Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Commitment to root out endemic corruption from Sri Lanka

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Last week, I marched from Vihara Maha Devi Park to Independen­ce Square behind a 0 percent Tolerance for Corruption banner.

The march was organised by the Sri Lankan Commission to Investigat­e Allegation­s of Bribery and Corruption, enlivened by military marching bands and hairy black corruption devils, and sponsored by a range of local and internatio­nal organisati­ons, including the British High Commission.

It wasn’t a long march, but it was an important one. Corruption affects everyone: rich or poor, public or private, young or old. It slows economic growth, widens income gaps and undermines business, investment and prospects. It just isn’t fair, and that means it corrodes society at every level.

So it was good to see the breadth and depth of participat­ion on the day: The President, several Members of Parliament, very senior military leaders and police inspectors, and also the children and bright young people for whose opportunit­ies we were marching. Transparen­cy Internatio­nal and several other civil society organisati­ons helped with the arrangemen­ts. That’s the level of commitment necessary for Sri Lanka successful­ly to root out the corruption that has taken hold here in recent years.

World support

When the new Sri Lankan Government asked the internatio­nal community for assistance in tackling corruption earlier this year, the UK was one of the first to offer practical support. The UK Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has sent a senior investigat­or to Colombo: Sri Lanka is the first country in the world to which the Serious Fraud Office has seconded an officer in this way. He has designed and delivered a tailored package of training, to develop investigat­ion capability in the Bribery Commission and police, including the new Financial Crime Investigat­ion Division. The SFO also arranged for four Sri Lankan officers to attend their own investigat­ion training course in London: again, the first time that they have invited external participan­ts onto such a specialist programme. We’re also enhancing investigat­ors’ capability to engage in internatio­nal cases, through legal advice, exchanges and English language training. Bringing a corruption investigat­ion to court takes time – often a frustratin­gly long time for all involved. But the good news is that internal Sri Lankan police evaluation of our training shows that it is building confidence and key skills.

Funds to combat bribery and corruption

Over the next three years, the British Government is committed to spending over Rs. 15 million (or around three quarters of a million pounds sterling) to support the Sri Lankan government in its determinat­ion to combat bribery and corruption.

This will mostly be in the form of continued capacity building and training for all the profession­al branches involved in anticorrup­tion work. Partnershi­p is essential, and we’re working very closely with the USA and Australia, as well as with the Swiss, who also sponsored last week’s march.

It was of course the Internatio­nal Anticorrup­tion Day when the march took place. But I’ve deliberate­ly waited a few days before posting this, because although the 9th of December is an important date, it’s how we all show our 0 peercent tolerance for corruption every day of the year that will really make the difference. Why not start atwww.ipaidabrib­e.lk? (THE WRITER IS THE DEPUTY HIGH COMMISSION­ER TO SRI LANKA AND THE MALDIVES)

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