Tuesday, May 17, 2011

India ratifies U.N. Convention Against Corruption-12/5/11

India ratifies U.N. Convention Against Corruption

PTI

India on Thursday ratified United Nations Convention Against Corruption which will help it deal with the problem of black-money and corruption through legislative and administrative measures.

The Convention, ratified six years after it was signed by India, will help the government to seize illicit money and assets, Indian government officials said.

“India has completed the process of ratification of U.N. Convention Against Corruption,” an official said.

According to the U.N. Convention, each member country shall “consider adopting appropriate legislative and administrative measures, consistent with the objectives of this Convention and in accordance with the fundamental principles of its domestic law, to prescribe criteria concerning candidature for and election to public office.”

It also prescribes disciplinary or other measures against public officials who violate the codes or standards established in accordance with this article.

“The ratification of the Convention is reaffirmation of our government’s commitment to fight corruption and to undertake vigorously administrative and legal reforms to enable our law enforcement agencies to recover illicit assets stolen by corrupt practices,” the official said.

The completion of the ratification process has been under active consideration of the Indian government since September last year, the official said.

A Group of Ministers has been overseeing the ratification process.

Before ratifying the UN Convention, government was required to make changes in domestic laws to have more transparency in funding election campaigns and political parties among other crucial legislative steps to bring it at par with the international instrument.

The Convention has already been inked by 140 countries.

In the backdrop of agitation by Anna Hazare-led civil society activists, questions had been raised recently on why India was not ratifying the convention even six years after signing it.

No comments: