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With middlemen diverting
cash into the Swiss bank accounts of a corrupt southern African
official, the Lesotho Highlands Water project epitomizes graft
in international construction. Continuing court activity this
month and next will ensure that Lesotho remains a symbol of
international constructions murky side and may help
clean up the industry globally.
In Lesotho, a former government
project director of the multibillion dollar Highlands
dam and tunnel scheme is entering his second year in prison.
He will stay there until 2020, barring parole. A key middleman
died before facing the law and another local consultant pleaded
guilty a few weeks ago. Two international design firms have
been found guilty of bribery and a leading French contractor
faces trial. More actions may follow.
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| Uncovered
Lesotho dam and tunnel project became a symbol of construction
corruption. (Photo courtesy of Michael Dam Constructors) |
The eruption of activity in Lesotho
has become a "landmark" for growing intolerance
to corruption, says Neil Stansbury, a British lawyer with
long construction experience. "I think we are going to
start to see more publicity around global corruption,"
adds Tony Boswell, the Houston, Texas-based senior vice president
of global ethics for AMEC plc, London.
By taking on international companies
and their teams of lawyers, Lesotho earned star billing at
the high-level eleventh International Anti-Corruption Conference
in South Korea in late May. The government wanted to "set
an example for other countries," said Lesotho Attorney
General Fine Maem.
Across the globe in London, a number
of top international contractors met confidentially under
the auspices of the independent anti-corruption body Transparency
International, based in Berlin and having national chapters
in over 80 countries. Attendees included AMEC and reportedly
executives of U.S.-based Bechtel Inc., Halliburton Inc. and
others. An initiative to clean up construction is likely,
says Stansbury.
The task will not be easy. Of all
major industries, international construction is the one indulging
in "the most flagrant corruption," says TI. It financed
a survey last year of over 800 people in 15 emerging economies
that identified construction as the most likely of 17 industries
to bribe, as well as the industry dealing in the biggest bribes.
Construction also ranks as a corruption
leader in a survey of executives by Control Risks Group, a
London-based business security consultant.
TI has compiled a corruption index
for countries based on 15 surveys and polls by nine organizations
that asked business people, country analysts and residents
about their perceptions of corruption (see table) Bangladesh
and Nigeria are the most corrupt, according to TI.
Among bigger international players,
companies from Russia and China were found to bribe "on
an exceptional and intolerable scale," with Taiwanese
and South Koreans following closely behind, says CRG.
Despite having the oldest law criminalizing
corruption abroad, U.S. firms were found to "have a high
propensity to pay bribes to foreign government officials,"
on par with Japanese companies, says TI. Firms from France,
Spain, Germany, Singapore and the U.K. were cleaner. And those
from Australia, Sweden, Swit-zerland, Austria, Canada, the
Netherlands and Belgium were least likely to bribe, says TI.
Among more corrupt regions, the
former Communist Europe and Soviet Union remain prominent,
according to a survey by the European Bank for Reconstruction
and Development and the World Bank. It found "bribe taxes"
exceeding 3% of company sales, with corruption most widespread
in Russia. "Ive heard stories [in Eastern Europe]
of people who wanted to do business on the straight and narrow
but [who] were forced out of the market," says Michael
Mix, infrastructure business development manager at Bechtel
Ltd., London.
In Asia, Indonesia remains notorious
for corruption, according to a new survey of 1,000 expatriates
by Hong Kong-based Political and Economic Risk Consultancy
Ltd. India ranked almost as bad, followed by Vietnam, Thailand,
China, The Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia and South Korea.
Singapore emerged as the cleanest country, ahead of Australia
and the U.S.
|
1
|
Bangladesh |
1.2
|
0.3 - 2.0 |
|
2
|
Nigeria |
1.6
|
0.9 - 2.5 |
|
3
|
Paraguay |
1.7
|
1.5 - 2.0 |
|
4
|
Madagascar |
1.7
|
1.3 - 2.5 |
|
5
|
Angola |
1.7
|
1.6 - 2.0 |
|
6
|
Kenya |
1.9
|
1.7 - 2.5 |
|
7
|
Indonesia |
1.9
|
0.8 - 3.0 |
|
8
|
Azerbaijan |
2
|
1.7 - 2.4 |
|
9
|
Uganda |
2.1
|
1.9 - 2.6 |
|
10
|
Moldova |
2.1
|
1.7 - 3.0 |
|
11
|
Haiti |
2.2
|
0.8 - 4.0 |
|
12
|
Ecuador |
2.2
|
1.7 - 2.6 |
|
13
|
Cameroon |
2.2
|
1.7 - 3.2 |
|
14
|
Bolivia |
2.2
|
1.7 - 2.9 |
|
15
|
Kazakhstan |
2.3
|
1.7 - 3.9 |
|
16
|
Vietnam |
2.4
|
1.5 - 3.6 |
|
17
|
Ukraine |
2.4
|
1.7 - 3.8 |
|
18
|
Georgia |
2.4
|
1.7 - 2.9 |
|
19
|
Venezuela |
