Transparency International's weekly newsletter and supplement to our Daily Corruption News, 27 October 2017

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Hi there,

It has been a historic week in the legal fight against corruption.

This morning, a French court convicted Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, vice-president of Equatorial Guinea and son of the president, of embezzlement. 

Transparency International has been fighting this case for ten years, since we helped bring about a change in French law to allow civil society to present evidence. 

The verdict is a huge victory against impunity, and a signal to corrupt leaders everywhere that they can’t hide their ill-gotten gains abroad. Next, we’ll be fighting to ensure that Obiang’s confiscated assets go back to their rightful owners: the people of Equatorial Guinea.

We had another important legal victory in a case brought by Transparency International Hungary. The country’s highest court ruled that special donations given to sports clubs in lieu of corporate tax counted as public money – and should therefore be open to public scrutiny.

US$1 billion has gone missing from the state treasury since the programme began in 2011. The biggest winner? Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s own hometown football club.

Meanwhile in Italy, a whistleblower’s courage led to the conviction of the former President of Ferrovie Nord Milano (FNM), the second largest railway company in Italy.

He was sentenced to two years and eight months in prison for embezzlement and fraud after the court found that he had taken company money for personal use.

We’ve been involved in the case as a civil party, and the ruling sets an important precedent: companies that receive public money should be subject to same anti-corruption rules as public administrations.

Speaking of whistleblowing, the European Parliament voted for the European Commission to propose EU-wide whistleblower protection legislation – something for which we’ve been advocating for years.

 

News from Transparency International

Interview with key witness is Obiang case: Delfin Mocache Mosokko
 

Interview with key witness is Obiang case: Delfin Mocache Mosokko

Obiang verdict: guilty of corruption. Before the verdict was announced we interviewed Delfin Mocache Massoko, a key witness in the case, to find out what the trial means to him and the citizens of Equatorial Guinea.

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How to make anti-corruption agencies accountable and independent

Anti-corruption agencies (ACAs) are key to the fight against corruption. They need to be independent, publicly accountable and well-funded and staffed. In a report launched in Bangkok this week, we published research into the strengths and weaknesses of ACAs in six Asian countries. 

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TI France releases plan for returning ill-gotten gains of grand corruption to country of origin

Ahead of this morning's Obiang verdict, Transparency International France released a plan for ensuring that money seized in cases of grand corruption returns to its rightful owners.  

 

Corruption in the news this week

Top Stories

Global: SAP reports itself to U.S. authorities over Gupta scandal
Fox Business (26 October)

German software maker SAP SE has reported itself to U.S. authorities after paying 94 million rand ($6.7 million) to a company with ties to South Africa's controversial Gupta family to secure contracts with state-owned enterprises

 
Pakistan: Pakistan finance minister Ishaq Dar indicted by anti-corruption court hearing Panama Papers case
First Post (27 October)

Pakistan's finance minister Ishaq Dar was indicted by an anti-corruption court hearing the Panama Papers case for possessing assets beyond known sources of income. The minister pleaded not guilty to all charges, terming them baseless

 
USA: What is money laundering? And why does it matter to Robert Mueller?
NPR

The former FBI director has assembled a team of lawyers, many of whom specialize in white collar law and financial crimes, leading to speculation that he is diving into the finances of those on the inner and outer orbit of the Trump campaign.

 
USA: The common bonus structures that can lead to corporate corruption scandals
Quartz at Work (24 October)

"No matter how much compliance training you give your employees, there’s only so much that can do if your pay structures are still encouraging them to be corrupt."

 

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