximately 300,000 children work on cocoa farms, 64% below the age of 14 and the vast majority unpaid. Hershey's and M&M/Mars earned $13 billion in chocolate sales from cocoa primarily imported from the Ivory Coast, the world’s largest cocoa farm producer and a practitioner of brutal child slavery.  Hershey’s and other major chocolate producers have pledged to commit themselves to a plan to produce slavery-free chocolate by July 2005.  However critics and child slavery monitoring agencies report little progress, citing that the companies have failed to enact serious measures to end child slavery practices. At issue is the industries’ avoidance of fair cocoa pricing and it’s role in perpetuating child slavery. Fair pricing can provide farmers with livable wages but threatens chocolate producers’ profits.  (Salon Magazine, Feb. 14, 2003, http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2003/02/14/chocolate/, summarized by Kelly Kristen). 

 

US SETTING GOOD EXAMPLE BY DISCLOSING ASSETS OF POLITICAL CANDIDATES, on line.  See  http://www.public-i.org

 

 

BOOK ARGUES THIRD WORLD ETHNIC HATRED A CONSEQUENCE OF CORRUPT LEADERS USING EFFECTS OF FREE MARKET DEMOCRACY.  Yale law professor Amy Chua’s book “World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability” discusses how the West’s impetus to export democracy as a panacea against tyranny, to countries lacking the infrastructure necessary to support it, has the unintended consequence of sparking violent ethnic conflict.  Countries typically affected often have an economically powerful ethnic minority in control of the dominant markets and a poverty stricken majority.  Chua argues that rapid conversion to democracy enriches the market controlling majority, while at the same time empowering the impoverished majority, who then scapegoat the advantaged minority as the cause for the majority’s ills.  The result are a highly predictable set of tensions that foster the emergence of morally corrupt demagogues who incite the majority to violence against the minority. Regions following this pattern include Rwanda, Southeast Asia, Russia, Yugoslavia, the Philippines, Indonesia, and East Africa. (Salon Magazine, Jan. 13, 2003, http://www.salon.com/books/review/2003/01/13/democracy/index.html, summarized by Kelly Kristen).

 

Interpol chief says fighting corruption essential in the war against terrorism . According to the Chief of Interpol, law enforcers around the world should not let the war on terrorism undermine efforts to fight other serious crimes. Interpol Secretary-General Ronald K. Noble also warned that other crimes, particularly corruption, could feed into terrorism. Noble said Interpol has sought to stop the global movement of terrorists by creating a database of stolen passports, giving police from its 181 member countries access to ID numbers on stolen travel documents that can be used by terrorists to move about. (Yahoo News (AP), January 22, 2003 summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

ITALIAN IN MALAYSIA WINS FIGHT VS EXTRADITION TO INDIA ($1.4BN BOFORS ARMS SCANDAL). Ottavio Quattrocchi, an Italian businessman, is accused of accepting US$7.3 million from Swedish arms maker Bofors to facilitate the sale of 400 artillery guns to the Indian army in 1986. Paying or receiving commissions on arms sales is prohibited by law in India. A Malaysian court quashed extradition proceedings against the Italian businessman, who is not going to be sent to India to face the corruption charges. Sessions Court Judge Akhtar Tahir agreed with Quattrocchi's lawyers that documents filed by Indian authorities were vague and insufficient. (Dow Jones Newswires, December 2, 2002, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

STATE NEWSPAPER EDITOR JAILED 14 YEARS FOR CORRUPTION Reports on Saturday said Fu Guiyu, former editor of  the Shenyang Daily - a Communist Party newspaper in northern China, who was arrested in October 2001, had been sentenced to 14 years in prison for taking more than 590,000 yuan (US$72,000) in bribes and confiscating 80,000 yuan (US$10,000) in company property. No comment from the Shenyan Daily. Shenyang, the biggest city in China's northeast, has been rocked by a series of corruption scandals over the past two years that brought down top party and government officials. (The Star, 23 Nov 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

ASSET MANAGER'S ETHICAL PROJECT (PROJECT FOR CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY) A three-year project to develop principles for corporate responsible in global operations, especially in developing countries has been launched by Insight Investment, the asset manager of banking group HBOS. Besides, It is found in this code broad guidelines which still needed to be greater clarity for companies on child labour, bribery and corruption, and human rights issues.( Financial Times, 19 Nov 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

ABACHA'S SON WANTS MONEY HELD BY BANKS Mohammed Abacha, son of Nigeria's late military ruler General Sani Abacha, who was recently released from three years in prison on charges of money laundering and corruption, has instructed lawyers to retrieve millions of dollars which he says are rightfully his. Banks in Europe have frozen accounts holding money allegedly siphoned off while General Abacha ruled Nigeria from 1993 to his death in 1998.  (The Independent, 20 Nov 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

Liberty = Prosperity,   Greater economic freedom seems to lead to greater prosperity. 2003 Index of Economic Freedom by the Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal suggests that economic freedom has advanced throughout the world; every region has improved. World-wide, 74 countries have better scores, 49 have worse scores, and 32 have scores that are unchanged. Of the 156 countries numerically graded in the Index, 15 are classified as "free," (with GDP exceeding $27,000 per capita. Less than half is earned in  56  "mostly free" countries.  Income is only around $3000 for 74 as "mostly unfree," and even lower for the 11  "repressed" countries. Latin America performed the worst as Chile dropped out of top 10. Asia has both the freest countries (like Hong Kong and Singapore) and most repressed countries.  Europe is actually freer than socialist rhetoric might suggest.  Estonia made great strides. Ms. Mary O'Grady, Gerald P. O'Driscoll Jr. and Edwin J. Feulner edited the Index (Nov. 12, 2002, Wall St. J.  Summary by H. Vinod).

 

JOURNALISTS FACE INJURY AND DEATH FOR THE TRUTH (INTERNATIONAL PRESS FREEDOM AWARDS) 31 journalists died on the job last year, eight of them while covering the war in Afghanistan. Another 110 were thrown in jail, an increase of almost 50% over 2000 due to sins known as "truth exposure", according to the international pressure group Reporters Without Borders. To honour journalists' contribution to the world's advancement, this year 's International Press Freedom Awards, which sponsored by the Canadian Journalists for Free Expression, are said to be presented to  Lira Bayseitova, who exposed government corruption in her native Kazakhstan;  Ahmed Abdisalam Adan, Mohamed Elmi and Ali Shamarke, three Somali-Canadians who returned to their war-torn native country to establish HornAfrik, a modern and independent radio and TV network that airs the only reliable information there; The Star's Kathleen Kenna, who was critically injured in Afghanistan. Kenna, who is still on leave, has won the Tara Singh Hayer Award, which goes to a Canadian journalist and HornAfrik's Elmi, 46, Canadian, who brought "state of the art broadcasting" and impartial journalism to the country of his birth.  (Toronto Star, 12 Nov 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

PROFITS FROM WAR International Consortium of Investigative Journalists has identified some 90 companies and a small group of individuals with connections to governments, multinational corporations and, sometimes, criminal syndicates in the United States, Europe, Africa and the Middle East that have profited from war commerce. Read more in ICIJ's 11-part series http://www.icij.org or Visit http://www.public-i.org
 

French pass rights plan. The countries of the Francophone yesterday adopted a plan to penalize, even expel, dictators and corrupt leaders among them that defy standards of democracy and human rights. The organisations of 54 members approved the declaration at the final day of the ninth summit of French-speaking countries, which was being held in Lebanon. The position marked a departure from past summits that addressed cultural issues and avoided criticizing corrupt regimes. Prime Minister Jean Chretien praised the gathering, saying that the meetings are very useful because we can discuss all problems, even human rights, electoral systems and judicial systems.(Calgary Sun, October 21, 2002, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson)

 

UN EXPOSES CONTINUING PLUNDER OF CONGO. According to a United Nations report, although Zimbabwe, Rwanda and Uganda have withdrawn their armies from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), they are still plundering the country through corrupt DRC government officials and criminal networks. Several senior figures are named in the UN report to the UN Security Council. According to the report, "the looting that was previously conducted by the armies themselves has been replaced by organised systems of embezzlement, tax fraud, extortion, the use of stock options as kickbacks and diversion of state funds." The report urges for financial restrictions on 29 companies and 54 individuals allegedly involved in the looting. (The Independent, October 22, 2002, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

Report Finds Corruption a Serious Problem in International Business. According to reports, financial corruption remains a serious problem in international business according to a new survey released by a business risk consultancy. The survey, by the Control Risks Group, found of companies in Britain, Germany, the United States, Hong Kong and Singapore, 40 percent believed they had lost business in the last five years because a competitor paid a bribe. CRG found that only 56 percent of British companies, 38 percent of German, and 30 percent of Dutch companies were familiar with the 1997 OECD anti-bribery law. The law makes it possible to prosecute companies in their home countries for paying bribes abroad. The survey also found that British companies were the most sensitive to corruption risks, with 48 percent saying they had stayed away from otherwise attractive investments because bribes were encouraged. (VOA News, October 18, 2002, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

LAWS FAIL TO HALT INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS BRIBERY 40% companies in the US, UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Hongkong and Singapore asked believed that they had lost business in the last five years because a competitor had paid a bribe despite the widespread introduction of OECD anti-bribery convention some years ago, a survey carried by the London-based Control Risks Group (CRG) revealed. The survey found that UK companies were the most sensitive to corruption risks, with 48 per cent saying they had stayed away from otherwise attractive investments because bribes were asked for. By contrast German companies were less likely to introduce management practices to counter corruption than their OECD counterparts, with 60 per cent perceiving the risk to be of "no real significance." US companies were the most likely to have formal agreements with agents that they would not pay bribes on the company's behalf. However some 67 per cent of respondents in the survey believed that US companies still used middlemen to circumvent anti-corruption legislation. (Financial Times, 15 Oct 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

