August 26th, 2011
As Libya prepares for the future, what are financial centres doing to stop the flow of stolen assets from dictators? The following is adapted from a speechmade by Transparency International’s vice-chair, Akere Muna, at the UN public service forum in Dar es Salaam, United Republic of Tanzania.
If corruption, especially money laundering and bribery are to be tackled, we need to see action not only from developing countries, but also countries that are home to major financial centres.
Here in Africa there is wide recognition that poor governance is one of the biggest barriers to sustainable development, what is missing is recognition...
Continue Reading
August 25th, 2011
As many of our readers know, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) is
under assault by the Chamber of Commerce and some members of Congress. This valuable statute prohibits domestic companies from bribing foreign officials for the purpose of obtaining or retaining business opportunities abroad and has a purposefully broad reach, extending to any company operating globally with securities registered in the U.S.
It should go without saying this kind of corruption undermines the integrity of foreign governments and competitive business practices internationally. In spite of this, the Chamber of Commerce wants to “reform” the statute so corporations can more easily...
Continue Reading
August 19th, 2011
Vietnam and the World Bank recently held
the first Viet Nam Anti-Corruption Intiative, or
VACI. The Initiative encouraged the public—whether ordinary citizens, NGOs, or private business—to develop proposals to help combat corruption in their communities. VACI then selected 34 promising ideas, and awarded a total of approximately $450,000 to help fund the implementation of these plans in the coming year. It is hoped that this initiative will be repeated in 2013.
In order for pervasive corruption to be combated effectively, public support for anti-corruption initiatives is essential, and this year has seen people around the world taking a stand against graft in their...
Continue Reading
August 15th, 2011
This weekend,
The Economist—building off information discovered by Task Force member
Global Witness—released an extensive feature on the operations of the "Queensway syndicate," a corporate partnership centered around the trade of oil from Angola to China. Through a series of shell companies, family relations, and personal ties dating back to the Cold War, a network of Chinese and Angolan business-people purportedly dominate many African resource markets, generally doing so through illicit means.
In order to gain access to valuable mineral resources across the African continent, the syndicate allegedly promised developmental aid, generally in the form of infrastructure development,...
Continue Reading