Corruption in Africa: Banks Abroad Warned To Have A Re-Think On How They Handle The Bad Guys By Kolawole Olaniyan, PhD
The financial crisis during 2008 and
2009, and its devastating effects on the socio-economic conditions of many
people have made bankers the least trusted of all trades in Europe and North
America. Statistics also show that sometimes unjustified salaries and bonuses
are contributory factors to banking’s image problem.
This lack of trust and public
confidence in the entire banking system is summed up by a UK banking regulator:
“They [the banks] had a culture of gaming – and of gaming us.”
The best description of this state
of affairs was provided by Mervyn King, former Bank of England governor: “I
find it depressing that people who earn so much seem to think that it’s even
more exciting to adjust the timing of it to get the benefit of the lower tax
rate … knowing this must have an impact on the rest of society, when even now
it is the rest of society that is suffering most from the consequences of the
financial crisis.”
However, the other side of the story
of a crisis of trust and public confidence, which is less understood, discussed
or addressed, is that for much longer, failures by these banks and their home
governments have caused and continue to contribute to untold damage to the
economies of some of the poorest countries in the world, especially in Africa.
Every year an estimated $148 billion
is siphoned off annually from African states and stashed in developed
economies, according to Transparency International, a global non-profit group
that tracks corruption. This figure may not be an exaggeration when it is considered
that in Nigeria alone, over $400bn is estimated to have been lost to high-level
official corruption since independence in 1960.
Corruption and money laundering can
have devastating consequences for national economies, democratic institutions,
the rule of law, and enjoyment of human rights especially for a region like
Africa.
Indeed, the twin problems of
corruption and money laundering, and their ‘offspring’ – poverty – have more in
common than one might expect at the outset. This link is best captured by the
second and third preambular paragraphs of the United Nations Convention against
Corruption, a treaty that has received almost universal acceptance.
Because it ‘takes two to tango’,
high-level official corruption depends on collusion between corrupt leaders,
their families, friends, and other politically exposed persons, PEPs (Dr Radha
Ivory has called them the ‘bad guys’ in her new book: ‘Corruption, Asset
Recovery, and the Protection of Property in Public International Law: The Human
Rights of Bad Guys’), and banks that frequently provide safe havens for the
funds. And the bad guys’ accounts’ details with these banks are often shrouded
in secrecy.
The problem of safe haven
jurisdictions is further exacerbated by the push for profits derived mostly
from corrupt money from developing regions like Africa. This profit incentive
also provides an explanation for the reluctance of many financial institutions
to check, limit, or stop the laundering by high ranking corrupt public
officials, of embezzled public funds.
This practice has become endemic and
has in fact gone on for many years but rarely is any meaningful or consistent
action taken by the international community or governments that supposedly
regulate the banks. As it is often the case, the Western press and politicians
are quick to denounce African corrupt leaders for causing so much suffering for
their people while avoiding the bigger picture: the complicity and culpability
of banks and financial institutions within their own borders.
It is beyond doubt that African
women, men and children are paying the price in terms of schools not being
built, environmental damage, bridges not fixed to standard and hospitals unable
to offer necessary medicines.
Yet, the banks that accept, keep and
profit from corrupt funds are rarely investigated or held to account. Rather
than facing scrutiny and sanctions for failing to observe the most basic
anti-corruption and anti-money laundering standards (such as identifying and
scrutinising the accounts of corrupt officials), and consequently, for their
roles in fuelling corruption, poverty and associated human rights violations in
Africa, these banks are often pumped up with state subsidies.
Good, responsible banking involves
always knowing your customer but many banks claim to be unable to do this
because of a flimsy excuse of ‘understaffing’. The simple fact of the matter is
that these banks are aiding and abetting those who have turned national
patrimony into a ‘cash-cow’. Recovery of any stolen public money or the profit
accruing from it is difficult, time-consuming and very expensive.
But it is all too easy to focus on
corrupt African leaders gleefully behaving badly.
To be sure, ‘African leaders’ share
primary responsibility for the appropriation of the commonwealth for personal
gain, and it’s certainly necessary to have prosecutions and wide-ranging
inquiries and restitution for their citizens who are the ultimate victims of
corruption.
