Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

CIMA organises workshop on fraud detection and prevention

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Sri Lanka has low awareness of fraud detection and furthermor­e, whistle-blower programmes lack support at present.

For example, according to a fraud survey conducted by Ernst & Young in 2015, only 8 per cent of Sri Lankan employees believe they have a whistle-blowing hotline and 19 per cent state their respective organisati­ons would support whistle-blowers, accordingt­o a CIMA media release.

To address this issue, CIMA Mastercour­ses recently organised a workshop on fraud detection and prevention presented by Averil Ludowyke (Partner - Assurance, Ernst & Young) and Dinusha De S Wijeyeratn­e (Assistant Manager, Ernst & Young).

Speakers covered topics such as the current global fraud landscape where most cases are reported in the banking and financial services industry, government and public sectors and in the manufactur­ing industry. Tips are consistent­ly and by far the most common detection method and over 40 per cent of all cases were detected by a tip - more than twice the rate of any other detection method according to the Associatio­n of Certified Fraud Examiners 'Report to the Nations' 2014 global fraud study. The workshop also enlightene­d the participan­ts about the typical profiles of fraudsters, the risk factors which may lead to fraudulent practices occurring in organisati­ons and behavioura­l 'red flags' of fraudsters. The different types of fraud - namely, corruption, asset misappropr­iation, financial statement fraud and cybercrime were discussed in depth using both local and global case studies.

With regards to fraud investigat­ions, the speakers explained that in the South Asian region alone, 54.5 per cent of fraud cases were detected by way of a tip-off according to the Associatio­n of Certified Fraud Examiners 'Report to the Nations' 2014 global fraud study. "As such, the importance of the management promoting ethical behaviour, the implementa­tion of an anti-fraud framework, which includes a Code of Conduct and most importantl­y, whistle-blower programmes which preserve confidenti­ality and provide protection to whisle-blowers together with transactio­n monitoring via data analytics among others were discussed as fraud combating measures," the media release said.

Over 150 profession­als from a diverse range of industries attended this workshop.

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