2.5
|
1.5 - 3.2 |
|
20
|
Nicaragua |
2.5
|
1.7 - 3.4 |
|
21
|
Guatemala |
2.5
|
1.7 - 3.5 |
|
22
|
Albania |
2.5
|
1.7 - 3.3 |
|
23
|
Zambia |
2.6
|
2.0 - 3.2 |
|
24
|
Romania |
2.6
|
1.7 - 3.6 |
|
25
|
Philippines |
2.6
|
1.7 - 3.6 |
|
26
|
Pakistan |
2.6
|
1.7 - 4.0 |
|
27
|
Zimbabwe |
2.7
|
2.0 - 3.3 |
|
28
|
Tanzania |
2.7
|
2.0 - 3.4 |
|
29
|
Russia |
2.7
|
1.5 - 5.0 |
|
30
|
India |
2.7
|
2.4 - 3.6 |
|
31
|
Honduras |
2.7
|
2.0 - 3.4 |
|
32
|
Cote dIvoire |
2.7
|
2.0 - 3.4 |
|
33
|
Argentina |
2.8
|
1.7 - 3.8 |
|
34
|
Uzbekistan |
2.9
|
2.0 - 4.1 |
|
35
|
Malawi |
2.9
|
2.0 - 4.0 |
|
36
|
Panama |
3
|
1.7 - 3.6 |
|
37
|
Senegal |
3.1
|
1.7 - 5.5 |
|
38
|
Turkey |
3.2
|
1.9 - 4.6 |
|
39
|
Thailand |
3.2
|
1.5 - 4.1 |
|
40
|
El Salvador |
3.4
|
2.0 - 4.2 |
|
41
|
Egypt |
3.4
|
1.7 - 5.3 |
|
42
|
Ethiopia |
3.5
|
3.0 - 4.0 |
|
43
|
Dominican
Republic |
3.5
|
3.0
- 3.9 |
|
44
|
China |
3.5
|
2.0 - 5.6 |
|
45
|
Mexico |
3.6
|
2.5 - 4.9 |
|
46
|
Colombia |
3.6
|
2.6 - 4.6 |
|
47
|
Sri Lanka |
3.7
|
3.3 - 4.3 |
|
48
|
Slovak Republic |
3.7
|
3.0 - 4.6 |
|
49
|
Morocco |
3.7
|
1.7 - 5.5 |
|
50
|
Latvia |
3.7
|
3.5 - 3.9 |
Source:
Transparency International
*Based on 15 polls and surveys of business people, country
analysts and residents by nine independent organizations.
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Corruption is more than "brown
envelopes paid to a civil servant," says Jean Pierre
Méan, EBRDs chief compliance officer. "In
a certain Western European city, there was an apartment made
available to civil servants on an hourly basis," he says.
But incidents witnessed by Stansbury
during 20 years as an international construction lawyer involved
intermediaries. Commonly, a person claiming influential contacts
would emerge, offering help with a bid for a fee. "Ten
to twenty million dollars is not surprising," says Stansbury.
Using such "middlemen"
is a practice the construction industry, "in particular,"
has tolerated, says John Bray, CRGs Tokyo-based director.
"There has been reluctance to address that."
Crooked middlemen were at the heart
of the Lesotho case, climaxing with last years trial
and sentencing of the Highlands Development Authoritys
chief executive, Masupha Sole. He was found guilty of taking
bribes from intermediaries of international firms. The representative
agreements "were nothing more than bribe agreements,"
says Maem.
Among the accused firms, Acres
International Ltd., Oakville, Ontario, was fined $2.7-million
last year. The result of its appeal is due in August. Germanys
Lahmeyer International GmbH, Bad Vilbel, was found guilty
in May and is due for sentencing in July. Paris-based Spie
Batignolles S.A., which led a contractors consortium,
will be next on trial. The chances of a trial over the Katse
Dam contract increased this June when Jacobus Michiel du Plooy
pleaded guilty of bribing Sole, allegedly on behalf of Milan-based
Impregilo SpA. The contractor says: "The new management,
which took over in 1999, has no knowledge of facts and circumstances
relating to unlawful acts allegedly committed in Lesotho."
Maem has found construction corruption
difficult to unearth, but once found, "prosecuting it
is not that difficult," he says.
With increasingly tougher laws
around the world, more companies may find themselves in court.
Over 30 countries in recent years have outlawed corruption
in foreign markets. Most earlier laws criminalized domestic
corruption, but the U.S. led in outlawing bribery overseas
in 1977. The legal net will reach more globally with a proposed
U.N. Convention against Corruption due for signing in December.
But law alone is not enough for
Boswell, hired this year to improve AMECs ethics strategy.
"This is a cultural issue....If [company] leaders do
not establish the culture...the people are going to find ways
around [the law]," he says. "What we need to do
is train."
Bechtel seemingly is content with
its strategy. Its guidance outlines the laws, urging staff
to consult company lawyers before starting relationships with
anyone "who might be considered to be a foreign official."
Staff must get assurances that no inducements will be paid
through foreign associates, whose appointments need senior
approval. Staff must account for all payments they make, and
whistleblowers have telephone help lines in 16 countries.
For less-sure companies, TI recently
helped publish guidelines, Business Principles for Countering
Bribery.
Voluntary pacts and codes are not
enough, says Stansbury. "The export credit agencies need
to start investigating," he says. With TI support, Stansbury
will soon publish a report on the danger signs of corruption.
Central to his recommendations will be a dramatic increase
in government investigations, which "must be followed
by prosecutions and imprisonment," he says. "Its
been a surprise to me...how prevalent corruption is and how
accepted it is by people who would otherwise be reasonably
moral."
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