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Transparency
International launches today the Global
Corruption Report 2005 Special focus: Corruption
in Construction and Post-conflict Reconstruction
Download full report:
http://www.transparency.org/download.html
Highlights:
http://www.transparency.org/pressreleases_archive/2005/2005.03.16.gcr_relaunch.html#relate
Statement by Peter Eigen:
http://www.transparency.org/pressreleases_archive/2005/2005.03.16.pe_statement.html
The GCR 2005 focuses on corruption in
construction and post-conflict reconstruction.
The book includes expert reports on:
* Post-conflict reconstruction, with a
detailed analysis of corruption in Iraq
* The mechanisms of corruption in
construction projects, from infrastructure
development in Lesotho to public services in
Germany
* The economic cost of corruption in
infrastructure
* The environmental risks of corruption in
construction
* Corruption on the fault line: earthquake
destruction in Italy, Turkey and worldwide
* The role of multilateral development banks
and export credit agencies in financing
corruption.
It also includes:
* A foreword by Francis Fukuyama
* Detailed assessments of the state of
corruption in 40 countries
* TI's Minimum Standards for Public
Contracting and the TI Integrity Pact
* The Business Principles for Countering
Bribery in construction
* The latest corruption-related research,
including studies on the links between
corruption and other global issues such as
pollution, gender and foreign investment
...
Press Release:
A world built on bribes?
Corruption in construction bankrupts countries
and costs lives, says TI report
Transparency International’s Global Corruption
Report 2005 shows how corruption in the
construction sector undermines economic
development, and threatens to hamstring
post-conflict reconstruction in Iraq and beyond.
TI publishes Minimum Standards for Public
Contracting
London, 16 March 2005
“Corruption in large-scale public projects is a
daunting obstacle to sustainable development,”
said Peter Eigen, Chairman of Transparency
International (TI), launching the TI Global
Corruption Report 2005 today. “Corruption in
procurement plagues both developed and
developing countries,” Eigen added. “When the
size of a bribe takes precedence over value for
money,” he said, “the results are shoddy
construction and poor infrastructure management.
Corruption wastes money, bankrupts countries,
and costs lives.” TI is the leading
international non-governmental organisation
combating corruption worldwide.
“Funds being poured into rebuilding countries
such as Iraq must be safeguarded against
corruption,” Eigen said today. “Transparency
must also be the watchword as donors pledge
massive sums for reconstruction in the countries
affected by the Asian tsunami,” he added. The
Global Corruption Report 2005, with a foreword
by Francis Fukuyama, includes a special focus on
construction and post-conflict reconstruction,
and highlights the urgent need for governments
to ensure transparency in public spending and
for multinational companies to stop bribing at
home and abroad.
“The unfolding scandal surrounding the UN
sponsored oil-for-food programme in Iraq
highlights the urgent need for strict
conflict-of-interest rules and transparent and
open bidding processes,” said Eigen. As Reinoud
Leenders and Justin Alexander write in the GCR
2005, much of the anticipated expenditure on
building and procurement in Iraq has not yet
been spent. “If urgent steps are not taken,”
they write, Iraq “will become the biggest
corruption scandal in history”.
To mark the publication of the Global Corruption
Report 2005, today TI launched its Minimum
Standards for Public Contracting, setting out a
blueprint for transparent public procurement.
According to Juanita Olaya, TI Programme Manager
for Public Contracting, “international donors
and host governments must do more to ensure
transparency in public procurement by
introducing effective anti-corruption procedures
into all projects. Tough sanctions are needed
against companies caught bribing, including
forfeiture of the contract and blacklisting from
future bidding.”
The TI Standards call on public contracting
authorities to ensure that contracts are subject
to open, competitive bidding. Other measures
include maintaining a blacklist of companies
caught bribing; providing public disclosure of
the entire process; and ensuring monitoring by
independent oversight agencies and civil
society. The TI Standards also advocate the use
of a TI Integrity Pact, which commits the
authority and bidding companies to refrain from
bribery. The Integrity Pact is a tool that has
already been successful in reducing corruption
and cutting the costs of dozens of procurement
procedures around the world, and most recently
has been agreed to be deployed in the EUR 2
billion development of the Berlin-Brandenburg
International Airport in Germany.
TI also urged the private sector to do more to
curb bribery. “Companies from OECD countries
must fulfil their obligations under the OECD
Anti-Bribery Convention and stop paying bribes
at home and abroad,” said Eigen. “With the
spread of anti-bribery legislation, corporate
governance and anti-corruption compliance codes,
managers have no excuse for paying bribes,” he
said. A promising sign, he said, was the
addition of a tenth anti-corruption principle to
the UN Global Compact, signed by close to 2,000
international companies, and the endorsement of
a public anti-corruption pledge by 63 companies
from the energy, metals and mining, and
engineering and construction sectors at the
World Economic Forum in Davos in January 2005.
The challenge now for companies is to enforce
tough anti-bribery policies.
The costs of corruption
The scale of corruption is magnified by the size
and scope of the construction sector, estimated
globally at some US$3,200 billion per year. The
Global Corruption Report 2005 presents detailed
case studies of large-scale infrastructure
projects that have been plagued by corruption –
including international bribes paid to secure
contracts for the Lesotho Dam, and the
implication of politicians in corruption
concerning the purchase of a waste incinerator
in Cologne, Germany.
The Global Corruption Report 2005 finds that a
lack of transparency in large-scale projects can
have a devastating impact on economic
development. “Corrupt contracting processes
leave developing countries saddled with
sub-standard infrastructure and excessive debt,”
said Eigen today. Corruption raises the cost and
lowers the quality of infrastructure. But the
cost of corruption is also felt in lost lives.
The damage caused by natural disasters such as
earthquakes is magnified in places where
inspectors have been bribed to ignore building
and planning regulations. Corruption steers
money away from health and education programmes
towards large capital-intensive infrastructure
projects. Corruption can also have disastrous
environmental consequences – the Yacyretá dam in
Argentina, the Bataan nuclear power plant in the
Philippines and the Bujagali dam in Uganda have
all been subject to allegations of the improper
diversion of money.
Taking action to prevent corruption
To coincide with the publication of the Global
Corruption Report 2005, Transparency
International is launching an international
initiative aimed at preventing corruption in
construction projects. Neill Stansbury, Project
Director for Construction & Engineering at
TI-UK, who is leading the initiative, said that
“corruption in construction projects can be
avoided if all parties put into place the
necessary preventive measures. This requires
coordinated international action by governments,
banks, export credit agencies, project owners,
contractors and other relevant parties.” TI has
produced a series of risk assessments, action
plans and anti-corruption tools for this sector,
and it will use these to lobby relevant
organisations to take action to prevent bribery.
The Global Corruption Report 2005 also includes
detailed assessments of the state of corruption
in 40 country reports written by Transparency
International's national chapters and other
experts. The book contains the findings of the
latest research into corruption and ways to
combat it, including studies on the links
between corruption and issues such as pollution,
gender and foreign investment.
‘Monuments of corruption’ from the Global
Corruption Report 2005:
* The Lesotho Highlands Water Project, in
which US$2 million were allegedly paid in bribes
by Acres International and 11 other
international dam-building companies.
* The Cologne incinerator project in
Germany, where US $13 million was allegedly paid
in bribes during the construction of a US$ 500
million waste incineration plant.
* The Yacyretá hydropower project on the
border of Argentina and Paraguay, built with
World Bank support, is flooding the Ibera
Marshes. Due to cost overruns, the power
generated by Yacyretá is not economic and needs
to be subsidised by the government. According to
the head of Paraguay’s General Accounting
Office, US$1.87 billion in expenditures for the
project ‘lack the legal and administrative
support documentation to justify the
expenditures’.
* The reservoir of the Bakun dam in Sarawak,
Malaysia, which will submerge 700 km2 of
tropical rain forest. The mandate to develop the
project went to a timber contractor and friend
of Sarawak’s governor. The provincial government
of Sarawak is still looking for customers to
consume the power to be generated by the
project.
* The Bataan nuclear power plant in the
Philippines, built at a cost of more than US $2
billion. The contractor, Westinghouse, admitted
paying US $17 million in commissions to a friend
of former president Marcos. The reactor sits on
an active fault line, creating a major risk of
nuclear contamination if the power plant ever
becomes operational.
* The Bujagali dam in Uganda, which is
currently being investigated for corruption by
the World Bank and four different governments
after a British subsidiary of the Norwegian
construction company, Veidekke, admitted paying
a bribe to a senior Ugandan civil servant. The
cumulative environmental impacts of Bujagali and
other dams on the Nile have never been assessed.
Transparency International’s Minimum Standards
for Public Contracting Public procurement
authorities should:
1. Implement a code of conduct that commits
the contracting authority and its employees to a
strict anti-corruption policy. The policy should
take into account possible conflicts of
interest, provide mechanisms for reporting
corruption and protect whistleblowers.
2. Allow a company to tender only if it has
implemented a code of conduct that commits the
company and its employees to a strict
anti-corruption policy.
3. Maintain a blacklist of companies for
which there is sufficient evidence of their
involvement in corrupt activities. Debar
blacklisted companies from tendering for the
authority’s projects for a specified period of
time.
4. Ensure that all contracts between the
authority and its contractors, suppliers and
service providers require the parties to comply
with strict anti-corruption policies. This may
best be achieved by requiring the use of a
project integrity pact committing the authority
and bidding companies to refrain from bribery.
5. Ensure that public contracts above a low
threshold are subject to open competitive
bidding.
6. Provide all bidders, and preferably also
the general public, with easy access to
information about all phases of the contracting
process, including the selection and evaluation
processes and the terms and conditions of the
contract and any amendments.
7. Ensure that no bidder is given access to
privileged information at any stage of the
contracting process, especially information
relating to the selection process.
8. Allow bidders sufficient time for bid
preparation and for pre-qualification
requirements when these apply.
9. Ensure that contract ‘change’ orders that
alter the price or description of work beyond a
cumulative threshold are monitored at a high
level, preferably by the decision-making body
that awarded the contract.
10. Ensure that internal and external
control and auditing bodies are independent and
functioning effectively, and that their reports
are accessible to the public. Any unreasonable
delays in project execution should trigger
additional control activities.
11. Separate key functions to ensure that
responsibility for demand assessment,
preparation, selection, contracting, supervision
and control of a project is assigned to separate
bodies.
12. Apply standard office safeguards, such
as the use of committees at decision-making
points and rotation of staff in sensitive
positions. Staff responsible for procurement
processes should be well trained and adequately
remunerated.
13. Promote the participation of civil
society organisations as independent monitors of
both the tender and execution of projects.
The Global Corruption Report 2005 is published
in London by Pluto Press (ISBN 0 7453 2396 0).
The book can be ordered (£19.99 / $29.95 plus
postage and packing) through online booksellers,
local bookshops or the publisher (www.plutobooks.com).
The report is published in French by Economica
(ISBN 2-7178-5025-2).
Media Contact:
Berlin:
Jesse Garcia
Tel: +49-30-3438 2019 / 45
Fax: +49-30-3470 3912
press@transparency.org
Gerard Waite
Tel:: +49 (0) 30 3438 2040
London:
Sarah Tyler
Mobile:+49 -1624196454
Diana Rodriguez
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7610 1400
Mobile:+44 (0) 7958 609082