MONEY LAUNDERING BLACKLIST NO LONGER INCLUDES RUSSIA AND DOMINICA Russia, Dominica, Niue and the Marshall Islands, the countries appeared on the blacklist of countries that fail to counter such a crime of money laundering since 2000,  have been removed from the blacklist, whereas 11 countries remain on the list are Cook Islands, Egypt, Grenada, Guatemala, Indonesia, Burma, Nauru, Nigeria, Philippines, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Ukraine, said the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). This move, according to Russian officials, will help the nation to  attract more investment inflow to the country in the years to come. (AP, 12 Oct 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

GLOBAL: BRAZILIAN BUSINESSMAN, SLOVAK JUDGE AND GERMAN PROFESSOR AWARDED FOR FIGHT AGAINST CORRUPTION Luis Roberto Mesquita, 43, a Brazilian businessman who challenged local officials to govern cleanly; Jana Dubovcova, 50, chief justice of the district court in the central Slovakian city of Banska Bystrica who initiated efforts to wipe out courtroom bribery and Peter S. Schoenhoefer, 67, a professor of pharmacology who has taken on drug makers whom he accused of paying medical professionals to promote the unnecessary prescription of their medications are to be given this year's Integrity Awards on Oct. 11 in Casablanca, Morocco. The award have been handed out annually sine 2000 to underline the effort of people and organizations who have shown bravery or special initiative in combating corruption, according Transparency International. (AP, 30 Sep 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

WORLD'S LEGISLATORS WILL GATHER TO FIGHT CORRUPTION 126 lawmakers from 40 countries will attend a 3 day conference (Oct. 13-16) organized by Mr. John Williams, MP for the Alberta riding of St. Albert and chairman of the commons public accounts committee and the Ottawa-based Parliamentary Centre (non profit research institute) at Parliament Hill - Ottawa - Canada to launch the Global Organization of Parliamentarians Against Corruption (GOPAC) and discuss on practical ways parliamentarians can keep tabs on their governments through institutions such as auditor-generals offices, public accounts committees and question periods. The organization will have regional chapters around the world, designed to support legislators who risk their lives by speaking out against corrupt governments. (National Post, 19 Sep 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

GRAFT 'A BIGGER RISK TO BUSINESS THAN TERRORISM'  Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) said in rating 60 countries across the globe that the corporate world faces a much bigger risk from corruption and bureaucracy than it does from terrorism. Its findings show that the average rating for security risk was just 35, compared to 59 for the government effectiveness risk (zero is the least risky score.) China, Indonesia and Pakistan in Asia were listed as having high government effectiveness risk while Singapore had the best overall business operations risk rating in the analysis, the Business Times reported.  (The Straits Times 09 Sep 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

COMPANIES WERE TOLD TO ROOT OUT CORRUPTION A UK government-backed initiative known as Publish What You Pay to make oil, gas and mining companies report all payments made to politicians overseas, which launched in June this year and still remains unclear whether the move would be based on introducing regulation or would appeal to companies to take voluntary action, is intended to reduce corruption and  allow local people in the developing world see how much is being paid to politicians. It is thought if the figures had to appear in company accounts it would be a severe blow to those guilty of corruption and the payments would soon disappear. Senior politicians in many developing countries are said to be in favor of payments appearing in company accounts because it might root out low-ranking corrupt officials who operate virtually unrestrained. (Accountancy Age, September 5, 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

CORRUPTION PLAGUES ACADEME AROUND THE WORLD    From diverse cultures such as found in China, Mexico, Kenya, Japan and the U.K., corruption in higher education is becoming a common denominator for institutional educators.  Ghost writing of theses and taking tests for others is blended with institutional corruption, which includes selling fake diplomas and using political influence for admission or grading to the benefit institutional supporters and their families.  Transparency International (TI) has identified a link which almost certainly extends to higher education by which corruption’s victims are the world’s poorest people.  Efforts to improve education abroad through exchange programs may limit confidence of American academics if students habitually buy grades rather than earn them.  (The Chronicle of Higher Education), Aug. 6, 2002, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

US$320M IN 'CORRUPTION FEES' PAID IN CARIBBEAN, SAYS UN OFFICIAL 10% of an estimated US$3.2 billion in illegal drugs passed through the Caribbean in 2000 was paid for so-called "corruption fees" said Flavio Mirella, the United Nations Drug Control Programme's (UNDCP's) acting resident representative in the region. According to him corruption has created conditions in which public servants are gradually drawn from minor forms into more serious activities (The Jamaica Observer, July 30, 2002, summary by Hanh Vu).

 

NO WHALING VOTES ´SOLD´ FOR JAPANESE AID Six Caribbean countries which includes Antigua, Dominica, Grenada, St Kitts-Nevis, St Lucia and St Vincent have said they will support the resumption of commercial whaling, but they have also rejected accusations that they have sold their votes to Japan or any other pro-whaling country. The islands will vote at the International Whaling Commission meeting in Shimoneseki, Japan, for an end to a ban on commercial whaling. The Commission is expected to vote at the end of its plenary session. Some of the six islands also plan to develop whale watching for tourists.(Financial Times, May 20, 2002 summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

FIFA OFFICIAL VOWS TO SPEAK OUT OVER CORRUPTION CLAIMS It was reported that Michel Zen-Ruffinen, shocked the world football with allegations of corruption inside Fifa. Zen-Ruffinen’s allegations concern the conduct of Sepp Blatter, Fifa’s embattled president, who is embroiled in a bitter election campaign to retain his post. Zen-Ruffinen’s have accuse Mr Blatter of involvement in corrupt practices and attempting to hide the true state of Fifa’s fin-ances. Mr Blatter, who has consistently denied any wrongdoing, maintains his innocence. (Financial Times, May 14, 2002, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

FIFA ALLEGATIONS TO BE FILED BEFORE WORLD CUP. Michel Zen-Ruffinen, Fifa’s general secretary, has compiled a 21-page dossier with 300 pages of ancillary evidence, detailing alleged corruption at the football body. The dossier will be passed to a Swiss judge. Allegedly, up to SFr800m (Dollars 500m) has been lost during Mr Blatter's presidency, in a number of corrupt practices, including paying a former referee Dollars 25,000 in return for "information". Mr Blatter has denied any wrongdoing. However, Chung Mong-Joon, head of the Asian Football Confederation, said: "Mr Blatter must face a thorough investigation over the abuse of his authority and misuse of Fifa funds." (Financial Times, May 9, 2002, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

Johannesburg, INTERNATIONAL CRICKET COUNCIL ANTI-CORRUPTION UNIT CHECKS 2003 WORLD CUP VENUES. The anti-corruption unit of the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) has empowered a team to carry out a security audit of match venues of the 2003 Cricket World Cup. Bob Smalley and Bruce Ewan from the unit, together with members of the World Cup Security Directorate, will undertake inspections of host grounds in South Africa and Kenya. “By working closely with the security directorate we will be able to cover both specific anti-corruption measures as well as the physical ground security requirements for each stadium,” said Lord Condon, director of the ICC unit. This means that South Africa’s leading international venues will be among the first in the world game to meet the anti-corruption standards recommended by last year’s Condon Report. (Indo-Asian News Service, April 27, 2002, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

Pristina, Yugoslavia, UN AUTHORITIES INVESTIGATE CORRUPTION IN KOSOVO. The U.N. authorities in Kosovo are investigating into a corruption case, which involves some 4.5 million euros. Andy Bearpark, the official responsible for reconstruction and economic development in the UN mission in Kosovo has now evidence of this alleged fraud. Mr. Bearpark identified the Kosovo Energetic Corporation, which handles power supply for the province, as a suspect in this corruption case. The alleged scheme involves international aid money for the purchase and import of electricity during the last three harsh winters in Kosovo. According to the chief UN administrator of the Yugoslav province, Michael Steiner, "there will be zero tolerance for crime." (Associated Press, April 30, 2002, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

Study finds world´s forests endangered
  A Washington-based environmental research group warns that the world’s forests are rapidly declining which is the result of unsustainable development. New reports released by the World Resources Institute’s Global Forest Watch say 40 percent of undisturbed forests could be lost in 10 to 20 years. The institute blamed mining, road construction and logging activities. However, much of the threat arises from bad economics, poor management and corruption. While many countries have enacted laws to protect untouched forestland, regulations are not always enforced. The survey results also cited the country Indonesia as an example, claiming that 70 percent of its timber production is illegally logged. It also targeted Central Africa as an example of poor management. The reports also say logging concessions cover more than half of the world’s second largest tropical rainforest. In addition to these areas, the institute’s two-year study also covered North America, Russia, Chile and Venezuela.   (VOA News, April 3, 2002, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

Trifin J Roule at has posted the latest issue of the Corruption List: http://www.corruptionlist.com. In List Members’ contribution section see (1) A report by Global Witness entitled ‘All the Presidents’ Men’, which links the economic and political disorder of the Angolan conflict to kickbacks on arms trafficking, and a highly over-priced military procurement process. The report reveals how a network of international leaders, bagmen and influence peddlers – ‘the Presidents and their Men’ - have presided over a system that has led to the embezzlement of Angola’s oil wealth. The report also examines links between this process and the ‘Angolagate’ arms-to-Angola scandal, uncovered in France at the end of 2000.  (2)Also see http://www.house.gov/reform/newindex/presidential_pardons.htm for a copy of : JUSTICE UNDONE: CLEMENCY DECISIONS IN THE  CLINTON WHITE HOUSE  by the U.S. House Committee on Government Reform, which includes comprehensive analysis and recently de-classified information on pardons issued during the final hours of the Clinton presidency.] March 27, 2002.

