Thursday, June 26, 2014

On Anniversary of Global Compact’s 10th Principle, Business Issues Call to Action Against Corruption

New York, 24 June 2014 – Marking ten years of the UN Global Compact’s 10th Principle Against Corruption, business called on Governments to address corruption and foster good governance in ways that advance the global development agenda.

Recognizing corruption as one of the greatest obstacles to economic and social development around the world, and good governance as critical for sustainable development and responsible business, the Call to Action: Anti-Corruption and the Global Development Agenda represents a call from companies to Governments to promote anti-corruption measures and to implement policies to establish systems of good governance.  

“It was clear a decade ago – and remains today – that corruption so profoundly corrodes sound business practice and good governance, and thus our ability to realize the other nine principles, that it uniquely deserved to be added to the commitments on which our Global Compact is founded,” said Georg Kell, Executive Director of the UN Global Compact. “While much has been accomplished, it is evident that corruption continues to be a critical challenge for business. Only by fostering a culture of integrity, transparency, accountability and good governance, can an equitable, inclusive and sustainable global economy be achieved.”

Companies that sign the Call to Action send a strong signal to Governments and businesses worldwide that it is important to put an end to bribery and corruption in all its forms. The Call to Action asks Governments to take five specific actions, ranging from fully implementing and enforcing the tenets of the UN Convention against Corruption by strengthening anti-corruption policies, laws and enforcement mechanisms to create a level playing field and incentivize good behaviour, to committing to engage in competitive and transparent procurement processes through public advertising of all Government procurement cases (read all five appeals).

The Call to Action – which is supported by the UN Global Compact, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, Transparency International, the Open Contracting Initiative, the World Bank Institute and the Global Organization of Parlamentarians against Corruption – will be forwarded to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon to highlight the private sector’s continuing efforts to work with other stakeholders to address corruption.

Signatories to the Call to Action will be acknowledged at the UN Global Compact’s 10th Anniversary of the 10th Principle, to be held in New York on 10 December 2014. The event will also highlight the private sector’s achievements in the fight against corruption over the past decade and discuss emerging anti-corruption measures in both developed and emerging markets.

Find more information about the Call to Action online at www.unglobalcompact.org/anti-corruption and follow the conversation on Twitter using #BizAgainstCorruption.

Contacts 

Olajobi Makinwa
Head, Transparency & Anti-Corruption Initiatives
UN Global Compact
makinwa@un.org

Kristen Coco
Public Affairs and Media Relations
UN Global Compact
cocok@un.org

http://www.unglobalcompact.org/news/1111-06-24-2014
United Nations Global Compact

2014 United Nations Public Service Awards Winners

The United Nations Public Service Awards (UNPSA) is the most prestigious international recognition of excellence in public service. It rewards the creative achievements and contributions of public service institutions to a more effective and responsive public administration in countries worldwide in four categories. These are Improving Delivery of Public Services, Fostering Participation in Public Policy-making Decisions through Innovative Mechanisms, Promoting Whole-of-Government Approaches in the Information Age and Promoting Gender-responsive Delivery of Public Services. 

Through an annual competition, the United Nations Public Service Awards Programme promotes the role, professionalism and visibility of public service. It encourages exemplary public service and recognizes that democracy and successful governance are built on a competent civil service. In brief, the Awards aim to discover innovations in governance; reward excellence in the public sector; motivate public servants to further promote innovation; enhance professionalism in the public service; raise the image of public service; enhance trust in government; and collect and disseminate successful practices for possible replication.

Some of this year’s winning projects involve: improving education; increasing access to potable water in rural areas; improving access to and the quality of health care; integrating government data including social security systems; enhancing transparency through increased access to information for citizens; and reducing infant mortality rate among other efforts.

The 2014 winners are from the following countries:

1st place winners: Austria, Bahrain, Brazil, Morocco, Oman, Republic of Korea, Singapore, South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, Uruguay

2nd place winners:  Bahrain, Brazil, Cameroon, India, Republic of Korea, Spain

Read more information about the winning countries here: http://workspace.unpan.org/sites/Internet/Documents/winner%20fact%20sheet%20with%20flags.docx.pdf  (close out sign in box to view)

For background information about the United Nations Public Service Awards and past winners, please visit: http://www.unpan.org/unpsa.

Past winning projects of the United Nations Public Service Awards are available as iPad and iPhone applications at: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/un-innovations-in-public-governance/id443218537?mt=8#.