A strong and effective leadership and clear and genuine commitment to achieve full respect for internationally recognized human rights—not just civil and political rights—but also economic and social rights of African women, men and children, is required to make African states more transparent, inclusive and accountable.
A strong and effective leadership and clear and genuine commitment to achieve full respect for internationally recognized human rights—not just civil and political rights—but also economic and social rights of African women, men and children, is required to make African states more transparent, inclusive and accountable.
But the persistent failure of many
international banks to stop African public stolen funds from being deposited
with them in the first place can no longer be ignored or allowed to go
unaddressed or un-remedied.
So far, the responses by banks and
their home governments to the human rights and other problems caused by
facilitating flight of ill-gotten funds from Africa and elsewhere and then
keeping and profiting from the funds have proved far from satisfactory; that
has to change.
An important part of the solution is
to change international banking to make it difficult for senior states to find
safe havens for their ill-gotten wealth.
Banking institutions and individual
operators must embrace professionalism and integrity when they come in contact
with corrupt officials from developing countries. Banking deserves to be
treated as a profession, rather than solely a series of trading and
profit-making activities.
Further, any ongoing plans by banks
and their home governments to fight corruption and bad governance in the
financial sector and to avoid another banking crisis must bear in mind these
important points. The idea of secrecy first, public interest second can’t be
good for business in the long run.
There is nothing intrinsically wrong
for banks to also operate as public benefit companies, especially given their
complicity in corruption, money laundering, poverty and associated human rights
violations in developing countries. It is time to accept that banks have social
responsibility and wider public interest obligations to discourage high level
official corruption in Africa. We need credit-creating banks – but acting
fairly, justly, and for the greatest happiness of the greatest number.
The argument can be made that
because of their access to corrupt officials’ transactions, banks and financial
institutions are well placed to play a key watchdog role to detect and prevent
money laundering by this category of clients. Thus, in relation to stolen
public funds at least, this duty of due diligence would at the minimum demand
complete fidelity to the public trust. If this is so, victims of corruption and
public interest groups can rely on human rights law to ensure compliance with
the duties of due diligence and know your customers rules, thereby enhancing
the effectiveness of the rules in practice.
This public trust function would be
undermined, for example, if financial institutions were to unreasonably
withhold information on transactions concerning corrupt officials and their
families and friends from the public upon request. Allowing victims of human
rights violations caused by corruption to access their records can act as a
powerful dissuasive tool, as it can help to discourage potential corrupt senior
state officials from engaging in corruption (and money laundering) in the first
instance, knowing full well that the chances of being found out within the
financial system are high.
While financial institutions have
ethical duties in relation to their clients, such duties should not be allowed
to trump the overwhelming public interest considerations involved in detecting
and preventing public funds derived from corruption (an illegal act) from being
subject of money laundering.
But it might be necessary to shield financial
institutions from the risk of litigation or liability for disclosure of
information on the ground of necessity and public interest if they are to be
encouraged to play a more proactive role in detecting and preventing money
laundering.
The proposed enhanced public
interest role for financial institutions may well help to reverse the
perception about these institutions as being part of the money laundering
conundrum (often considered to be carrying out the instructions of corrupt
officials) and thus contribute to changing public attitudes to them, which in
the long term may create an ethical (and profitable) business environment for
the institutions.
Financial institutions can recoup
any potential fall in the profit margin that may result in the short term, by
for instance establishing new areas of work and consultancy services in the
field of anti-money laundering.
But the open question remains
whether the proposals highlighted here have got the political vehicle to get
traction with the public to generate the necessary pressure, and whether the
banks and their home governments are ready to ‘walk the talk’ and fulfil their
inherent commitments to global distributive justice.
Kolawole Olaniyan, PhD is Legal
Adviser at Amnesty International in London and the author of ‘Corruption and
Human Rights Law in Africa’.
Corruption in Africa: Banks Abroad Warned To Have A Re-Think On How They Handle The Bad Guys By Kolawole Olaniyan, PhD
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Monday, September 15, 2014
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