 

FIFA critics seek fresh audit  An unusual meeting of FIFA’s executive committee has been scheduled. The meeting will discuss the call for the creation of an independent panel to investigate the body’s financial affairs. Sepp Blatter who is the president of FIFA has resisted calls for independent investigation of FIFA. The investigation is due to the concern about FIFA losing money following the bankruptcy of ISL/ISMM, the Swiss marketing agency that was FIFA’s main commercial partner. Mr. Blatter responded by commissioning a report from KPMG, which is FIFA’s official auditor, but this failed to placate his critics. Mr. Blatter´s opponents believe KPMG is too closely linked with FIFA and they want an audit by an independent body. Moreover, there have also been calls to broaden the investigation to cover bribery allegations, which was levelled at Mr. Blatter´s supporters. It was claimed that some of Mr. Blatter’s supporters paid bribes to African FIFA delegates to ensure his election in 1998.   The FIFA presidential elections are in May, which is before the start of the World Cup in Seoul and Korea. Mr. Blatter is so far the only candidate but a challenge is likely from Issa Hayatou, president of the Confederation of African Football.  (Financial Times, March 2, 2002, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

POOR MOUTHING AID:  THE TRUTH IS, IT WORKS:  COMMENTARY.  (Editorial Writer, Sebastian Mallaby, Washington Post.    Pessimistic people say that poverty is a shame, but is ‘unfixable’; that bigger aid programs will be wasted; that previous pro-market policy reforms have failed; that not much progress has been seen in education or health clinics even with aid; and that measurable success in developing countries cannot be attributed to aid, due to lack of evidence.  However, though billions of people remain poor, the numbers of poor has been steadily declining even though the world’s population has risen by 1.6 billion persons since 1990.  Returns from health aid include millions of years of productive labor to regional economies and simple nutritional alterations can boost children’s IQ levels by at least 10 percent.  The global international institutions, think tanks, and government representatives are meeting in Monterrey, Mexico this month to discuss development strategies, to push for doubling aid to guarantee the access of essential health care, a sound environment, and primary education to the poor.  The Bush administration will be urged to join this campaign on behalf of the United States.  A recently released macroeconomic and health report stated a yearly, global $66 billion investment until 2015 could generate 6 times as high benefits up to 2020.  In conclusion, aid to developing countries, especially in light of the anti-terror war being at center stage, is not philanthropy, it is strategic.    (WorldBank DevNews, Mar. 4, 2002, summary by Marg Reynolds)

 

Corruption ´deters Caspian investors´. With proven oil reserved of between 17 and 33 billion barrels, comparable to the Us, the Caspian Sea region has not developed as expected since the collapse of the USSR, mainly due to corruption and an inadequate legal framework that are scaring investors off, in spite of recent optimism about two pipeline projects in the region taking oil and gas from Azerbaijan to Turkey. The main problem now is territorial claims, as the world’s largest inland sea which used to be divided between URSS and Iran is now claimed by Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, as well as Russia and Iran, and no agreements on how to share it have been made yet, but the there is a strong environmental threat that could turn it into an ecological disaster area. (BBC News 26 Feb 2002, summary by Monica Voitovici).

 

Break through on tax havens  A group of 30 leading industrialised countries, The Organisation for Economic Co-Operations and Developing has made a breakthrough in the controversial campaign that force tax havens to improve levels of financial transparency.  The coalition has made an accord with Barbados, which has led opposition to its decision to blacklist 35 financial centres. A joint press release issued by the OECD and Barbados said Barbados would be excluded from a second blacklist of "unco-operative" tax havens, which is due after the end of this month. It is said that Barbados had decided to extend its existing bilateral agreements with large economy countries, such as the United Kingdom to cover all OECD members.   (Financial Times, February 1, 2002, summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

UN  FIRST MEETING ON THE ELABORATION OF THE UN CONVENTION AGAINST CORRUPTION  In its first meeting at Vienna this week, the Ad Hoc Committee is considering the first draft of a Convention against Corruption derived from a wide range of proposals from Member States, which were discussed at the Informal Preparatory Meeting of the committee held in Buenos Aires in December last year. The Officer- in- charge in the UN Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention, Mr. Steinar B. Bjornsson has said that this is a historic process in the fight against corruption intended to equip the member countries with a comprehensive, broad, effective and functional instrument to strengthen and create capacity to counter corruption. He indicated that the proposals show a keen interest from all countries to participate actively so that the final product of the convention reflects the multifaceted problems of corruption, and is accepted universally. The Chairman of the Ad Hoc Committee H.E. Ambassador Charry Samper has said that the task would be to bring about a change in behavior and obtain a commitment to act against the corruption world wide, which is increasing, and encroaching on agencies designed to curtail it. He has said that the measures to reach a common formula worldwide should include strengthening of controls, reform practices, international co-operation, and establishing a culture of transparency and integrity. He sought the support of the World Bank and the IMF, and urged all the financial and banking institutions to step up their efforts to combat corruption. Encouraging the Ad Hoc committee to move the convention forward he concluded that whilst no country, developed or developing is immune to corruption, effective ways of dealing with it could definitely be worked out.  (22 January 2002, www.un.org, summary by Aruna Balakrishnan).

 

WHISTLEBLOWING:  PEEP AND WEEP    Reaching corporate targets has caused companies such as BP and Xerox to not only not reward whistleblowers for expressing concern about environmental and accounting issues, but in fact, to punish them by persistent harassment, reprimands, or outright firing.  Many firms massage numbers to reach unrealistic targets, but since September 11th, whistleblowers on security issues have failed to receive a response to known cases of breaches.  Legislation for protection of whistleblowers who expose corporate or government shenanigans is gradually being introduced in a number of countries, but is bogged down in congressional committees in the U.S.  The Public Interest Disclosure Act, recently introduced in great Britain, is cited as the most far-reaching whistleblower protection in the world; however, few firms see whistleblower protection as being in their best interests.  A British bank, Abbey National, is an exception in its treatment of whistleblowers and now gives regular advice to its employees on how to blow the whistle – far more constructive than the approach of BP or Xerox.  (The Economist, Jan. 10, 2002, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

Annan urges Third World to fight corruption. Secretary General Kofi Annan urged developing countries on Monday to agree to fight corruption so as to persuade rich states to raise an extra 50 billion dollars in aid at a major UN conference this year. The week-long conference, which opens in Monterrey, Mexico, on March 18, "offers us the best chance we have had for many years to unlock the financial resources that are so desperately needed for development," Annan said. He was speaking at the start of the fourth and final round of preparatory talks for the conference, which runs until the end of next week. Annan told delegates he had appointed South African Finance Minister Trevor Manuel and the former managing director of the IMF, Michel Camdessus, as his special envoys to help rally support for the conference. "The role of the special envoys is to contact heads of state and high-level political leaders to foster national commitments to concrete outcomes in Monterrey," the UN department of public information said. Annan identified six criteria for success at Monterrey -- a prelude to the main UN event of the year, the conference on sustainable development to be held in Johannesburg in from August 26 to September 4. "First, it must strengthen and sharpen the consensus that now exists" that developing countries must do more to attract capital, in particular foreign direct investment, he said. "Agreement to conclude a comprehensive international convention against corruption -- providing for example for the repatriation of illegally transferred funds -- would also be a major step forward," he said. Second, there must be a promise of new trade negotiations going beyond what was achieved by the World Trade Organisation in Qatar in November, he said. Rich countries must double official development aid to 100 billion dollars a year, he said, noting that this would still fall short of their pledge to devote 0.7 percent of gross domestic product to aid. Creditor nations must go beyond current agreements on the debt of low-income and middle-income nations so as "to prevent the tragic experience of Argentina from being repeated elsewhere", Annan said. Developing nations must be given a bigger say in the management of the global economy, he went on, and Monterrey "must agree on effective follow-up mechanisms to make sure that whatever it decides is actually done." (Times of India, January 16, 2002, ,summary by Sherldine Tomlinson).

 

NEW MEASURES IN INTERNATIONAL CRICKET COUNCIL'S FIGHT AGAINST CORRUPTION.  The International Cricket Council (ICC) is going to appoint an  anti-corruption co-ordinator and five regional managers, as part of the  battle against match fixing. The initiative follows a report, which was  commissioned last year by the Anti-Corruption Unit of the Council. According  to Malcolm Speed, the ICC chief executive, "whilst this position is not  required by the Condon Report, we believe it is an important one to provide  focus and momentum for our ongoing fight against corruption." "Both the  anti-corruption co-ordinator and the security managers will play vital roles  in making sure cricket is clean in future," added the ICC chief executive.  (Source: The Times, January 9, 2002, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

ENRON, A BAD BUSINESS    Enron Corp. has denied any role in the mid-1997 arrests and beatings of dozens of peaceful objectors to the $2.6 bn. Natural gas plant planned by its subsidiary, the Dabhol Power Company.  However, initial investigations by the American Human Rights Watch group found categorical evidence that Enron paid the government to police the protests and officially suppress dissent.  Further investigation by Amnesty revealed harassment, arbitrary arrest, preventative detention, arbitrary and brutal misuse of the law, and ill-treatment of anti-Enron protest leaders.  Enron, together with Monsanto, Shell, McDonald’s Gap, Nike, and Exxon have been complicit in causing outrage on three continents; however due to Enron’s sheer scale, business methods, and manipulation of the international political process.  Tight links with the politically powerful, including James Baker, former U.S. Secretary of State; Robert Mosbacher, former Commerce Secretary; and Thomas Kelly, Director of Operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the Gulf War, has ensured massive contract awards far in excess of the payroll costs for the political support.  Enron has left a trail of U.S. government cash, public accusations, and angry communities in Britain, Germany, Panama, the Philippines, Argentina, Mozambique, and Bolivia.  Even in the U.S., due to special concessions by then Governor Bush, Enron was allowed to pollute without a permit and received immunity from prosecution after violating pollution laws at its Texas methanol plant.  Everyone is better off without the giant rampaging bully.     (The Guardian, Nov. 30, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