Follow the United Nations Public Service Forum and Awards on social media:

Facebook: United Nations Public Administration Network

Twitter: @unpan
Official Hashtags: #unpsa2014 #unpsa

Source: UN Department of Public Information
http://unpan.org/DPADM/UNPSDayAwards/UNPublicServiceAwards/tabid/1522/language/en-US/Default.aspx

The Ethical Alliance Daily - 26 June 2014




The Ethical Alliance Daily - 26 June 2014:

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Enhancing the UN response to strengthening Transparency, Accountability and Anti-corruption in the EE and CIS region

Corruption and state capture in Europe and Central Asia region still hamper efforts aimed at achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), impacting negatively the quality of life, access to social services, harming the business environment and the effective delivery of the public service. As such, governance and anti-corruption have being increasingly prioritized as one of the top priorities in the National Development Plans across Europe and Central Asia.

With the aim of promoting a coherent and systematic approach in the region towards Transparency, Accountability and Anti-corruption, UNDP, with the support of UNODC, organized the regional training “Integrating Anti-Corruption into the UN Programming Processes”, on June 9-10, in Istanbul, turkey.

The training targeted focal points from twelve countries that are currently undergoing the development of new UN Development Assistance Frameworks (UNDAF); these documents will provide guidance for the work of various UN Agencies at the country level during the next five years. Participating countries included: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, FYRO Macedonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Serbia, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, and Tajikistan.

The training equipped participants with practical tools and knowledge to integrate anti-corruption analysis, activities and targets in the UNDAFs. This initiative has proved to be instrumental in other regions and countries (Kenya, Madagascar, and Iraq among others) to enhance the country analysis and strategic planning phases of UNDAF, by integrating the anti-corruption perspective as a critical driver in the achievement of development results. UNDP and UNODC will follow up with the different focal points in the EE and CIS region on the opportunities and challenges for the integration of anti-corruption in the UN programming process. 

For more information about this initiative contact: Anga Timilsina ( anga.timilsina@undp.org) and Francesco Checchi ( Francesco.checchi@undp.org)

The Ethical Alliance Daily - 24 June 2014

The Ethical Alliance Daily - 24 June 2014


Monday, June 23, 2014

The Ethical Alliance Daily - 21 June 2014


The Ethical Alliance Daily - 21 June 2014

Spain: Grifols discloses probes in multiple countries

Romania: Romanian president’s brother held for alleged corruption

United States: Ex-Bexar judge indicted on bribery charges

Israel: Former Jerusalem Mayor Lupolianski sentenced to 6 years prison

Italy: Mafia paid judge €250k bribe to ‘fix’ murder case

Libya: Former prime minister Zeidan returns to Libya amid rising instability

Pakistan: Ex-Deputy Treasurer Amer Ahmad pleads guilty in Pakistan to falsifying documents

United Kingdom: Former PSNI assistant chief constable questioned over alleged corruption

Mozambique: Anti-Corruption Office Confirms Illegal Timber Exports

South Africa: Cosatu Nw and the Corruption Case in the High Court

The Ethical Alliance Daily - 20 June 2014


The Ethical Alliance Daily - 20 June 2014

United States: Houston energy company looking into alleged Foreign Corrupt Practices Act violations in Russia, Mexico

United Kingdom: Ex-Innospec directors found guilty over bribes to sell toxic fuel additives

Papua New Guinea: Peter O’Neill sacks top PNG policeman and shuts down corruption watchdog

China: Former vice president of state bank stands trial

Australia: Vic transport dept in corruption probe

Hong Kong: Fugitive tycoon Zeng Wei back in Hong Kong after extradition from US

Israel: Senior IEC officials arrested for taking $16 million bribes from Siemens

Vietnam: Vinalines boss suspended as $400,000 graft case widens

Cuba: Canadian exec on trial, some investors put off

Canada: Quebec’s ex-deputy premier denies questionable activity at corruption inquiry

The Ethical Alliance Daily - 19 June 2014


The Ethical Alliance Daily - 19 June 2014

Canada: Anti-corruption police nab Montreal hospital contract fraud suspect at airport

Australia: Money laundering fight: AFP battles to confiscate $30m in alleged Russian racket on Gold Coast

Kuwait: Ex-Kuwait PM ready to face coup, graft claims probe

Nigeria: Ex-gov’s ill health stalls N4.5b corruption trial

Indonesia: KPK Questions Sutan Bhatoegana in SKK Migas Bribery Investigation

United States: South Carolina sheriff faces federal bribery charges

Philippines: Pangasinan ex-mayor convicted of graft over overpriced computer

Israel: Former IDF Chief Ashkenazi Questioned by Police in Corruption Scandal

China: China Sets Sight on Graft in Bond Deals, Herald Says

Pakistan: Under investigation – 22 officers, contractors arrested over corruption charges

