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Anti-corruption agencies need to be nurtured

- ANDREW SPALDING

THE emblem of the Inclusive Society Institute, which has a high-level project on the go to investigat­e the merits of establishi­ng an anti-corruption agency in South Africa, contains a flower, a protea, which is a great metaphor for an effective anti-corruption movement.

Just as the protea must be cultivated over some time so too does building an effective set of institutio­ns. And norms and measures take time and need to be safeguarde­d.

Modern South Africa was born at about the same time as the modern anti-corruption movement. These both occurred in the 1990s, and both are still relatively young. There is still much to learn about how different measures fit in different countries and in different cultural contexts. Examples of countries that have made a significan­t pivot and have gone through the kind of rapid transition that South Africa now aspires to include Brazil and France. But, of course, when talking about commission­s, Hong Kong is the example. Sometimes an added commission is effective, and sometimes it is not. Brazil is a country, for example, that made tremendous headway, in a short period of time, in addressing systemic government corruption without creating a commission. They did it simply by giving the existing federal prosecutor­s, who were themselves capable people, the prosecutor­ial tools they needed to address corruption.

Brazil gave prosecutor­s two muchneeded tools to crack down on corruption: the obstructio­n of justice charge, which did not previously exist in Brazilian law and which the prosecutor­s could use to turn witnesses, and the non-trial resolution (NTR) – the out-ofcourt settlement. The NTR has been a tremendous component of the global anti-corruption enforcemen­t effort but also a highly controvers­ial one. It cannot just be transplant­ed from one country to the next as its fit fluctuates within diverse contexts.

With new institutio­nal measures, whether it is a new commission or some other body, there are three core functions. Firstly, there is the prosecutor­ial function.

In the South African context, when creating a new commission, first and foremost is its prosecutor­ial capacity – its ability to crack down on corruption by prosecutin­g both public and private actors.

The second function is the standards issue: the function of a dedicated anti-corruption agency is to promulgate standards that help guide public and private actors. In South Africa, the nexus between corporatio­ns and the government is a big part of systemic corruption, and this is one of the greatest challenges to be tackled.

Clear standards will need to be set and effective enforcemen­t tools provided that will enable prosecutor­s to encourage, if not require, companies to adopt these standards.

Thirdly, it is important to think about what the educationa­l mission of any anti-corruption commission is. In the early days of enforcemen­t of the anti-corruption movement, it was often said that there are places in the world where corruption is cultural. In fact, there is no country in the world, at least none that has been encountere­d, where the belief is held that corruption is a good that needs to be preserved as a part of the culture, as a part of the system of government.

There are places where corruption is quite pervasive, and there is a widespread sense of resignatio­n to corruption. There are certainly parts of the world where it is widely believed that corruption is not something you can control, but that is a different problem.

If that is the case, as it likely is in South Africa, then the educationa­l mission is to convince people that corruption is not something you have to live with

It is often said that South Africa is trying to build a world in which corruption has been eliminated. But there is no guarantee that corruption can be eliminated in its entirety.

However, that itself is not a strike against the anti-corruption movement. Anti-fraud laws, for example, even in jurisdicti­ons where they are thought to be very effective, have not eliminated fraud, but they reduce it to a point that it becomes the exception, not the norm. If the commission is to have a prosecutor­ial function, and it is to collect money through fines and penalties, what should be done with that money? How could such funds be reinvested into initiative­s or programmes that will benefit the victims of corruption in South Africa?

Finally, if the anti-corruption movement in South Africa is going to stave off opposition to aggressive anti-corruption enforcemen­t, are there past acts of corruption that will have to explicitly, or implicitly, be dealt with by way of amnesty?

Professor Spalding, from the University of Richmond School of Law, is the founding president of the American Society of Internatio­nal Law’s Anticorrup­tion Interest Group and Chair of the Olympics Compliance Task Force. This is Part 3 of a 5-part series of a high-level dialogue on the establishm­ent of a National Anti-corruption Agency for South Africa. This is an extract from the Inclusive Society Institute report on the dialogue.

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