TERRORISM, ORGANISED CRIME, MONEY LAUNDERING. It goes without saying that there is a strong connection between terrorism and organised crime. Estimates of the total money laundered around the world range from $500 billion to $1.5 trillion, most of it from the illegal drugs trafficking. Secretary-general of INTERPOL, Ronald Noble said: "If corrupt public servants provide false identity documents, terrorists will move more freely throughout the world, and all of us will remain threatened." The OECD-based Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering is holding a special meeting in Washington to consider measures to stop the flow of these terrorist funds. There are 19 states that are identified by FATF as lax on money laundering, among them Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, Indonesia and Russia; Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq have no regulations against money laundering; arrangements are inadequate in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. According to the Global Corruption Report, published by Transparency International, " laundering only needs to be good enough to defeat the capacity of financial investigation skills and the burden of proof in any of the jurisdictions along its economic path." (Source: TI, International Herald Tribune, October 30, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

THE ANTI-CORRUPTION MOVEMENT GROWS IN COURAGE. It is well known that fighting corruption is dangerous. Corrupt public figures do not hesitate to assassinate journalists, public prosecutors and civil society activists who try to expose corruption. At the recent International Anti-Corruption Conference (IACC) in Prague, attended by 1,400 participants from dozens of countries, Transparency International paid tribute to four victims: Carlos Alberto Cardoso (Mozambique), Luis Carlos Galan (Colombia), Georgy Gongadze (Ukraine) and Norbert Zongo (Burkina Faso). The IACC noted, however, that progress has been made in the international anti-corruption movement. TI was created only eight years ago (1993) and now has national chapters in 80 countries; today, a rapidly growing set of coalitions is being organized at national, regional and global levels to force change. It is also impressive that leaders from official multilateral organizations (the OECD, the World Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development etc) should come together with top executives from multinational corporations, journalists, judges, police and security agency leaders and civil-society activists to work on new initiatives. (Source: TI, Earth Times, October 31, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

LEGISLATIVE ACTIVISM TRIGGERED BY CURRENT TERRORIST THREATS LACK THE COORDINATION TO BE EFFECTIVE – EDITORIAL (The writer is Chairman of the OECD’s working group on bribery in international business transactions and a former member of the FATF).    The use of the financial system by organized criminals for money management in hiding money in offshore companies has been aided by the uncoordinated, patchy, incomplete, and inadequate measures by the governments of countries such as Germany, the United States, and the United Kingdom.  Ten years ago, the FATF advocated creation of a central notification body to report suspected money laundering cases, together with measures of identification of both foreign and domestic front companies of terrorists.  However, bureaucratic controls will easily be evaded by the criminals and terrorists and the financial institutions should be responsible for identification and profiling of not only their individual clients and corporate vehicles, but also the beneficiaries behind the customer.  All countries should be able to search, seize, and forfeit property belonging to a terrorist organization and those assisting in hiding finances should be charged with the criminal offense.  It should be mandatory for all countries to notify the central body authorities of suspect funds, including countries such as Iran and Russia, who have expressed anti-terrorism solidarity but are not currently participants in anti-laundering codes.    (FT, OCT. 24, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds)

 

NEW U.S. TASK FORCE TO INVESTIGATE ILLICIT CHARITIES AND CORRUPT FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS    A new team, called Operation Green Quest and composed of prosecutors and investigators from the U.S. Treasury Dept., Justice Dept., the Internal Revenue Service, the Customs Service, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, will target charities, non-governmental organizations, and underground remittance systems to disrupt terrorist financial networks such as al-Qaeda.  The task force will track down and dismantle present and future sources of financing by targeting hawalas (undocumented asset transfers), illicit charities, corrupt financial institutions, counterfeiting, credit card fraud, drug trafficking, and cash smuggling.     (FT, Oct. 26, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds)

 

TRYING A NEW APPROACH. The 10th Annual Anti-Corruption Conference was held from 7 to 11 October in Prague (Czech Republic). A wide range of subjects was discussed, including fighting corruption in the judicial system. Keith E. Henderson, the creator of USAID's first official anti-corruption policy, was interviewed about the roots of corruption in post-Soviet judiciaries. Keith E. Henderson is currently working on a small judicial-reform project in Bulgaria, called the Black Sea Legal Community. Keith E. Henderson considers an independent judiciary to be prerequisite for a corruption-free society. "In the judiciary, economic interests agree to pay officials to appoint certain people to judgeships." "The person appointed may get a call from time to time to make a decision a certain way. By then the government official may no longer be there. That means that the economic interest again has to have someone else appointed to a position within that agency. There is a huge turnover of officials, particularly in transition times...Many officials want to be appointed to as many positions as possible, because every time they get an appointment they get another bit of the action. So there is a constant placement of corrupt officials. That's why this corrupt network grows. That's just one form in which this corruption occurs." According to Keith E. Henderson the fundamental problem is systemic corruption, thus, the solution is to work with the state in a "very targeted, strategic way." Accordingly, donors should give more emphasis to the issues of judicial independence, rather than to judicial administration and actual management. (Source: TI, Transitions Online, October 18, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

SOME CORRUPTION BATTLE IS BEARING FRUIT. The Global Corruption Report 2001 is the first such survey of its kind. According to Transparency International, which prepared this study, " this new report contains rays of hope. Increasing numbers of governments and business organizations are starting, albeit modestly, to take positive steps to curb bribery. In particular, citizens' action is beginning to call politicians to account in all corners of the world." The survey provides an exhaustive list of examples of corruption around the world as well as how they were uncovered. (Source: TI, Business Day, October 16, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

MIXED RESULTS FOR GLOBAL ANTI-CORRUPTION DRIVE. The results of anti-corruption drives are mixed, according to the watchdog charity Transparency International (TI). TI released its first Global Corruption Report, according to which the problem had become a big political issue in many countries. "On balance, the international community's efforts to fight corruption have had a positive impact," the report said. Peter Eigen, chairman of Transparency International, said that the September 11 attacks in the US had also made clear how high the stakes were in areas such as money laundering. "Without corruption, the terror attacks would not have been possible," he said. "To fight corruption means to fight terrorism." The report also warned some countries in Africa that rushes into privatization and liberalization may increase the potential for corruption. (Source: TI, Financial Times, October 16, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

TRADITIONAL PAPERLESS MONEY TRANSFERS COULD BENEFIT BIN LADEN NETWORK. The traditional system of import-export offices, or trading marts, the so-called "hawala," is believed to have been used by Osama bin Laden's terrorist network. "Hawala" (="reference" in Urdu-language).  is a low-tech method of money transfers, which is widely used in south Asia, the Middle East and beyond. The system is simple: a customer walks into an office and tells the broker where to send the cash. Soon, the faraway recipient goes to an affiliated broker and collects the same amount of money, minus costs and perhaps a small fee. Sometimes the money is even home-delivered. During this transaction the actual cash hasn't gone anywhere. The system is based on the trust among the hawala brokers, who are often blood relatives. Although almost every country outlaws hawala, financial experts believe many of the transactions are innocent, involving customers who simply can't afford banking fees or wish to avoid long delays. Nevertheless, the system's relative anonymity and lack of any legal record keeping makes it useful to drug traffickers, weapons brokers, tax evaders, corrupt officials - or operatives of a shadowy network like that of bin Laden. (Source: The Independent, October 17, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

THE WORLD BANK AND INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM COURSE  STRENGTHENS MEDIA IN LATIN AMERICA There is no more effective check on corrupt officials, bribe takers, embezzlers and those who waste public funds than a hard-nosed investigative journalist. In many parts of Latin America, unfortunately, they are not abundant. No more. The World Bank Institute is tapping its own knowledge, and that of media experts across Latin America to train 200 journalists in nine countries in how to dig up stories that make the corrupt tremble.  (Source: World Bank Institute, September 26, 2001, originally published in “Today”, the daily e-zine of World Bank Staff Summary by: Shatarupa Chaki).

 

JOURNALIST KILLINGS, SELF-CENSORSHIP CONCERN IAPA. The Miami-based Inter American Press Association (IAPA) has warned that Latin America's media-freedom problems have been heightened in recent months by the murders of nine journalists and the emergence of a "culture of self-censorship." In a recent report IAPA declared that its "greatest concern" was the killing of seven journalists in Colombia, one journalist in Mexico and another in Costa Rica since March. IAPA also expressed its concern about violence in Haiti, Cuba and the Dominican Republic, about "innumerable lawsuits being filed against individual journalists and the news media, particularly in Costa Rica and Brazil" and about "anti-press legislation and bills" in Paraguay, Chile, Nicaragua and Panama. According to the President of IAPA, Danilo Arbilla, the climate of self-censorship results from violence in rural areas of the countries, like Colombia, Mexico and Brazil, in which journalists were least protected and feared reprisals for writing of corruption or drug trafficking. The organization urged for strict compliance with the principles of the IAPA-sponsored Declaration of Chapultepec. (Source: Freedom Forum Online, July 31, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George)

 

CENTRAL ASIA:  BATTLE LINES FORMING IN STRUGGLE OVER CORRUPTION IN CASPIAN BASIN    Endemic and pervasive corruption in the countries of the former Soviet Union located in the Caucasus and Central Asia is the real danger and serious challenge to investors and to Transparency International’s loud calls for reform.  New systems of government, pledges by the International Monetary Fund, reforms imposed as a precondition to World Bank loans, and cultivating enlightened images on transparency and worker rights is estimated to reduce a shadow economy of up to half certain nations’ GDP.  Bribes and side payments in the Kazakhstan oil industry or the Turkmenistan caviar trade, together with nationalizing key industries may well cause dilution of foreign investment.  Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Armenia, and their neighbors depend upon foreign investment for large portions of their budgets.    (EurasiaNet, July 20, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

HYPOCRISY SURROUNDS BRIBERY ISSUE – EDITORIAL    We are pure, live by the rule of law, thoroughly deservedly rich, neat, orderly, and legal.  However, THEY are corrupt, live by connections or cronyism, thoroughly deservedly poor, disorganized, anarchic, and secretive.  Companies in signatory nations to the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention account for almost three-quarters of global trade and an estimated $37 billion was affected by bribery of foreign officials – the bribes were then returned to rest in secret accounts of First World nations.  Therefore, accessories to the crime are the First World nations.  Fine Maema, Lesotho Attorney-General, has brought a first or extremely rare suit against European and Canadian engineering firms for bribing officials to award contracts for a huge $1.4 billion dam construction project.  Those who pay the bribes must be held equally responsible as those who are taking the bribes.  The extraordinary courage of Lesotho eclipses that of the World Bank, who suggested taking no action for fear of construction project cancellation.    (TI, The Toronto Star, July 19, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

