(August 16, 2004) Richard Bentley, the 18th-century English scholar, once observed that "no man was ever written out of reputation but by himself." It is so, too, with corporations. A striking demonstration of this is Acres International.
Other News Sources
World Bank approves reform of extractive industries in Nigeria, others
(August 16, 2004) The Board of the World Bank Group has called for reforms of the Extractive Industries (mining, oil and gas) in Nigeria and other developing countries. The World Bank has endorsed the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative.
The Senate and corruption
(August 15, 2004) After two years, 130 countries including the Philippines completed the negotiation for a landmark United Nations Convention Against Corruption.
Review of the Fund’s strategy on overdue financial obligations
(August 13, 2004) In a review of countries in protracted arrears to the IMF, the Fund said emergency post-conflict funding for Iraq would be approved once it had paid off an $80 million debt to the IMF.
Under eye of U.N., billions for Hussein in oil-for-food plan
(August 13, 2004) Toward the end of 2000, when Saddam Hussein’s skimming from the oil-for-food program for Iraq kicked into high gear, reports spread quickly to the program’s supervisors at the United Nations.
Report calls for independent anti-corruption authority
(August 12, 2004) To curb corruption, public administration reform must include the strengthening of parliamentary oversight and accounting bodies like the Auditor-General’s office, and new laws.
Look beyond bias to explain investment dearth
(August 12, 2004) Who benefits from weak and corrupt governments? Companies that require cheap production and every opportunity to circumvent statutory obligations.
Corruption Choking Growth – World Bank
(August 12, 2004) Corruption, coupled with non-transparent regulations, red tape and the lack of infrastructure, is choking economic growth in Cambodia according to a damning World Bank report released Thursday.
Freed migrant leader He Kechang still fighting for justice
(August 11, 2004) He Kechang, jailed for three years for appealing to top Chinese leaders about corruption in the Three Gorges resettlement operation, has been released and is still struggling on behalf of people uprooted by the dam.
World Bank slams Cambodian investments
(August 11, 2004) Rampant corruption has paralyzed private businesses and is hampering economic growth in Cambodia, the World Bank said Thursday in a damning report about the country’s bribe-ridden investment climate.
Iraq: UN panel says oil-for-food probe to take much longer than expected
(August 10, 2004) The head of an independent panel investigating corruption in the United Nations’ "oil-for-food" program for Iraq says it may take another year to produce its main findings.
The Lesotho Highlands Water Project: bribery on a massive scale
(August 8, 2004) Many of the legal aspects of corruption have now been thoroughly and recently tested in the Lesotho courts, challenging the ways in which corruption is detected and punished in different parts of the world.
The World Bank gives graft another go in 2008
(August 7, 2004) Evidence of corruption in Bank-funded projects should raise red flags instead of more greenbacks but a year in to his tenure as World Bank president, Robert Zoellick has yet to put the brakes on a single loan, a recent Wall Street Journal article notes.
Ottawa lends Delta money for Bombardier jets
(August 7, 2004) Subsidiary of troubled U.S. airline to use federal funds to buy regional jets.
Don’t get bogged down in dam ‘details,’ Lu Youmei urges
(August 6, 2004) A commentator who takes issue with views expressed by the former manager of the Three Gorges Corp. praises environmental groups opposed to big dams for their ‘respectful, constructive and effective’ campaigns.


