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VOL 22 NO 130 REGD NO DA 1589 | Dhaka, Sunday, March 22 2015
countries. The definition of money laundering has been subsequently extended to cover various
processes through which the crime is being committed, including 'predicate offences', such as
corruption and bribery, forgery of currencies and documents, extortion, cheating, dealing in
illegal arms and drugs, smuggling, abduction for ransom, murder, and the transfer of concealed
money to other countries from Bangladesh or receiving such money from other countries into
Bangladesh.
A number of reforms in laws related to corruption and laundering of money have been
undertaken. The Code of Criminal Procedure 1898, the Prevention of Corruption Act 1947, the
Penal Code 1860 and the Money Laundering Prevention Act 2002 criminalise attempted
corruption, extortion, active and passive bribery, bribery of foreign public officials, money
laundering, and using public resources or confidential state information for private gain.
The Anti-Money Laundering Law also incorporates provisions to prevent stock market
manipulation and a provision that allows documents provided by foreign governments to be
admissible in court for bringing back siphoned-off money from abroad.
But the drive of the Anti-corruption Commission failed to address the problem of corruption and
money laundering due to intervention from the influential persons and inactiveness and
nepotism. The Anti-corruption Commission (ACC) Act needs to be further amended to make it
more independent of government influence.
Bangladesh can learn from the experience of China. As he took executive authority in December
2012, the Chinese President Xi Jinping directed the Central Commission for Discipline
Inspection (CCDI) to begin its anti-corruption campaign. The campaign, which has so far
concentrated on "tigers and flies" - senior and junior members of government - has snared oil
chiefs, heavyweight politicians and a top People's Liberation Army (PLA) general.
The "Fox Hunt" is the latest battle in president Xi Jinping's ongoing crusade against government
corruption which, he has warned, could lead to the Communist Party's demise. China has
launched an international "fox hunt" for corrupt officials, vowing to track fugitives to the four
corners of the earth and bring them to justice. It is alleged that Chinese officials have been lining
their pockets and skipping the country since the 1980s.
China has had many successes in its anti-corruption push. More than 750 errant civil servants
were repatriated last year who had fled from China with more than 960m, according to figures
released recently.
Fox Hunt 2014 sounds like the name of a blockbuster movie - one about gangsters or spies. It is
the code name for efforts by Chinese CCDI officials to arrest suspected economic criminals in
foreign countries. Fox hunting, which originated in the 16th century, is an activity involving the
tracking, chase, and sometimes killing of a fox, traditionally a red fox. It is no more a game and
banned in all parts of the world.
After "beating the tigers" and "catching the flies" within the country under active support from
the head of the state, China's anti-corruption campaign rolled out "Fox Hunt 2014."
The "Fox Hunt" is a campaign to hunt down officials and senior management of state-owned
enterprises who have fled the country with embezzled or illegally obtained money. The majority
of the runaway officials used to work in lucrative departments such as finance, state-owned
monopoly enterprises, transportation, land management, construction, taxation, trade, and
investment.
President Xi Jinping is the hunt organiser and his master of hounds is Wang Qishan, a 66-yearold historian who runs Beijing's feared anti-corruption unit, the Central Commission for
Discipline Inspection.
Some of the countries responded very positively to China's appeal for help in its anti-corruption
drive. Australia has agreed to assist China in the extradition and seizure of assets of corrupt
officials who have fled to Australia with illicit funds running into the hundreds of millions of
dollars. The joint operation will make their first forfeiture of assets within weeks, having agreed
on a priority list of alleged Chinese economic fugitives who have taken residence in Australia identified by Beijing as one of the most popular outlets for corrupt Chinese money. Among the
suspects identified are naturalised Australian citizens and permanent residents who for years
have laundered money under the guise of being genuine investment or business migrants from
China.
Similarly, Bangladesh has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Malaysia for
exchange of information relating to money laundering between the financial intelligence units
(FIU) of the two country's central banks. The agreement will also help to bring back the money
siphoned from Bangladesh to that country. Between 2002, when Malaysia launched its 'second
home' programme, and April this year, some 25,500 people from across the world migrated to the
country. Of them, 2,874 (11 per cent) are Bangladeshis, according to the Malaysian government
website. Let us wait and see the outcome of anti-corruption drive of the Bangladesh government.