TRANSPARENCY INTERNATIONAL:  INDEX POINTS TO WORLDWIDE CORRUPTION CRISIS    Peter Eigen, Transparency International Chairman, stated perceived corruption amongst public officials and politicians is believed by investors, risk analysts, and the public as the most widespread and levels are as high as ever in both developing and developed countries.  TI also noted the vicious circle of poverty and corruption, especially in education and health care.  Many developed countries lack the integrity they preach to developing countries and Eign was alarmed at the campaign contributions scandal in Germany; the gifts received by former French Foreign Minister, Roland Dumas from Elf Aquitaine; and Washington’s re-thinking their participation in an OECD working group to abolish harmful tax practices, which would cause a serious setback in the corruption battle.    (AOL News (Reuters), June 27, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds

 

CRUNCH TIME FOR WAR ON ‘HOT MONEY’ HAVENS    The ‘name and shame’ campaign exercised last year which was launched by the Financial Action Task Force, a forum initiated by the Group of Seven economic powers and joined by 31 states, has already prompted encouraging changes or pledges from major offshore centers and others blacklisted.  Lack of reform may cause counter-measures such as imposed sanctions against renegade financial centers and FATF officials are also scrutinizing a swathe of locations not including in the first warning list.    http://finance.individual.com  (Office.com (Reuters), June 22, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

WORLD BANK:  GLOBAL WAR ON CORRUPTION – PICKING UP MOMENTUM    James Wolfensohn, World Bank President, has made war on corruption an inalienable part of the Bank’s campaign for eradication of poverty.  The Bank’s efforts include surveys of state of affairs by observers in various countries; participation in the bi-annual International Anti-Corruption Conference (IACC) and the Global Forum on Fighting Corruption and Safeguarding Integrity; and other valuable insights on issues such as Integrity and Governance, Law Enforcement, Customs, Corruption, Transition and Development, and Government and Business Sectors.  Information on these topics may be accessed at:  http://usinfo.state/gov/topical/econ/bribes/gf2workshops.htm  The anti-corruption movement must be both compliance-based and values-based, free of political manipulation and control, impartial, and required to report publicly on results.  It was noted that India did not send a representative to the Conference.  (Business Line India, June 21, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

HISTORY SHOWS MULTIPLE CURRENCIES BREED CORRUPTION   Multiple currency regimes have historically distorted economic activity through fraud and incentives to under-invoice imports and over-invoice exports.  Billions of dollars have been lost to countries such as Argentina, Venezuela, Brazil, Italy, Belgium, Egypt, and France during their unsuccessful experimentation with multiple exchange rates; dollars which were transferred to offshore accounts.  Future loan agreements from the IMF will ban this practice.    (Excite (Reuters), June 20, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

UNITED NATIONS:  AUDIT CHARGES CRIME PREVENTION OFFICE WITH FRAUD AND MISMANAGEMENT    Dileep Nair, Under-Secretary of Internal Oversight Services of the U.N. Drug Control and Crime Prevention offices stated a report has been forwarded to Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s office which outlines faults in personnel policy, waste, corruption, and inefficiency.  Nair further believes that overcentralized and heavily personalized decision making within the agency has led to allegations of overspending against Pino Arlacchi, Director of the Drug Control Program, for a $100,000 Mercedes and other luxuries.     (DJ Newswires, June 12, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds)..

 

GLOBAL FORUM:  TREATY TO BE DRAFTED TO CONTROL CORRUPTION. A U.N. Treaty will be drafted by Ministers of more than 100 countries to control corruption, which Kofi Annan, U.N. General Secretary, believes will make it easier to detect corruption and locate and punish offenders.  However, concrete action at a national level is needed, including anti-corruption programs, an independent judiciary, and free media.  Peter Eigen, TI Chairman, expressed concern that the euro currency launch scheduled for next year, together with a possible temporary lift of anti-money laundering laws in France could trigger the largest money laundering exercise in history.  Robert McNamara, former World Bank President, believes the 1999 OECD measures have lacked progress and enforcement, and is concerned for the U.N. Treaty’s implementation.  Seoul, South Korea will host the next forum in 2003.    (UN Wire, May 31, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

GLOBAL FORUM II – FIGHTING GLOBAL CORRUPTION – BUSINESS RISK MANAGEMENT. Cynthia Schneider, U.S. Ambassador to the Netherlands, stated at the Second Global Forum on Fighting Corruption and Safeguarding Integrity held in the Hague that the administration of President George Bush is committed to the international corruption fight.  Colin Powell, Secretary of State, announced the release of a publication entitled: ‘Fighting Global Corruption:  Business Risk Management’.  The full text may be located at:  http://www.state.gov .  He believes success depends upon impartial democratic institutions, open elections, unfettered access to information, leadership by the private sector, and active participation by citizens.    (State Department Media Note, May 29, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

GLOBAL FORUM II:  GOVERNMENTS TOLD TO GET TOUGH ON CORRUPTION    Jeremy Pope, TI-UK Director, stated progress has been made in raising international awareness of corruption, however, government cooperation on returning stolen assets by politicians is failing due to non-facilitation of legal frameworks.  Daniel Kaufman, World Bank anti-corruption expert, believes more attention and effective action should be paid to high level corruption in government structures and the judiciary.  Michel van Hulten, corruption expert and Dutch MP, disagrees with both TI and the World Bank and believes it is not possible to measure corruption as the corrupt do not record their transactions, and tax and anti-fraud inspectors need to find ways of gathering information on illegal practices.    (World Bank DevNews, May 29, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

INNOVATIVE CORRUPTION – ILLEGAL SALE OF HUMAN ORGANS (Extract of an article by David Finkel) The sale of human organs is against the law in every country (with the exception of Iran) and the world’s medical associations and political and religious leaders have stated the practice is morally and ethically irresponsible, inhumane and unacceptable, and violates the dignity of the human person.  Donated organs – hearts, livers, lungs, and kidneys – are, however, legal.  An organ-trafficking market, composed of buyers and sellers, is illegal, complex, well organized, often cross continental, and is conducted with only a scant nod toward secrecy in Israel, India, Turkey, China, Russia, and Iraq.    (NY Times Magazine, May 27, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

INTERNET MAY BE NEW MONEY LAUNDERING BATTLEFIELD. The estimated $1 trillion per year that is laundered in an increasingly borderless world is being aided by criminal development of new and more sophisticated methods for moving money, even as countries develop counter measures.  Exploiting vulnerabilities in the financial system is an area of rising concern as Internet banking transactions are quick, easy, and anonymous.  Inadequate customer identification and account monitoring procedures allow money laundering to affect all levels of society and gives wicked legitimacy to ill-gotten wealth.  The underworld is expanded and ‘clean’ money spawns more social and economic woes.    (DJ Newswires (AP), May 22, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

NO TRADE BENEFITS WITHOUT REFORMS … INCLUDING FIGHT AGAINST CORRUPTION SAYS WOLFENSOHN    During the Third UN Conference for Least Developed Countries (LDCs) in Brussels, James Wolfensohn, World Bank President, stated implementation of basic vital political and infrastructure reforms in developing countries, which include good governance, functioning legal and judicial systems, education and health care initiatives, together with the fight against corruption would boost LDC’s chances of being competitive and enjoying the benefits of globalization.  He urged national leaders to address the HIV/AIDS problem and to be involved in international efforts in prevention, education, cultural exchange in concert with reducing the cost of retrovirals.   Also at the Conference, Olusegun Obasanjo, Nigerian President, believes political instability can be avoided through governmental transparency and that corruption is anti-development.  Kofu Annan, UN Secretary-General, believes the support of developed countries in LDCs efforts to join the global market place as producers and consumers will give them a chance in their continuous struggle against hunger, malnutrition, polluted drinking water, infectious disease, ignorance, oppression, and violent conflict.    (WB DevNews, May 15, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

CORRUPTION COSTS $80 BILLION YEARLY – (BY ELINOR GARELY, CONTRIBUTING EDITOR E-TURBO-NEWS)    Corruption – a major international scourge flourishing in regimes that limit power to an unaccountable few – has been estimated by the World Bank to cost $80 billion annually, not including embezzled development funds and small scale corruption.  In many cases, specific information on the unrecorded, non-rule based, or informal economy of both national and cross-border trade involves private profit through misuse of public power by simply too powerful interests.  Corruption is a disincentive for direct foreign investment; thrives in opacity; creates poverty and therefore an even larger underground economy; creates distrust of government, citizens, and investors; threatens aid programs; subverts rule of the law and work ethics; and violates opportunities for safe buildings, bridges, drinking water, air, and non-violent international co-existence.  Prosperity and freedom may be obtained in countries that value transparency and openness.    (E-Turbo News, May 14, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

JOURNALISM AND POWER:  WHY OWNERSHIP MATTERS (Article by Frank Vogl, Vice President of Transparency International)    The media’s role in strengthening democracy by exposing corruption depends on non-media developments such as press freedom laws, fair and independent judges, courageous public prosecutors, and by serving as an effective public watchdog.  Many powerful media owners, both private and state-controlled, have multiple business interests and political party affiliations and govern the editors.  In many developing and transition countries, investigating journalists are prevented from tough and independent coverage by minimal newsroom budgets, and are therefore easy prey for bribery.  However, there are still many excellent developing world media owners who struggle to support brilliant editors and courageous reporters.  Donor agencies are implored to fund independent judicial systems, education in research and analyses to secure meaningful media antitrust regulations and secure transparency in the non-media business dealings of media owners.    (Media Channel, May 9, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

Transparency International has released the 2001 ranking of 91 countries according to corruption perception index. Peter Eigen, the president states: “The OECD Anti-Bribery Convention was a landmark in the fight against corruption in international business, but countries such as the United Kingdom have still not even tabled the legislation to implement the Convention.” (June 27, 2001, visit http://www.transparency.org ).

