Statement by Huguette Labelle, Chair, Transparency International 
On the Stolen Asset Recovery (StAR) Initiative 
New York, 17 September 2007
 
Transparency International (TI) welcomes the Stolen Asset Recovery
(StAR) Initiative of the World Bank and United Nations. It is an
important element of the Bank’s comprehensive attack on corruption. The
programme, which will provide resources to help countries locate and
repatriate assets lost through illicit acts, is a wake-up call to those
who steal and to those who facilitate or harbour stolen assets. 
 
Corruption’s drain on resources available to alleviate poverty, disease
and illiteracy is profound. The annual cross-border flow of proceeds
from criminal activity, corruption and tax evasion is estimated by the
StAR report at between US $1 trillion and US $1.6 trillion. Furthermore,
bribes received by public officials from developing and transition
countries are estimated at US $20 to $40 billion annually. Indeed, these
estimates are roughly equivalent to the Bank’s total annual lending
portfolio. 
 
Transparency International has long called for action to end safe havens
for such funds and to secure their return to their rightful owners. Our
national chapters around the world actively supported inclusion of
strong provisions for this purpose in the UN Convention against
Corruption (UNCAC) in order to ensure cooperation between developing and
developed countries. 
 
Realising the full potential of these legal requirements will require
political will and strong support from many stakeholders. Locating,
freezing and repatriating stolen assets will require cooperation among
governments seeking recovery, from financial institutions holding the
assets and from the governments that regulate these institutions and
provide offshore accounts. 
 
Civil society must play a key role in the implementation of StAR, and
that critical role must be reflected in the initiative’s structure. 
 
The World Bank and other donors can also play a supportive role. They
can assist governments with the skills and resources to navigate complex
procedures and legal requirements, and support their efforts to
implement the UNCAC’s provisions on budget, expenditure and procurement
transparency. 
 
They can also create transparency and accountability mechanisms to
ensure that the returned funds are used to benefit the citizens.
Countries can also sanction publicly held companies that are complicit
in corruption, and promote compliance by financial centres with
anti-money laundering rules. 
 
Well performing judiciaries and financial systems are essential to
fighting corruption, and nations should support their development where
they are deficient. 
 
The StAR initiative is an important development, adding a powerful
deterrent to those seeking to plunder their nation’s wealth and to those
who have wilfully or inadvertently provided them safe havens. With
strong top-level leadership from these institutions, from governments
and from the banking and legal community, StAR can be a valuable
component of the broader anti-corruption reform agenda. 
 
In addition, all countries must ratify UNCAC, the global legal framework
essential for the success of initiatives such as StAR. To date, four of
the Group of Eight countries have not yet ratified: Canada, Germany,
Italy and Japan. 
 
### 
 
Note to editors: TI Chair Huguette Labelle participated in today’s
launch of the Stolen Asset Recovery (StAR) Initiative along with World
Bank President Robert Zoellick, United Nations Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon and United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime Executive Director
Antonio Maria Costa.
 
Adhi Ardian Kustiadi
Transparency International Indonesia
Jl. Senayan Bawah No.17
Jakarta 12180
Phone : 62-21 720-8515
Fax     : 62-21 726-7815
HP: 0856-7816574/0818-767744
E-mail : HYPERLINK "mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]"HYPERLINK
"mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]"[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web   : HYPERLINK "http://www.ti.or.id/"www.ti.or.id  
 

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