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Archive for 16 November 2010

Quote of the Day

Here are some of the inspiring quotes from the 14th IACC. If they move you to find out more about each session, just click on the links to explore further.

Leadership forum

View the short report here

“Asia must embrace the principle of inclusive growth, brining more people into the circle of opportunity that growth and development provides”
Haruhiko Kuroda, President of the Asian Development Bank

“Without civil society and without the people, from the grassroots up, anti-corruption agencies will not be able to operate efficiently.”
Juree Vichit-Vadakan, Secretary General, Transparency Thailand

Corruption, Peace and Security

Read the plenary transcript here

Read the short report here

“Corruption fuels many of today’s gravest risks to security, from nuclear proliferation, to terrorism, to organized crime”
Melinda Crane, Deutsche Welle

“There is simply no alternative… to a really coordinated international effort based on cooperation; to enforce international mechanisms; to provide financial, institutional support when its needed; and of course it was to promote an anti-corruption culture, based on integrity and accountability.”
Gareth Evans, President Emeritus of the Brussels-based International Crisis Group

“We need to create development policies, combat corruption and combat organized crime, from a human rights perspective, in which we take into account the dignity of individuals, their autonomy and their rights.”
Magdalena Sepulveda, Independent Expert on Human Rights and Extreme Poverty for the Office of the UN High Commission of Human Rights; Director of Research, International Council on Human Rights Policy

“Customs could be a leading showcase for good governance because of its critical role in facilitating trade, a viable source of poverty reduction in line with the Millennium Development Goals. Also it plays a critical role in protecting society at borders.”
Kunio Mikuriya, Secretary General of the World Customs Organization (WCO)

Fuelling Transparency & Accountability in the Natural Resources & Energy Markets Plenary

View the plenary transcript here

Read the short report here

“Transparency is an absolutely critical component of maximizing the long-term economic benefit for the resource-producing country.”
Karin Lissakers, Director General, Revenue Watch Institute

“Most of my experience has been with real people on the ground, the village housewife of third world countries, the farmer, the fisherperson. And these are the people that face the actual cutting edge of corruption.”
Arvind Ganesan, Director, Business and Human Rights, Human Rights Watch

“The important thing is to maintain a consensus between the magical triangle as I call it, of government, civil society and private sector, at every level.”
Peter Eigen, Chairman of Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative

“There has to be strong enforcement. In order for that to happen, you need what is called political will, and in order for political will to happen, you need strong public opinion.”
Ashok Khosla – President of the International Union for Conservation of Nature

Climate Governance: Ensuring a Collective Commitment Plenary

Read the plenary transcript here

Read the long report here

“When one considers climate governance, one must address both the national and international levels. At national level climate finance must be applied in a way which respects and promotes the full enjoyment of human rights.”
Iruthisham Adam, Ambassador /Permanent Representative of Maldives to the United Nations Offices at Geneva & WTO

“We need to invest in building local civil society to be able to hold institutions accountable”
Manish Bapna, Managing Director, World Resources Institute

“It’s essential that we move away from this industrial paradigm and put in a system where the 1.6 billion people that depend in some degree or other on the world’s forests have a major role in the reform and benefit directly from the funding that comes from it.”
Patrick Alley, Founder and Director, Global Witness

“We need strong whistleblower protections at all levels where climate finance is taking place.”
Daphne Whysham, Fellow and Board Member, Institute for Policy Studies

Strengthening Global Action for an Accountable Corporate World

Read plenary transcript here

Read the short report here

“It’s the intersection between private and public that …corruption notoriously does most of its dirty work. It’s also in this public stroke private space that the fight against corruption can usefully be waged.”
Timothy Large, Thomson Reuters Foundation

“The next task is pulling together good public procurement, good public integrity programmes, good corporate education, corporate audits along with a good domestic and foreign anti-bribery programme.”
Richard Boucher Deputy Secretary General, Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development

“In voluntary compliance, the society… works together and puts a core value that surrounds itself on the basis of integrity and transparency; people voluntary comply with what is considered right.”
Minister Idris Jala Minister in the Malaysian Prime Minister’s Office

“Corruption lurks in shadows and behind closed doors and across borders. Capital and money moves much more easily internationally than evidence does”
Mark F. Mendelsohn Former Deputy Chief, U.S Department of Justice

“Corruption is not as yet entrenched in most African countries: as such there’s still the opportunity to bring about effective reforms and perhaps entrench anti-corruption policies and initiatives into the fabric of African countries.”
Mary Boakye, SNR Denton, Africa Financial Markets group head

When Life Is The Price of Integrity

Natalia Nikolaeva Magnitskaya never expected to lose her son, a corporate lawyer from Russia, Sergei Leonidovich Magnitsky. She always hoped that Sergei will be a great man and achieve his goal.

But Natalia stumbled upon fate: her son was arrested for revealing state bigwigs’ tax fraud worth U.S. $ 230 million, then died in custody due to severe illness without proper medication. Sergei, 37 years old, died 16 November 2009 after 11 months in jail, just a few days before the one year limit that he could be held without trial would expire.

‘He was a man of dignity, and prison didn’t change him,’ said Natalia with a gloomy face when receiving the Integrity Award for his son last Friday.
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Sri Lanka’s hypocritical journalism

I come from a country where journalism is at its lowest ebb and unity among scribes even lower.

In another country, the journalist brethren would have probably gone gung-ho and splashed the news of its fellow colleague winning an international award of integrity on its front page, but not in Sri Lanka, dubbed as the ‘land like no other’ for its pristine beauty which Mother Nature has so generously doled out.

Sri Lanka is home to a population of 20 million, tens of newspapers in three languages including English, at least a dozen magazines, more than three dozen radio stations and over a dozen television stations and countless number of online news sites.

Yet, exiled journalist Poddala Jayantha being honoured with the Transparency International Integrity Award for 2009 – 2010 at a ceremony held in Bangkok, Thailand on November 12th  sadly made it to a very few news media in Sri Lanka.

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Youth Demand To Have A Say In Fighting Corruption

Most corrupt countries have a large proportion of youth in the population. A big number of anti-corruption efforts are already operating in those states and there are surely more to come, but in most cases, youth seem to be left out of the fighting rings.

The members of Global Youth Anti-Corruption Network and young people participating in the 14th International Anti-Corruption Conference could not just sit and wait to be older to join the ranks.

They say, or even SHOUT, that they must be heard. That they have the right to participate. That they might get better, fresher ideas than the older generations.

Over the four days of the Conference, more and more youths are asking and demanding for their rights to the (mostly) older panelists. But it’s not enough, they’ve prepared their version of Bangkok Declaration.
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Video: What are participants going to do after they reach back home?

What are participants going to do after they reach back home to fight against corruption?

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