 

Financial Action Task Force (FATF) against Money Laundering, an international body of major industrial countries has published a new report on June 22, 2001.  It has updated the original blacklist of countries and can discourage multinationals from doing business in these countries and require banks to collect detailed information regarding most transactions.

1]Removed from blacklist are Bahamas, Caymen Islands, Liechtensterin and Panama.

2]Added to blacklist are: Egypt, Guatemala, Hungary, Indonesia, Mynmar and Nigeria.

3]Still on blacklist and facing countermeasures: Nauru, Philippines and Russia.

4]Still on blacklist but making progress: Cooks Islands, Dominica, Israel, Lebanon, Marshall Islands, Niue, St; Kitts and Nevis and St. Vincent and Grenadines.

(Wall St. J. June 22, 2001, p. A3)

 

WORLD BANK:  GOVERNANCE MOST IMPORTANT IN REDUCING POVERTY SAYS WOLFENSOHN    James Wolfensohn, President, stated that public sector corruption is now viewed as a social issue by the Bank, rather than a political issue as in the past.  The Bank’s new approaches include assisting in individual country poverty reduction strategies, public spending management systems, transparency, access to and cooperation with developed markets, and technical assistance to post-conflict countries.  Hotlines have been provided for citizen complaints of corruption and ethics violations and the Bank employees are provided with ethics training.    (Washington File, Apr 27, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

WORLD:  $131 BILLION IN FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT DETERRED DUE TO OPACITY. A recent study by Pricewaterhouse Coopers stated capital flight from opaque countries to those with greater transparency indicates the link between transparency policy changes and economic growth and investment.  Singapore, the United States, Chile, and the United Kingdom were established as benchmarks and corruption, legal, regulatory, accounting, and economic opacity of individual countries was compared to the transparency of the benchmark countries.  The Index will be further refined and developed by the firm and may be used as an analytical tool for policy debates within the country and in global forums.    (Yahoo News, Apr 24, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

UNITED NATIONS:  AUDIT REPORT RAISES CONCERNS ABOUT DRUG PROGRAM    Investigations are underway into a series of mismanagement and corruption allegations at the United Nations Drug Control Program in response to one of two U.N. Reports; the second investigation to be released shortly.  The audit report focused on recruitment, commitment of resources, and appropriateness of expenditures.  Financial status of individual projects was not readily available and when located, differed widely by the three concerned UNDCP sections.  A new financial management system request from auditors has been ignored for six years and Kofi Annan, U.N. Secretary-General, will make a decision as to the recommendation of Pino Arlacchi, Executive Director, for a second five-year term.    (FT, Apr 26, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

IMF:  EXTRACTS FROM INTERNATIONAL MONETARY AND FINANCIAL COMMITTEE COMMUNIQUE    11.  The Committee would like to initiate a framework for development plans with other international institutions, member governments, and the private sector to locate high quality ventures with sustainable market justification.  12.  The Committee plans to initiate measures to further its knowledge of individual country requirements of early warning capabilities and strengthen crisis prevention through private sector involvement.  13.  The Committee has progressed its previous initiatives in crisis prevention and financial sector surveillance through assessing member monitoring systems.  14.  The Committee hearily endorses anti-money laundering legislation and financially back same.  15.  The Committee plans to continue its efforts to assist in strengthening country reforms and will review conditionality on an ongoing basis.  16.  The Committee plans to review remedial measures taken against poor governance and corruption by surveillance initiatives. (Washington File, Apr 29, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

R. PRODI: "CORRUPTION IS AN INSULT TO THE POOR." In an article for the International Herald Tribune, Mr. Romano Prodi, the president of the Commission of the European Union, expressed his concern that "in the world today millions of people continue to live in conditions that most Westerners can barely imagine." This week the European Union is hosting a UN conference on the problems of the so-called least developed countries (LDCs). We remind to you that the European Union recently decided to grant duty-free and quota-free access to all products from the LDCs with the exception of arms. In his article Mr. Prodi urged other industrialized countries to follow suit. On the other hand the President of the European Commission said that no amount of money from the rich West would help unless the anti-poverty strategies were combined with "a drive for democracy, human rights and the supremacy of the rule of law". "Corruption is an insult to the poor, and we should all put the fight against corruption at the core of our policies," added Mr. Prodi. (Source: International Herald Tribune, May 16, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

CORRUPTION - THE UNIVERSAL PHENOMENON. In Arab countries it is called baksheesh, hongbao in China, matabiche in central Africa, propina in Latin America, pots de vin in France, in other parts of the world it is called bribery. According to the World Bank, corruption amounts to $80 billion a year. This amount does not include embezzled development funds and small-scale corruption found in developing countries. Reno (2000) estimates that in Benin, ninety percent of its cross-border trade flowed through illegal channels (Allen, Baxter, Radu & Sommerville, 1989). An estimated sixty- percent of Nigeria's trade with its neighbors in 1998 was unrecorded (Nigerian Loses, 1999). Quantifying the economic loss due to corruption is difficult, however, because it is illegal and hidden (Wei, 2000). Tanzi (1994) defines corruption as "the misuse of public power for private profit. According to him, corruption represents "non-compliance with the 'arm's length' principle, under which no personal or family relationship should play any role in economic decision-making." Bribery, an central element of the corruption process, is explained by Daniel Bertosa, the Public Prosecutor of Geneva, as a system that "consists of promising or offering an advantage to a public agent, civil servant, minister or manager of a public company, so they betray their responsibility to the public authority they represent" (Abramovici, 2000). Transparency International (1995) examines the connection between poverty and corruption. "If poverty were the cause of corruption, then it would be hard to explain why rich, wealthy countries are beset by scandals." Perhaps, poverty does not cause corruption; rather, poverty is the consequence of corruption. (Source: E-Turbo News, May 14, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

New York, UN CRIME CONTROL BODY TO FOCUS ON CORRUPTION. The progress in fighting corruption will be the central focus of a United Nations international crime control body that began its current session in Vienna today. The UN Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, established in 1992, is expected to set the stage for negotiating a legally binding international treaty on corruption. Additionally, the Commission will consider ways to promote the early entry into force of the recently adopted UN Convention against Transnational Organized crime and its three protocols dealing with trafficking in human beings, smuggling of migrants and illicit manufacturing and trade in firearms. (Source: United Nations, May 9, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

SEOUL MAYOR WINS INTERNATIONAL ANTI-CORRUPTION ACCLAIM. IEEP has honored Seoul mayor, Goh Kun, for his work in routing corruption from his city’s administration in 1999. Transparency International awarded him the “2001 Global Integrity Medal.”  New York University Wagner school of public service honored him on May 9, 2001.  The meeting was attended by President D. P. Gregg of Korea Society, Korean diplomats and Prof. H. D. Vinod, among others.  The Mayor explained the latest developments in using Information Technology (IT) to fight corruption throughout Korea beyond the city, how the system will be integrated with the actual working of the city in October 2001, how the cost of the whole system was only about $300,000. Integrity Pact (IP) is an agreement between companies submitting bids signing the oath to not engage in illegal price-fixing or offer bribes, gifts and entertainment and to accept punishment if they violate the IP.  To enforce the IP there is an IP Ombundsmen as citizen representatives to monitor if bribes or entertainment are offered.  An anticorruption index (ACI) to assess areas most susceptible to corruption.  The idea is to encourage the competition for integrity among various departments. The corruption report card is sent to the citizen every month by the mayor’s office many report irregularities and recommendations and as a result two officials were dismissed, one suspended, one reprimanded, and several were admonished or underwent corrective training courses. There are money rewards to citizen for making reports and suggestions.

 

WORLD BANK:  EIGHT FIRMS, TWO INDIVIDUALS DEBARRED FOR CORRUPTION IN CONTRACTS     Claes Fjellner of Sweden and Jonas Gyllensvaan of the United States, together with eight Swedish consulting firms, have been debarred by the World Bank for corruption in the award of contracts.  Included in the firms are:  Nordic Trust Stiftelsen, Swedcon, O-Group, Sadin International Operations, and Swaan Consulting.  Five European governments due to corruption allegations have frozen consultant trust funds administered by the bank and three bank employees have been sacked.    (World Bank DevNews, Apr 5, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

WORLD:  TAX HAVENS STILL THRIVE DESPITE ATTACKS    The EOCD recently estimated that over $200 billion has been placed in about 35 tax havens worldwide.  Most havens have extremely strict bank secrecy laws and do not disclose information to foreign tax authorities except where crimes are suspected.  Rose Wong, of the private bank Courts in Hong Kong, stated: ‘It’s not against the law to set up something that avoids taxes.  It is against the law to evade taxes, but setting up an entity to get around the tax structure, finding a loophole, there'’ nothing wrong with that.’    (Far East Economic Review, Apr 5, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

TRANSPARENCY INTERNATIONAL:  CAMPAIGN FOR GREATER TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY IN LOCAL GOVERNMENT    Peter Eigen, Transparency International (TI) Chairman and Anna Tabaijuka, United Nations Center for Human Settlements (Habitat) have announced the launch of a Global Campaign for Participatory Urban Governance to campaign for government transparency and accountability with attention focused on the needs of the urban poor.  The good governance norms of the campaign are sustainability, decentralization, equity, efficiency, transparency, accountability, civic engagement, and safety.  Several flagship projects are planned and the campaign will first be launched on April 10 in Nigeria.    (TI Press Release, Apr 5, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

ACCOUNTANTS CALLED TO FIGHT CORRUPTION    The International Development Committee of the House of Commons stated that spreading an active and vocal path of best practice methods and raising standards was a key role of auditors.  The committee cited areas in which revisions were required are:  an uncoordinated approach to money laundering, government response time to tracing and freezing the proceeds of corruption, extra resources to tackle these issues, and reform in World Bank accounting regimes.  Roger Davis, senior audit partner at Price Waterhouse Coopers stated it was not an auditor’s role to make a moral judgement on what is acceptable.    (AccountancyAge, Apr 4, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

