[NYTr] CORRUPTION: World Bank, U.N. Target Kleptocrats
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Mon Sep 17 18:27:20 EDT 2007
IPS - Sep 17, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=39291
CORRUPTION: World Bank, U.N. Target Kleptocrats
By Abid Aslam
WASHINGTON, Sep 17 (IPS) - The United Nations and World Bank launched a
bid Monday to strip crooked leaders of the money they steal from poor
countries, and to plough the sums into health and development efforts.
"From now on it should be harder for kleptocrats to steal the public's
money, and easier for the public to get its money back," said Antonio
Maria Costa, executive director of the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC), the world body's agency in charge of the initiative.
Bent leaders cheat developing countries of 1 trillion-1.6 trillion
dollars a year through smuggling, corruption and tax evasion, according
to a report released to mark the launch of the Stolen Asset Recovery
Initiative.
Recovering even a portion of the stolen assets could provide financing
for social programmes or infrastructure.
"Every 100 million dollars recovered could fund full vaccinations for 4
million children, provide water connections for some 250,000
households, or fund treatment for over 600,000 people with HIV/AIDS for
a full year," the report said.
The initiative will seek to prevent the theft by helping developing
countries to improve governance and accountability and by urging
wealthy countries to stop providing safe havens for the loot.
It exhorts countries to ratify the U.N. Convention against Corruption,
a 2003 treaty that obliges governments to counter graft of all sorts.
Among members of the G-8 wealthy countries, Canada, Germany, Italy and
Japan have yet to ratify.
Half of the 30 free-market democracies in the Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development have ratified the treaty, as have 13 of the
54 jurisdictions classified by the International Monetary Fund as
offshore financial centres. These include British crown dependencies
such as Guernsey and the Isle of Man; Bermuda and the Bahamas among
others in the Caribbean; European states such as Liechtenstein and
Monaco; Pacific island states including Samoa and Vanuatu; and parts or
all of Djibouti, Malaysia, Panama, and the United States.
As with many international pacts, the corruption convention has not
been high among many parliaments' priorities. Finance firms and
regulators also have voiced concern about reconciling the treaty's
requirements against national laws and standards.
Efforts to clean up also have been hamstrung by scandals involving
allegations of fraud and nepotism at the World Bank and in the U.N.
system.
Even so, Monday's initiative sets out to bring financial centres into
compliance with anti-money laundering legislation that would detect and
deter laundering of illicit proceeds, and to strengthen financial
intelligence units' capacity to enhance cooperation across the globe.
Developing countries will be able to tap the initiative for help in
beefing up prosecuting agencies, officials said. Loans and grants will
be made available alongside advice to countries lacking sufficient
capacity to pursue stolen assets.
The initiative also is intended to monitor the use of recovered assets
so that repatriated loot is used for development purposes.
"Tough safeguards will be needed to ensure that returned assets do not
get stolen again by a new generation of leaders," Costa, the UNODC
chief, said in a published commentary. "That means monitoring the use
of recovered funds by officially recording the receipt of the assets,
declaring their intended use, and reporting on expenditure."
Significant sums have been siphoned off: Public officials in developing
and former Soviet-bloc countries pocket bribes worth at least 20
billion-40 billion dollars a year -- roughly 20-40 percent the value of
all official development aid, said the report released Monday.
Anti-corruption group Transparency International has estimated that
Suharto, who was forced to resign as Indonesian president in 1998,
embezzled 15 billion-35 billion dollars from his compatriots. Deceased
former heads of state Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines, Mobutu Sese
Seko of the former Zaire, and Sani Abacha of Nigeria pocketed as much
as 5 billion dollars each, the watchdog added.
Africa loses 148 billion dollars -- 25 percent of its economic output
-- to corruption every year, according to the African Union.
U.N. agencies said that in the 1990s, corrupt officials pocketed 5.5
billion dollars in Nigeria and three billion dollars in Kenya.
Recovering stolen assets can be a time-consuming business: It took the
Philippines 18 years to get back 624 million dollars that Marcos had
secreted in Swiss bank accounts.
(END/2007)
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