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July 9, 2004
ICAC
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Int'l cooperation key to anti-graft battle

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ICAC
The effectiveness of international cooperation in battling corruption hinges on inter-agency exchanges, not only in law enforcement but also in experience sharing and staff training, ICAC Commissioner Raymond Wong says.

 

Addressing the China & ASEAN Countries Attorneys-General Conference in Kunming, Mr Wong said corruption has often become part and parcel of other organised and serious crimes, and many corrupt activities transformed into cross-border crimes.

 

He said, with the rise of globalisation and the 'knowledge-based economy', criminals around the world are now able to plan and execute illicit activities through the Internet or other means of mobile communications.

 

Easy travel helps criminals escape justice

"Criminals are also able to escape justice by speedily moving around different places, taking advantage of the convenience of modern travelling facilities," he noted.

 

On the enforcement front, Mr Wong cited a number of major ICAC inquiries, which had achieved success with assistance from Interpol and other agencies in the Mainland, Singapore, Vietnam, Philippines, the United States, Switzerland and Cambodia.

 

Examples included graft-facilitated cross-border cigarette-smuggling cases, a massive bank loan fraud involving a Hong Kong listed company and a major Malaysian bank, and corruption-facilitated passport scams.

 

Since the establishment of the ICAC, he said, 26 suspects had been extradited back to Hong Kong from nine countries - Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines, Australia, the United Kingdom, France, Holland, the United States and Canada. Ten of them were returned after 1997.

 

There are seven ICAC cases pending extradition proceedings.

 

ICAC recognises experience sharing as key

Recognising the importance of experience sharing in combating transnational corruption, the ICAC became a founding member of the International Anti-Corruption Conference in 1981 and is also a founder of the Interpol Group of Experts in Corruption.

 

The Commission took the initiative to expand the regional anti-corruption seminars.

 

Exchange visits are regularly arranged between the ICAC and its overseas counterparts while ICAC officers have also attended overseas training courses or been invited to assist in staff training for other agencies abroad.

 

Courses attract officials from around the region

The Commission's latest Command Course for Chief Investigators attracted law-enforcement officials from Australia, Mauritius, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Macau and the Mainland.

 

"Through exchanges, we have successfully established an international liaison network with overseas law-enforcement partners," Mr Wong noted.

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