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New
calls for companies to encourage whistleblowers
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| Blow the whistle
before it happens |
Paris,
24 April, 2003
- ICC anti-corruption experts have called on companies to encourage whistleblowing
by creating internal policies under which employees can report concerns
without fear of retribution.
In a new book, titled
Fighting Corruption, contributor and ICC Anti-Corruption Commission member,
Michael Davies, argues it is in the best interests of companies to encourage
and accommodate whistleblowers.
The book was launched
today in Paris at an Anti-Corruption conference at ICC headquarters attended
by over 100 lawyers, business executives and corporate managers.
"It is in the
corporate interest to deal pro-actively with whistleblowers and to make
sure employees are provided with comfortable reporting channels and are
confident that they will be protected from any form of retribution,"
Davies writes.
"The public perception
is that, if whistleblower concerns h
ad been heeded, some of the recent
corporate disasters could have been avoided, and that in order to prevent
future misconduct, whistleblowers should be encouraged to come forward.
"Such an approach
will enhance the company's chances to become aware of, and to appropriately
deal with, a concern before an illegal act has been committed rather than
after the fact when the damage has already been done. If reporting is
delayed, the company's reputation can be seriously harmed and it can face
a serious risk of prosecution."
Whistleblowing is
only one of the anti-corruption issues addressed by the new publication,
which, according to ICC Publishing, has been produced with an audience
of corporate managers in mind.
Other emerging anti-corruption
issues covered in the new book include money laundering, terrorist finance
and reform of accounting and auditing standards.
ICC Secretary-General,
Maria Livanos Cattaui, has welcomed the publication of Fighting Corruption
as a "timely, vital tool for business managers everywhere".
"The fight against corruption has taken on additional momentum and
increased complexity in the past four years," she said. "Thirty-four
countries have enacted laws implementing the OECD Convention's prohibition
of foreign bribery. The events of September 11, 2001, and the fight against
terrorism have resulted in stepped-up anti-money laundering programmes
and the wave of corporate scandals in 2001 and 2002 has created strong
pressure for reforms in corporate governance.
"Fighting Corruption
has been published to meet the new demands of this new agenda."
Fighting Corruption is edited by ICC Anti-Corruption commission members,
François Vincke and Fritz Heimann, and is available from ICC Publishing
(www.iccbooks.com) publication
number 652.
Today's Anti-Corruption
conference was convened by the International Bar Association in cooperation
with ICC.
For further information
or an interview with the authors of Fighting Corruption, please contact
Dawn Bartram, in Paris, +33 1 49 53 2907, Click here to send a mail
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