The Ethical Alliance Daily - 18 June 2014


The Ethical Alliance Daily - 18 June 2014

Japan: Deutsche managers knew about, didn’t stop entertainment of Japan pension funds: regulator

Russia: Russia Hands Ex-EBRD Director Suspended Prison Sentence

Vietnam: Vietnam rice firm denies paying bribes to win Philippines rice contract

Hong Kong: Hong Kong Probes Financial Firms for Money Laundering

Indonesia: Hefty sentence sought for Budi Mulya in Bank Century scandal

China: 6.7 bln yuan misused in power grid project

South Korea: Former Lotte Shopping chief detained on charges of receiving kickbacks

Russia: Extradition hearing for fugitive Russian finance official postponed

Croatia: Milanovic says Sanader’s verdict burdening entire HDZ

Australia: We would have sued Julia Gillard if we had known: former AWU boss

The Ethical Alliance Daily - 17 June 2013


The Ethical Alliance Daily - 17 June 2013

France: LVMH executive, former PM Balladur associates in court on arms-sale corruption charges

South Korea: Sewol owner’s close aides deny charges as trial opens

China: Former bank chairman faces prosecution

Italy: Mayor of Venice Resigns Amid Corruption Probe

Papua New Guinea: Peter O’Neill, Papua New Guinea Prime Minister, served with arrest warrant in relation to fraud case

Israel: Benjamin Netanyahu accused of ‘corruption’ over home furniture

Indonesia: Life sentence for Akil on the table: Anti-graft body

Lebanon: Scandalous claims of corruption at the highest levels of Lebanon

Zimbabwe: New Report Reveals U.S $770 Million Lost to Diamond Corruption

The Ethical Alliance Daily - 13 June 2014


The Ethical Alliance Daily - 13 June 2014

Croatia: Croatia to try MOL chairman in absentia for role in bribery scandal

South Africa: Let Zuma Have His Day in Court – Lekota

Italy: Tax police number-2 probed for alleged corruption

India: Prashant Bhushan alleges Praful Patel inflated Air India project cost; complains to CBI

Ukraine: How Ukraine’s tax cheats stole billions from the country’s coffers

Bulgaria: Europolitics: Bulgaria charges senior judges in EU funds embezzlement case

Russia: Kremlin Critic’s Associates Charged With Fraud

United States: FBI Confirms Criminal Investigation Into Veteran Affairs Corruption In Phoenix

Turkey: Opposition resubmits corruption motion on PM

Israel: Police anti-corruption unit question Ben Eliezer for second time

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

UNDP completes project to provide global web access to African governance data


The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has completed a project to provide global web access to African governance data. The project includes the AfriGAP Data Portal and the AfriGAP Open Data Platform. Both consolidate quantitative indicators on the quality of governance and democracy in African countries, and provide users with simple tools to analyze this data.

The AfriGAP Data Portal provides policymakers, analysts, researchers, experts in social and political science and other specialists with a one-stop-shop platform to navigate and also compare indicators on various themes of governance (corruption, citizen participation, human rights, natural resources, conflict, etc.), from both African and international sources. It offers customized tools for data management, analysis and display, including keyword search for finding relevant information within a fraction of the usual time. The solution's interactive maps, charts and diagrams graphically demonstrate the progress of governance reforms across Africa. Users can generate analytical reports to print, export to external data formats, and share via social media.

The AfriGAP Open Data Platform facilitates collection and sharing of data on emerging and crucial topics such as economic governance, democratic institutions, civil society and media, and more. Through this platform, users can work with existing data, load custom data sets, visualize data, analyze the selected indicators at national and regional levels, contact other users, and share reports and charts.

UNDP project partners include Afro Barometer, Africa Governance Institute, Global Integrity, Mo Ibrahim Foundation, State of the Union, and Trust Africa.

Read the full story in Digital Journal.

UNESCO launches ETICO, new portal to fight corruption in education


ETICO, a unique new portal aimed at fighting corruption in education systems around the world, was launched today by UNESCO's International Institute for Educational Planning (IIEP-UNESCO).

Corruption is often hard to track and measure, but is found at different levels in countries’ education systems and is hampering access to education and children’s learning. It results in children being denied a good-quality education. Examples of corruption in education range from ghost schools and fake diplomas, to missing textbooks, stolen school supplies, absent teachers and misallocation of school grants.

