Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, good afternoon.
I'm not a lawyer. My disclaimer, however, is the same, and I'm not even Canadian, so I'm certainly no specialist on the Canadian criminal law. I speak to you from the perspective of a not-for-profit organization based in Switzerland but working pretty much around the world with developing or transitional countries as well as financial centres in efforts to recover stolen assets through the hands-on law enforcement work we do with our partner countries, as well as at the Global Policy Forum, where we try to promote the issue.
This is really my perspective. I understand you're looking at two specific pieces of legislation, but I have been asked to give you a bit more of a broader perspective on asset recovery. I'm very pleased that I can speak to you today. It is nice to see that your committee, and I imagine the House of Commons, is interested in the topic of corruption and asset recovery. For me, it is still very important, and I think Gerry and I speak the same language in that we realize that it's not just the responsibility of certain countries. It is very much a product of globalization, as well as a threat to globalization, so it is very much an issue we should be concerned about and work together on globally.
I'd like to speak about two elements in my opening statement. First I'll give you a message that you might want to use or not in talking to your colleagues in Parliament and government about why returning stolen assets is important and why Canada should care. Then I'll say a few words about what I think Canadian lawmakers and politicians should do to improve Canada's track record in asset recovery and to make a more active contribution to the global efforts.
First of all, why is it important? You may or may not have heard of the estimates that between $20 billion U.S. and $40 billion U.S. is stolen every year from developing countries through corruption. If you consider the broader term of illicit financial flows, there are estimates that $1.1 trillion U.S. in illicit assets flows out of developing countries every year. These are mind-boggling figures that should alert everyone to the seriousness of this issue.
The most obvious reason that asset recovery is important is that these monies should not be stolen and taken out of developing countries. Instead, they should be invested for the purpose of development in these countries.
I would, however, like to point out that this objective in itself should not be overestimated at this point. Gerry said we're not very successful globally at this point in recovering assets in huge sums. Rather, asset recovery, in my view, has an importance because it gets across the message that impunity for corruption, even for those powerful and rich, is no longer accepted. We take, in a sense, a very preventive approach to asset recovery, because by taking away the stolen assets from criminals, we succeed in taking away the incentives for these crimes. If we are more systematic with asset recovery, we will also have a preventive and not just a law enforcement effort. Because the whole chain of law enforcement and the judicial system is involved in asset recovery efforts, we also succeed in strengthening the rule of law, particularly in developing countries, thereby contributing to global development and stability. I think this is really important to understand. We're not just talking about specific cases; we're talking globally about a much more systemic impact when we talk about asset recovery.
If you look at why Canada should care, my personal view is that if the assets flow out of developing countries, they have to flow into some other country, and these are typically well-developed financial centres like Canada and Switzerland—my own country—as well as the U.K. and others. As a consequence, asset recovery, in my view, is very much is a shared responsibility between developing countries and financial centres. We can always blame the poor developing nations for having bad governance, having a lack of control over corruption; our financial centres, however, and the banks in our financial centres, contribute just as actively to these horrendous cases of money laundering and corruption as the badly governed regimes, so I think it is really the responsibility of every country with a significant financial centre to contribute to global asset recovery.
I'd also like to point to one last issue, and that is very much something that has been coming out in the last couple of years.
Corruption—and asset recovery really is just one measure against corruption—significantly is seen to lead to political instability and undermines economic development. These are direct threats to security that don't stop at borders. They do lead to immigration issues. They lead to terrorism. They have negative consequences on global trade. Again, when we talk about asset recovery, I would just like us all to realize we're talking about something much broader, something that affects many interests and issues at the core of Canadian foreign policy and domestic policy interests. This is the global context.
Now I have just a few words about what I believe a country like Canada—again, I'm not a Canadian and I'm not a Canada expert—should do.
On the preventive side—which, of course, I think should always be our preferred way of operating—it is absolutely essential that Canada fully implement and especially enforce a very strict anti-money-laundering regime.
In this regard, your committee should look at what has come out in the September 20, 2016, report of the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering. The report finds that Canada has a relatively adequate legal framework, but that there is one particular significant loophole, which I recommend you look at. It is that the money-laundering regime in Canada excludes in many respects legal counsels and legal firms. We all know that in large corruption deals legal counsel, legal firms, play a very important role as intermediaries.
What is also very significant in the asset recovery context is that the report also finds quite serious shortcomings in relation to investigating and prosecuting financial crime, especially money laundering and corruption. Canada does not have the level of investigative prosecutorial activity in relation to financial crime that it should have when you compare this activity to the significance of Canada as a financial centre.
I absolutely join Gerry—and I don't have to say more than that, really—in encouraging Canada to set up beneficial ownership registries that are publicly accessible. This also is a preventive measure. It is also, however, an important measure to strengthen law enforcement activity and thereby asset recovery.
Canada has made significant commitments in the context of the G20, in the context of the Cameron anti-corruption summit in May this year, and it will be great to see Canada follow through with these efforts.
I believe something that is very positive in the Canadian context and globally, comparatively speaking, is the fact that you have a form of administrative freeze. I believe this is in the FACFOA law, which is really considered internationally good practice. Together with Switzerland and the European Union, