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News |
External Reports |
Resolutions/Statements |
Reports |
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Bribery Cases |
Report Bribery |
International Instruments
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UNICORN works with trade unions around the world to combat bribery and corruption |
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trade unions
The Trade Union Congress of Tanzania (TUCTA) marked Labour Day by calling the government to fight grand corruption among its top officials. The International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) has called for urgent progress in implementing the United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNCAC). |
highlights
July 2008: In the UK, on 7th-8th July 2008, the Appellate Committee of the House of Lords heard the appeal by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) against the High Court ruling of the 10th April 2008, that the SFO acted unlawfully when it terminated in December 2006 its investigation into alleged corruption by BAE Systems in its arms deal with Saudi Arabia.
June 2008: Transparency International released its annual Progress Report on the OECD Anti-bribery Convention. The World Bank Institute published its latest Worldwide Governance Indicators, measuring six dimensions of governance for 212 countries. UNDP released its Asia-Pacific Human Development Report, which examined corruption from the perspective of development and democracy-consolidation in the region.
May 2008: The Woolf Committee published its report on BAE Systems plc and ethical business conduct, which contained 23 "robust and challenging" recommendations. BAE had already committed itself to fully implementing all recommendations.
April 2008: The Serious Fraud Office in the UK was given leave to appeal against a High Court judgment that it "acted unlawfully" when it halted the investigation into BAE Systems and the Al Yamamah arms deal. Earlier, the OECD carried out an examination of the UK's implementation of the OECD Anti-bribery Convention.
March 2008: The UK Government published its Draft Constitutional Renewal Bill, containing proposals to increase the powers of the Attorney General to stop criminal investigations on 'national security' grounds. The Swiss Bank, Julius Baer, dropped its lawsuit against Wikileaks.
February 2008: Wikileaks, which publishes 'anonymous, untraceable and uncensorable' documents, was taken offline after a fire and a restraining order. The High Court (London) heard the Judicial Review brought by The Corner House and Campaign Against Arms Trade (CAAT) contesting the legality of the decision to terminate the investigation into alleged bribery by BAE Systems.
January 2008: The head of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission in Nigeria, Nuhu Ribadu, agreed to stand down for a year, following pressure from the President to attend a training course. Earlier, Human Rights Watch described efforts to remove Ribadu as a "thinly veiled attempt to gut the only law enforcement agency that has tried to hold prominent ruling party politicians to account for their many crimes".
December 2007: Siemens allegedly made improper payments to senior officials of the Association of Independent Employees, an employer-friendly competitor to the main trade union at the company IG Metall. Earlier in the month Nigeria debarred Siemens for corruption. |
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