WORLD BANK:  REPORT URGES DONORS TO REWARD ‘GOOD GOVERNANCE’    David Dollar, World Bank researcher, has stated further research is required into reasons why aid has supported poverty reduction in some areas where political leaders reforms and implement change, increase public confidence and attract greater private investment; and retarded it in other areas which are not committed to reform.  A report was released entitled, ‘Aid and Reform in Africa: Lessons from Ten Case Studies’ which investigates and draws conclusions as to why only two of the ten countries studied – Ghana and  Uganda – adopted and maintained a sound reform policy. (WB DevNews, Mar. 28, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

FIRST FINANCIAL RECORDS REFERENCE MODEL AVAILABLE    The International Records Management Trust, together with the World Bank and the U.K. Department for International Development is pleased to make available to the public a publication entitled, ‘Principles and Practices in Managing Financial Records:  A Reference Model and Assessment Tool’.  Research has found greater public sector financial accountability provides a safeguard against corruption and fraud, and the publication distills good practice strategies in developing country contexts.  (IRMT Press Release, Mar. 28, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

LENDING TO BE CUT BACK FOR COUNTRIES THAT DON’T CONTROL CORRUPTION    The World Bank, together with its sibling lender, the International Monetary Fund, have this week announced changes in lending practices to governments that have been dogged by corruption charges.  They will reduce aid to governments who refuse to cut government spending, reduce subsidies to industry, or open their economies and will increase aid to those countries committed to policy reforms that spur private investment and reduce poverty.    (Bloomberg News, Mar 27, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

INCREASING KIDNAPPINGS CREATE GLOBAL BUSINESS, ‘MADE EASIER BECAUSE OF CORRUPTION’    Clark Staten, director of Emergency Response and Research Institute of Chicago, stated kidnapping for ransom by extremist groups to finance their activities has become big business.  Although the U.S. government discourages ransom payments as it encourages terrorism, between 70 and 80 percent of kidnap cases end in such a payment.  International companies such as oil, gas, and mining are most at risk and some demands are up to $100 million, with the average ransom being $250,000.    (Yahoo News (AP), Mar. 25, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

RECOVERING THE DICTATORS’ LOOTED WEALTH – OPINION (Written by Edwin Truman, senior fellow the Institute for International Economics and former assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury for International Affairs).    An internationally coordinated strategy involving local authorities, private organizations, international financial institutions and destination jurisdictions is required to recover funds looted by kleptocrats including Joseph Estrada, Slobodan Milosevic, Ferdinand Marcos, Mobutu Sese Seko, Francois ‘Papa Doc’ Duvalier, Suharto and Sani Abacha.  Establishment of an international commission with dedicated systems, procedures and laws would deter future kleptocratic rulers and help citizens of these countries recover their looted wealth. (FT, Mar. 20, 2001, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

WORLD BANK ADVISES AID DONORS TO REWARD GOOD GOVERNANCE. According to the latest thinking from the World Bank, rich donors, instead of trying to buy reform with aid, should reward developing countries that follow good policies. This is a conclusion included in a report of the World Bank's most recent assessment of aid and poverty. The report compares the experiences of 10 African countries and reaches the conclusion that attempts to buy reform over the past years have failed. That is why, according to the report, international aid donors should only lend on countries that have displayed a good record of macroeconomic and governance policy, such as Uganda and Ghana. Finally, the report repeats the familiar call for rich countries to increase the amount given in aid to the poorest nations. According to World Bank officials it is ironic that aid as a proportion of national income has been reduced just as an international consensus on the effectiveness of aid has been developed. (Source: Financial Times, March 27, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George). 

 

"SLEAZE'S SLIMY INVENTIVENESS".  In an article in the Guardian, the controversial author Mr. Salman Rusdie examines, among other things, the phenomenon of corruption.  According to Mr. Rusdie, recent corruption scandals in France, Peru, India, the United States etc are expressions of a general trend.  "Yes, sleaze has resurfaced, grinning its slobbering grin, to remind us that it never really went away - that it remains the great occult force that bends and shapes the age, its existence perennially denied, its empire expanding daily.  You can almost admire its inexhaustible inventiveness.  Things you never imagined were sleazy - things that actually were never tarnished before - come daily under sleaze's slimy suzerainty, and are hopelessly compromised, or, like innocence or paradise, lost" (Source: The Guardian, February 7, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

MONEY LAUNDERING CONCERNS cited in US Senate Staff Report, Wall Street Journal, NY Times and AP, Feb. 5, 2001. Many major US banks and correspondence banks in various island countries are accused.

 

 FIVE BASIC PRINCIPLES FOR A WORLDWIDE CODE OF BUSINESS ETHICS. Today most companies have internal codes against bribing government officials.  The OECD has published guidelines for multinational enterprises, and many nongovernmental organizations have publicized sets of global principles that, unfortunately, "lack teeth". According to an article of Mr. E.B.Kapstein (Instead business school, Fontainebleau, France) the World Economic Forum or the International Chamber of Commerce might usefully serve to help develop best practices for corporate conduct. According to Mr. Kapstein, some basic principles that could help the effort could be the following: 1) Companies should ensure the safety of their products and services. They should test their products in cooperation with consumer organizations. 2) Companies should encourage transparency in public tenders, in order to minimize incentives for corruption. 3) Multinational companies should pay their workers in every country a wage that is sufficient for maintaining a life of dignity. In hiring workers, they should not practice any form of discrimination and they should accept the principle of equal pay for equal work. 4) Companies should seek to minimize environmental damage from their activities and should report annually on the progress they have made in this field. 5) Companies should not conduct business with governments that refuse to support these ethical principles and they should report to the international media any efforts by public officials to subvert or undermine them. (Source: International Herald Tribune, January 24, 2001, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

“THE FIGHT AGAINST CORRUPTION IS FAILING …” SAYS HEAD OF CORRUPTION STUDY CENTER    Rachel Ehrenfeld, Director of the Center for the Study of Corruption and the Rule of Law has suggested that international lending institutions build specific requirements for effective anti-corruption policies, rules, and practices in order to be eligible for funds.  Further, a measured benchmark should be developed against which countries’ actions to fight corruption can be tested.  The governing elite of some countries has looted billions of dollars and unchecked corruption undermines the foundations of civil society and endangers the stability and legitimacy of democratically elected governments.    (WT, Dec. 29, 2000, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

EUROPEAN COMMISSION. The Prodi Commission set a reform program in motion in a positive response to weaknesses in financial management and control found by the European Court of Auditors,  Mr. Jan O. Karlsson, President of the Court of Auditors, reports an unacceptable incidence of errors affecting legality and budget irregularities were found on various programs. (ECA Press Release, Nov. 15, 2000, summary by Marg Reynolds).

 

TRANSPARENCY INTERNATIONAL,  INTEGRITY AWARDS ANNOUNCED. Transparency International (TI) is a global anti-corruption organization founded in 1993, an organization that today has national chapters in 75 countries. TI established a TI Awards Committee in late 1999 chaired by Virginia Tsouderos (Chair of TI's national chapter in Greece) Today the first winners of its new Integrity Awards were announced. Peter Eigen, Chairman of TI said: "Fighting corruption requires enormous personal courage in many countries and today we are honoring people who have put their lives on the line". "We are recognizing the courage and dedication of individuals and organizations fighting corruption around the world," he added. The first winners of the TI Integrity Awards are: Mustapha Adib, a Moroccan army captain who was condemned to five years in prison after he had exposed corruption in the Moroccan Air Force. The Concerned Citizens of Abra for Good Government (CCAGG), a citizens group in a remote province of the Philippines, which insists that government money is not plundered but reaches the poor. Lasantha Wickremetunge, an investigative journalist from Sri Lanka whose paper was banned in May after he had exposed corruption. The late Dr. Alfredo María Pochat, a civil servant who was murdered after he blew the whistle on corruption in the Argentinean government. The TI Awards will be presented to the winners or their representatives on Saturday, September 30 at a celebratory event in Ottawa, Canada on the occasion of Transparency International's annual general meeting. (Source: TI Press Release, September 28, 2000, summary by Pavlidis George).

 

WORLD BANK  CORRUPTION EFFORTS INCREASED, BLACKLIST PUBLISHED. The World Bank has decided to publish a "blacklist" with the names of national and multinational firms that have been found to be involved in corruption. The list is part of the Bank's efforts to fight not only corruption in the commercial transactions of different countries but also to separate the firms involved in it. The purpose of the blacklist is a boycott of the firms listed, with the hope that the damage to these firms in terms of image and lost business will discourage them to continue their corrupt practices. The list will be updated annually. The Bank aims to show the problem of corruption and remedy it with its instruments and mechanisms. One of the projects it has started is a research on the financing of concrete and systematic actions that can be done to limit corruption in the countries concerned. (World Bank Development News, 13 Nov 2000, summary by Debbie Uy).

 

Brussels, 62 JOURNALISTS VICTIMS OF ASSASSINATIONS WORLDWIDE IN 2000. The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), founded in 1926, is the world's largest organization of journalists; it represents more than 420,000 journalists worldwide. Yesterday (19/12/2000), IFJ released its annual list of journalists and media workers killed during 2000. According to the IFJ press release, 62 journalists were killed, many of them investigating cases of corruption or expressing political dissent. Aidan White, General Secretary of the IFJ, said "The death toll speaks for itself; journalists risk their lives daily for expressing independent opinions and exposing wrongdoing". Many dramatic examples of assassinations are given: in Pakistan, Sufi Mohammed Khan, a reporter who exposed local Mafia, was killed after death threats. In Mozambique, Carlos Cardozo, a campaigning editor, was shot in an ambush. In Russia, Sergei Novikov, a radio station owner, who was criticizing regional political leaders, was killed outside his home etc. (Source: Africa News Service, December 20, 2000, summary by Pavlidis George)

United Nations  INTERNAL AUDITS REVEAL MILLIONS WASTED. The United Nations has saved only $5.3m of a recommended $17m cost savings, according to an internal audit report by its the Office of Internal Oversight Services. The small savings was blamed on continued wasting of resources, fraud and general bad bookkeeping. Among the irregularities are a payroll audit on a Kosovo mission showing a subsistence allowance overpaid by about $324,000, and an audit of property management showing delays in locating and accounting for assets transferred from other missions. Moreover, a UN official was sentenced to 41 months in prison for submitting false invoices, causing a loss of $800,000. (Accountancy Magazine, 14 November 2000, summary by Debbie Uy).

