Your Highness,
Attorney General Al-Marri, Excellencies, Colleagues:
It is a distinct honor for me to join you to
inaugurate the Sixth Global Forum on Combating Corruption and
Safeguarding Integrity. Let me begin by commending the leadership and
hospitality of His Highness, the Emir -- as well as that of His
Excellency Dr. Al-Marri and of the Government of Qatar -- in their role
as hosts of both the Global Forum and the Third Conference of States
Parties to the United Nations Convention Against Corruption.
We come here for two reasons: To celebrate
what has been accomplished since Global Forum One; and – more important
-- to recommit ourselves to the task that remains -- the task of
fighting corruption wherever it manifests itself. We have made progress
in this fight -- but we must do more.
As President Obama has said, "The struggle
against corruption is one of the great struggles of our time."
Corruption is condemned by all religions, all ethical codes, all legal
systems. It hinders all development, slows all progress, impedes all
advancement -- both within our own countries and across our borders. It
strikes hardest at the poor and vulnerable, siphoning scarce resources
away from those most in need. It advances the selfish interests of a
dishonest few over the interests of the great many who work hard and who
obey the law and our common traditions. Corruption erodes trust in
government and private institutions alike; it undermines confidence in
the fairness of free and open markets; and it breeds contempt for the
rule of law. Corruption is, simply put, a scourge on civil society.
And yet corruption continues to flourish. All
nations – all nations -- struggle against corruption – the United
States no less than every other nation represented here. I know this- I
began my career as a lawyer who prosecuted American public officials who
betrayed the trust of the people they were sworn to serve. And all
nations can do more. That is why this gathering is so important. Since
Vice President Al Gore opened the first Global Forum ten years ago, this
conference has stood as a crucial rallying point in the great
international struggle against corruption. From Washington to The Hague,
from Seoul to Brasilia, in Johannesburg and, now, in Doha, we have
joined together every two years to consider how best to fight
corruption.
During these ten years, we have accomplished
much. We have joined hands to draft and bring into force the United
Nations Convention Against Corruption -- the first truly global
anti-corruption treaty. We have seen unprecedented cooperation across
international boundaries to tackle corruption. And we have witnessed
such important developments as the establishment of the Extractive
Industries Transparency Initiative.
Yet this is not the time to rest on our
laurels. For despite our important achievements, the cancer of
corruption remains. Indeed, each and every one of us here should be
alarmed by the sobering results of Transparency International’s 2009
Global Corruption Barometer, a global public opinion survey of more than
73,000 people in 69 countries. Half of the respondents to that survey
viewed the private sector as corrupt – an increase of eight percent from
five years ago. More than 60 percent of respondents said that political
parties, parliaments, and government civil service were corrupt. And the
poor continued to pay more, largely as a result of petty bribery
demands. Shockingly, in some regions, four-in-ten respondents reported
having had to make bribe payments in the past year. And only
three-in-ten respondents to the survey said that their government’s
efforts to fight corruption were effective. This last statistic should
be a clarion call to all of us here today.
So it is with purpose and urgency that we come
here -- not simply to acknowledge our achievements, but to chart a way
forward that will make our efforts to fight corruption more effective.
We must act. Let me suggest three critical steps that I believe we
should take together.
First, we must renew our efforts for
ratification and full implementation of the UN Convention Against
Corruption. Seven years after it opened for signature, several of the
world’s largest economies – including several of our close partners in
the G-20 – still have not ratified the Convention. Still others that
have ratified have not fully implemented the Convention. We again call
upon all countries to join and implement the Convention.
And all of us who already are parties to the
Convention must put in place an effective, transparent, and inclusive
review mechanism. That is the critical question that we face this coming
week in the Conference of States Parties. We will have failed our
Governments and more importantly our peoples if we do not produce a
review mechanism that is itself transparent and inclusive, and that
allows our experts to have a candid dialogue about each nation’s
anti-corruption efforts. I urge the delegations to dedicate themselves
to achieving this goal.
Second, we must work together to ensure
that corrupt officials do not retain the illicit proceeds of their
corruption. There is no gentle way to say it: When kleptocrats loot
their nations’ treasuries, steal natural resources, and embezzle
development aid, they condemn their nations’ children to starvation and
disease. In the face of this manifest injustice, asset recovery is a
global imperative.
