Home Secretary speech at Ukraine Forum on Asset Recovery○UK Home
Office and Foreign & Commonwealth Office(2014.04.29)
https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/home-secretary-speech-at-ukraine-forum-on-asset-recovery
https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/home-secretary-speech-at-ukraine-forum-on-asset-recovery
The Home Secretary outlines how the UK and
international community are mobilising to recover stolen assets for the people
of Ukraine.
Good morning. I am very pleased to be here to open the Ukraine Forum on Asset Recovery. I would like to thank the United States
Attorney General Eric Holder
for proposing this event, and extend a warm welcome to Ukraine
Prosecutor General Oleh Makhnitskyy , the Ukrainian delegation and Daria Kaleniuk ,
who is from the Anti-Corruption Action Centre and
is representing civil society.
I would also like
to thank the World Bank and UN Office on Drugs and Crime’s Stolen Asset Recovery
Initiative for their crucial support in making this event happen,
and their continued leadership on this agenda.
The UK has taken a
strong stance on the importance of returning stolen assets to the Ukrainian
people. We have played a leading role in
promoting the EU sanctions regime to freeze the assets of Ukrainians suspected
of misappropriating state funds, allowing
for proper investigations and judicial processes to take place.
Cracking
down on corruption, and working to
recover stolen assets, is an issue which has increasingly gained
international importance and is one we must we continue to work hard on.
The events of the Arab Spring a few years ago led to a renewed
focus on asset recovery, and under our G8
Presidency last year, the international community came together in Marrakech to
show leadership and bolster our collective efforts to recover misappropriated
funds.
But our endeavours
to help the Arab Spring countries have also demonstrated just how challenging
this work is.
Stolen
assets are laundered around the world, through shell companies and complex
corporate structures, and it can take years of intensive work to trace
and identify those funds.
Many of you in this
room know just how challenging that work is from first hand experience and I
commend your dedication and expertise.
We must work together internationally
International
cooperation is central and crucial to any successful asset recovery case. In our globalised
economy, laundered money can move across borders in seconds. Investigators must follow that trail, which
makes cross-border law enforcement
cooperation critical.
That’s why events
like this matter so much. I am
particularly pleased to see representatives from financial
centres and key jurisdictions
around the world coming together to assist the Ukrainian authorities.
Collaboration
requires political will, as well as technical knowledge of each other’s legal systems. But personal
relationships which enable practitioners to pick up the phone and
talk directly to a trusted contact when needed, are also vitally important.
So I would urge
everyone here today to make the most of this opportunity to hold detailed,
case-specific meetings with partners.
I would also urge
you to make the most of the assistance offered by international organisations
who are present here today.
The UK is taking a strong stance on
corruption
Corruption has a deplorable
effect on our societies – corroding
justice, good governance and prosperity.
And it is an issue the UK is determined to tackle.
The UK is a global
financial centre, open for business with the world. It is one of our country’s
great strengths, but it brings with it responsibilities:
to ensure that we take the appropriate steps to prevent money laundering; and
that we act to stop the proceeds of overseas corruption from being hidden here.
During our G8
Presidency, we led international efforts to establish new standards on corporate
transparency, and to stop shell companies being used to launder the proceeds of
crime and evade taxes.
Recently the
government set out how it intends to meet our commitments in practice, with a
public register of company beneficial ownership.
And in October last
year, we took two steps to transform the UK’s response to serious and organised crime.
First, we launched
a new National
Crime Agency which has stronger powers and a clear remit to lead and
co-ordinate the fight against serious and organised crime, including corruption.
The National Crime
Agency has coordinated our law enforcement response to the events in Ukraine,
bringing together partners to provide support to the Ukrainian authorities,
investigate cases, and build the intelligence picture.
Learning from our
experiences on asset recovery during the Arab Spring, officers from the
National Crime Agency and the Metropolitan Police,
accompanied by Crown Prosecution Service
prosecutors, went to the Ukraine to offer support soon after the fall of
Yanukovych’s regime.
Secondly, alongside the
launch of the National Crime Agency, we published a Serious
and Organised Crime Strategy, which includes measures to crack down on
those who facilitate serious and organised criminals in using, hiding and moving
the proceeds of crime.
In addition, I
intend to bring forward legislative measures on asset seizure as soon as
Parliamentary time here in the UK allows.
Conclusion
So we know from
experience that asset recovery is hard, complex work, which takes years not
months to complete.
What you, as
practitioners, do here over the next two days will define the future of our
work to recover and return assets to the Ukrainian people.
This event, and our
on-going work to recover Arab Spring stolen assets,
are helping to set a new benchmark for the international community.
It is the tangible
manifestation of our shared determination to end the culture of impunity, and
prevent our open societies and open economies from being abused by corrupt
individuals to launder and hide stolen funds.
I wish you all the
best with the forum over the coming days.
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