United Nations  WATCHDOG INSPECTOR GENERAL´S OFFICE SHIFTS FOCUS TO IMPROVING MANAGEMENT. Dileep Nair, chief inspector of the Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS), said in an annual report that his staff was shifting its focus from investigations of cases of waste and fraud to audits that result in "less direct savings, but more long-term savings." Nair said that $17 million in savings had been identified by his staff this year, and that his office had recovered about $5 million by renegotiating misunderstood contracts and seeking compensation in criminal cases. According to the United Nations, the OIOS has saved the UN nearly $90 million. Some of Nair's recommendations in line with his focus to improve management were creating mini-versions of OIOS within some of the more complex UN agencies, and stationing analysts in long-term missions to identify problems before they happen. (Washington Times, 10 November 2000, summary by Debbie Uy).

NAME AND SHAME CAN WORK FOR MONEY LAUNDERING. A June decision to name 15 territories that do not cooperate with international efforts to fight money laundering, and a warning that they faced counter-measures if they did not improve, may be working. Seven of the 15 jurisdictions with "serious systematic problems" in their anti-money laundering organization have implemented legislation that addresses problems identified by the Financial Task Force (FATF) on money laundering. These are the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands, the Cook Islands, Israel, Liechtenstein, Panama and St. Vincent & the Grenadines. Five countries are already working on legislation or have promised to do so. These are Dominica, the Marshall Islands, the Philippines, Russia and St. Kitts & Nevis. Three other jurisdictions- Lebanon, Nauru, and Niue- were named as  non-cooperative in the June report. (The Observer, 20 October 2000, summary by Debbie Uy).

OTTAWA – Transparency International recently held its annual meeting here, attracting over 230 people from 60 countries. The meeting saw the accreditation of several new national chapters and the creation of “Integrity Awards”.   One award was handed posthumously to Argentinean civil servant Alfredo Maria Pochat , who was murdered for his anti-corruption activities, another was awarded in absentia to Captain Mustafa Adib of Morroco, who is currently in prison after opposing an illegal military procurement, and the remaining two were bestowed on journalist Lasantha Wickremetunge for his expositions of corruption in Sri Lanka and the Concerned Citizens for Good Government (CCAGG) of the Phillippines for monitoring and demanding accountability of public works projects.  (Earth Times News Service, October 19,2000 Summary by Fabian Camacho).

 

Anti-Corruption Initiatives at the World Customs Organization

Established in 1952, the World Customs Organization (WCO) is an independent intergovernmental body whose mission is to enhance the efficiency of Customs administrations by promoting a transparent and predictable Customs environment. Concrete tools that have been developed by the WCO’s Secretariat (in certain cases in cooperation with members and regions) under this plan are: • A Model Code of Ethics and Conduct for Customs Officials; • An Integrity Self-Assessment Guide; • The content of a standard WCO Integrity Workshop which was already implemented on a national basis in the Czech Republic. (www.respondaenet.com/english, issue 24 of the US AID Newsletter) 

 

Interpol and the Fight against Corruption

Established in 1923, the International Criminal Police Organization or Interpol is an entity composed of 178 members states to promote mutual assistance among criminal police authorities from around the world. It became actively involved in initiatives to curb corruption in April 1998, when its General Secretariat unanimously approved a recommendation to set up an Interpol Group of Experts on Corruption (IGEC) was mandated with fighting all forms of corruption through effective law enforcement, education and prevention. The Group of Experts prescribe minimum standards for law enforcement officers. The Group of Experts also compiled an international list of national contact points, to serve both as a point of first contact with regards to operational cooperation, as well as a conduit for the complaints from the public. This list will be posted on the Expert Group website for easy reference. This website is currently under construction, and will be accessible at the end of November via the existing Interpol site. (www.respondaenet.com/english, issue 24 of the US AID Newsletter)

September 14, 2000. New Corruption Perception Index released by Tranparency International.

G7 STATEMENT RELEASED IN PRAGUE: Items 12 and 13 deal with corruption and bribery

12. We reaffirm our commitment to MDB reform aimed at helping countries reduce poverty and welcome the substantial progress that has been made in translating these shared priorities into core policies and operational practices. The challenges are to build on this progress, to translate the principles of good governance, selectivity and accountability, the importance of ownership and participation, into concrete action aimed at a substantive development impact. We call on the MDBs:  -To present proposals aimed at strengthening internal governance and, in particular, compliance with safeguards and fiduciary policies. -To develop Memoranda of Understanding between the World Bank and regional MDBs setting out areas of specialization and collaboration. Actions against Money Laundering and the Abuse of the Global Finance System.

13. We have made significant progress in recent months in the international fight against financial abuse, including money laundering and corruption, in particular through the work of the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering (FATF) (establishing a first list of noncooperative jurisdictions). We reaffirm our strong supports of the efforts by the OECD (addressing harmful tax practices) and the FSF on OFCs, and by the FATF for the inclusion of its recommendations among priority international financial standards. We commit to pursue the review of additional noncooperative countries and territories in the FATF. We are prepared to provide, where appropriate, our technical assistance to jurisdictions that commit to making improvements to their regimes. We are committed, where dialog to ensure compliance with international standards has demonstrably failed with countries listed as non-cooperative by the FATF, to defining an appropriate and comprehensive set of countermeasures. These would include the possibility to condition or restrict financial transactions, in order to protect the international financial system against abuse and to condition or restrict assistance by the international financial institutions to those jurisdictions. We have already issued advisories to our banks and other financial institutions to demonstrate our commitment in this field. We call on the IMF, the World Bank, and the regional development banks to fully integrate the fight against financial abuse in their surveillance exercises and programs. We urge the IMF and the World Bank to prepare a joint paper on their respective roles in combating financial abuse and to protect the international financial system, for discussion by their boards before the spring meetings and ask them to report to the spring IMFC/ Development Committee meetings on the status of their efforts. (September 23, 2000).

G7 and dirty money FUKUOKA, Japan. The Group of Seven leading industrialized nations announced a new campaign to deter money launderers and erode tax havens. Fifteen Nations were identified as committing financial crimes in a report issued by The Financial Action Taskforce. The nations identified in this report are Russia, Israel, the Bahamas, Dominica, Liechtenstein, Niue, Cayman Islands, Marshall Islands, Panama, St. Kitts and Nevis, Cook Islands, Lebanon, Nauru, the Philippines, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines. The Group of Seven leading industrialized nations will issue advisory notices to their domestic commercial banks to increase scrutiny on transactions that involve these Nations. Lawrence Summers, U.S. Treasury Secretary believes that the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank should do the following in to help fight financial crime: provide technical assistance to targeted countries who needs to introduce new laws that meet international norms, and to consider compliance with such standards when considering loan requests from their client countries. (DJ News, July 8,2000, summary by Rosado Maritza).

WHO's financial health

In the mid-1990s, the WHO was investigated for poor accounting practices by the U.S. and several European governments

The prestigious British Medical Journal wondered if the agency was doomed to "flounder in a morass of petty corruption and ineffective bureaucracy."

At about the same time, Mr. Dietrich in these pages pointed out that the WHO was increasing the budget for conferences by 73% while slashing funds for some vaccinations in poor countries.

The agency's own reports admitted that infectious diseases were rising because "vigilance had been relaxed." Millions die every year from infectious diseases -- most of those lives could be saved by a vaccine that costs less than $1 per dose.

The WHO did clean up its bookkeeping in response to the 1990s complaints. And it also has stepped up spending for vaccinations, we're told. So maybe the critics did some good. Instead of excoriating them, the WHO should consider them free consultants.

(W S Journal Europe, August 3, 2000, summary by Rujuta Vinod).

CFO Prediction

We estimate that within three years, three-quarters of the region´s banks will have a CFO in place, creating and driving the financial management processes that Asia´s banks need to prosper and compete.

(By Philip D. Sherman and Philip E. Strause. Mr. Sherman and Mr. Strause are part of Deloitte Consulting´s Asia-Pacific financial services industry practice).
Asian Wall Street Journal, August 10, 2000

Sectretarty Albright urges Asia to curb corruption and cronyism

The U.S. urged action Friday against cronyism and corruption in Southeast Asia,while China criticized inequalities in the world economy at an Asian security.conference Friday.

U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright praised Southeast Asian countries for recovering from financial turmoil that hit the region in 1997, but said future stability would depend on strengthening the rule of law.

China´s Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan railed against the "unequal international economic order" that he said is manifested by rich countries´ preoccupation with human rights.

The officials made the remarks at an annual gathering of the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations or Asean, and other countries with interests in Asia

The conference gives countries an opportunity to exchange views on everything from politics and the economy to regional security. Asean comprises Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

Albright noted that Asean was moving into its second year of economic recovery following the devastation of a regional financial crisis in 1997 and 1998. "The hard decisions that some Asean nations had the courage to make on banking reform and privatization are paying off," Albright said.

To grow further, countries needed to adapt to globalization by keeping an eye on market fundamentals, e-commerce and education, she said. "A critical component of this effort will be strengthening the rule of law and curbing official corruption and cronyism,"

Albright said. The economic crisis has variously been blamed on lax financial regulations and governance, but also on the swiftness with which Western banks retreated when financial turmoil struck.

Dow Jones Newswires (AP), July 28, 2000

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