Transparency International's weekly newsletter and supplement to our Daily Corruption News, 25 August 2017

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Hi there,

This week we want to focus on two countries who face similar problems with grand corruption: Angola and Venezuela.

Both are rich with natural resources and have the potential to create and redistribute wealth for their citizens; but in both places the devastating effects of corruption are keeping citizens poor.

Grand corruption is the abuse of high-level power that benefits the few at the expense of the many, and causes serious and widespread harm to individuals and society. 

In the case of Angola, one family and its cronies have controlled the country for almost 40 years. Corruption has enriched this small ruling elite, while more than two thirds of the country’s population live in poverty. It is the archetype of a captured state enabled by grand corruption, and even recent elections are unlikely to bring about change.

Meanwhile, Venezuelans are suffering both a humanitarian and economic disaster at the hands of those in power. Their actions are bankrupting the country despite sitting on the world's largest oil reserve. They have taken control of the entire architecture of government - from the judiciary to the parliament - and are misusing it to enrich themselves. 

Keep this name on your radar: Ricardo Martinelli

The former Panamanian president, who faces corruption charges in his home country, will hear from a judge in Miami, Florida on 31 August whether or not he will be extradited.

In our view, leaders who use their office for their own personal gain must be held to account - more on that next week. 

 

News from Transparency International

 
Elections in Angola: time to tackle corruption
 

Elections in Angola: time to tackle corruption

The unofficial results of Angola’s elections are expected on 25 August. This is not cause for celebration unless it brings change. Corruption has for too long enriched a small ruling elite while more than two thirds of the country’s population live on less than US$3 a day.

 

A lifetime waiting for the future to come

A personal view of the Angolan elections and a country wracked by corruption by Karina Carvalho, Executive Director of Transparency International Portugal, who fled Angola aged 5 because of the civil war.

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If you were a G20 leader for a day..?

Remember the big headline from the recent G20 Summit in Hamburg about what leaders are going to do to tackle corruption head-on?

No, we don’t either. An analysis about how corruption should be preoccupying G20 leaders. 

Money Laundering Index
 

Money laundering Index: A welcoming world for dirty money where you might least expect it

Possibly the best analogy for the link between corruption and money laundering was coined by a Nigerian anti-corruption investigator: "If you know there’s no landing space to land your plane, you don’t take off in the first place. It’s the same with money: if there is nowhere to land it once you’ve stolen it, you can’t steal it.” 

Unfortunately the corrupt have a wide variety of landing strips to choose from across the globe.

 

Corruption in the news this week

Focus: corruption taken to court

South Korea: Samsung heir sentenced to five years in jail after corruption conviction
The Guardian (25 August)

A bribery and cronyism scandal that has already toppled a South Korean president has claimed a major business scalp after a court sentenced Lee Jae-yong, the acting chairman of Samsung, to five years in prison for crimes including offering bribes and perjury.

 
USA: U.S. seeks prison sentence for VW engineer in diesel scandal
The Chicago Tribune (25 August)

U.S. prosecutors will seek a three-year prison sentence on Friday for a Volkswagen engineer who had a key role in the company's diesel emissions scandal. Robert Liang, 63, was one of two VW employees to plead guilty in the scheme.

 
Australia: Commonwealth Bank faces class action over money-laundering scandal
The Guardian (23 August)

Lawyers Maurice Blackburn and litigation funder IMF Bentham have announced a potential class action on behalf of Commonwealth Bank shareholders over a share price drop caused by allegations related to money laundering.

 
Bangladesh: Court clears way for Bangladesh opposition leader’s trial
Associated Press (21 August)

Bangladesh’s top court on Monday cleared the way for the continuation of opposition leader Khaleda Zia’s trial on bribery charges for granting two contracts as prime minister from 2001-2006 that allegedly cost the government millions of dollars.

 
USA: Menendez judge has history of tough corruption sentences
Politico (23 August)

The judge overseeing U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez's trial on federal corruption charges has made it a personal crusade to impose harsh sentences on officials who are found guilty of violating the public trust.

 

Private vs. public interest

Brazil: Brazilian anti-corruption division approves J&F leniency accord
Reuters (25 August)
 
Germany: VW’s State Protector
Handelsblatt (21 August)
 
South Africa: South Africa's Guptas to sell media stakes in bid to "clear name"
Daily Mail (21 August)
 
USA: Carl Icahn’s failed raid on Washington
The New Yorker (21 August)
 

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