For example, surveys carried out by IIEP partners tackling corruption estimate that the salaries of absent or ghost teachers may account for 15-20% of payroll costs in some countries; in some cases this is equal to half of the funds allocated to improving school buildings, providing better class equipment and buying school textbooks, etc.

The ETICO database, which houses the latest cutting-edge research tracking ethics and corruption, is a gateway for accessing expert training materials on transparency, accountability and anti-corruption issues in education and for support in implementing anti-corruption tools and strategies.

The global online platform will serve as a key interactive discussion hub for national and international partners who are promoting transparency. It will provide them with the opportunity to upload and share research on this crucial topic to help create a stronger united front against corruption in education.  

“It is estimated that corruption is sucking millions of dollars out of the system, and as a result many children are missing out on an education due to malpractices and a serious lack of ethics in the system. The ETICO platform aims to help prevent this by bringing all of the key stakeholders together to fight against the problem and offer expert advice,” IIEP’s Senior Researcher on anti-corruption and ethics in education, Muriel Poisson, said.
Through its blog, the ETICO platform will host in-depth discussions on tackling corruption by sharing news and information, as well as highlighting best practices in countries where interventions against corruption in education have proved successful.

The launch of ETICO coincides with the release of an important new IIEP publication, Achieving Transparency in Pro-Poor Education Incentives. The book outlines the best ways to ensure that scholarships, conditional cash transfers, free school meals, etc., actually reach children from poor backgrounds and families who need it most.

For example, in South Africa, the quintile ranking system was designed to provide enhanced funding to schools serving the poorest students. To ensure that funds are reaching the right schools, several measures have been introduced, such as the use of objective, transparent and publicly known targeting tables. This system is recognized as an important effort towards ensuring greater equity in education by cutting school fees for the poorest children in South Africa, thereby giving them access to education.

In Brazil, the creation of food school councils has reduced the risks of misappropriation of food or fraud in food procurement – both problems in the past – by institutionalizing the process of continuous programme monitoring and accountability. Relying on the participation of the school community and civil society, these councils scrutinize school menus and their related expenses. They help reduce delay in the transfer of resources, cut down operational costs and improve the quality of goods. The Brazilian school lunch programme reaches over 45 million people, and provides stability to the lives of poor families and students.

In the Indian state of Rajasthan, 28% of schools have introduced display boards that are available for public scrutiny. Usually painted on the school building, they display key information related to the daily functioning of the school, e.g. all financial investments made by the school; teacher attendance, etc. Publicly displayed transparency boards are now regarded as an important feature of community-based monitoring and public hearings are held where people are invited to give testimonies of corrupt practices and government officials are called upon to take action.

Presenting research comparing seven projects implemented worldwide, Achieving Transparency in Pro-Poor Education Incentives shows that measures taken to confront corruption risks – such as school display boards, local transparency mechanisms, appeal mechanisms, social audits, and informal whistleblowing, among actions taken is key in the battle against corruption in education. These measures are seen as crucial tools for achieving the Education for All goals. They are presented in detail on ETICO, together with hundreds of other such cases.

Visit the ETICO portal: http://etico.iiep.unesco.org/

Eliminating Customs of Corruption -- New Approaches in Cameroon & Afghanistan (World Bank blog post)

"The World Bank has been an active supporter of customs reform across the world for the past 20 years, having supported roughly 120 such programs. The Bank works closely with national reformers and has piloted a number of new, innovative strategies.

"Two of these, in Cameroon and Afghanistan, deserve special mention.

"Their approaches are relatively unique, reflecting very different circumstances. But they may have application in other countries."

Read the commentary by Gerard McLinden and Miles McKenna, in The Trade Post, a World Bank blog page.

Anti-corruption officials pressure Japan and Spain to step up prosecutions over foreign bribery

International anti-corruption officials are pressuring Japan and Spain to step up their investigations and prosecutions of companies using bribery to conduct foreign business. The Working Group on Bribery, which implements the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development’s anti-bribery convention, issued a warning that Japan’s new action plan, which for the first time gives specialized investigation resources to police and prosecutors’ offices, still lacks important details.

Read the story by Stella Dawson in Thomson Reuters Foundation.

From the Arab Spring to Occupy, Corruption 2.0 Rallies the Masses


"Corruption provides an explanation, both simple and powerful, for failures in government performance, for webs of nepotistic interests supported by foreign investors, and for billions of dollars in disappearing public funds. … all recent urban protests put corruption near the top of their list of grievances – from the Occupy movement to the Arab Spring."

Read the article by Alison Taylor in Forbes.