In response to this ongoing challenge, I stand
before you to announce a redoubled commitment on behalf of the United
States Department of Justice to recover such funds. Indeed, we have
scored successes in this regard already. Through enforcement of our
asset forfeiture laws, and in close cooperation with our law enforcement
partners in other countries, the United States was able to repatriate
more than $20 million to the nation of Peru that was looted during the
government of Alberto Fujimori and Vladimiro Montesinos -- and we have
assisted in the repatriation of tens of millions of dollars more. We
likewise have forfeited and repatriated more than $100 million to Italy
that constituted proceeds of corruption in the judiciary, and have
repatriated several million dollars to the Government of Nicaragua
traceable to the illicit conduct of the administration of Arnoldo
Aleman.
But we – both the United States and all
countries here – need to do more. It is only with a truly international
and cooperative response that we will be able to achieve success in
recovering the proceeds of corruption. Asset recovery requires the
dedication and expertise of investigators and prosecutors in both the
country victimized by the corrupt acts and in those countries in which
corruption proceeds have been secreted. In that regard, with support
from the U.S. Department of State, we will continue and expand our Asset
Recovery Mentor Program piloted earlier this year, and – as called for
in the Leaders’ Statement at the G-20 Summit in Pittsburgh, we will work
with the World Bank’s Stolen Assets Recovery Program, and with the
Financial Action Task Force. I challenge all of my colleagues here today
similarly to commit to concerted action in support of asset recovery.
Third, countries must end official
impunity with regard to corruption. In a number of countries, immunity
for actions of public officials, judges, and parliamentarians has been
broadly adopted, often for the legitimate reason of affording officials
protection from politically motivated prosecutions. In too many places,
however, public officials are given blanket immunity from investigation
and prosecution for any action, even where the conduct involves
public corruption. In such places, immunity becomes impunity. This
cannot stand.
Let me be clear: Swift and effective
prosecution of corrupt public officials must be at the core of our
broader effort to end corruption. As I indicated, this mandate is deeply
personal to me. More than thirty years ago, fresh out of law school, I
started my career as a new prosecutor in the United States Department of
Justice, prosecuting public officials and those who bribed them. I know
first-hand the challenges of fighting corruption as well as the
considerable obstacles to effective enforcement. But I also know the
vital importance of these efforts. As law enforcement officials, we can
have no more solemn duty than to protect the integrity of our government
institutions by vindicating the rights of those harmed by the greed and
dishonesty of a corrupt few.
The importance of vigorous prosecution of
corrupt public officials is a lesson that we in the United States have
learned though hard experience. Indeed, from 2004 through 2008, the
Department of Justice has convicted hundreds of public officials in the
United States. We have convicted elected officials, appointed officials,
military officials, and judges, as well as private citizens who
illegally sought unfair advantage by bribing public officials.
Key to these efforts is the dedication of
career prosecutors with the independence to prosecute corruption cases
objectively and fairly, without regard to political affiliation, status,
wealth, or position. Because of these prosecutors’ tireless work, our
institutions are stronger, our markets are fairer, and our people are
better off.
We must all strive for this, and we must help
each other in this vital cause. We must vigorously enforce our own laws
that prohibit bribery of foreign officials, such as, in the United
States, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. And we must work together to
support our partners in anti-corruption enforcement, and expose all
efforts to undermine the effectiveness of anti-corruption initiatives.
Together, we can make a difference.
So while this Global Forum series is coming to
a conclusion, the work of the Global Forum must not end. Its spirit and
its mission must, and will, live on -- in the UN Conference of States
Parties, in the International Anticorruption Conference, and in the
daily work of the many civic organizations, institutions, and
governments present here today.
In this great struggle, we must not falter or
compromise. Too many children’s lives, too many communities’ hopes, too
many futures depend upon the fulfillment of our commitment. We must not
turn away from what is truly a defining issue of our time. What, my
colleagues, will you do? How committed to this effort will you be? Join
me in dedicating ourselves to eradicating the plague of corruption from
all of our countries. Our people demand, and deserve, nothing less.
Thank you.
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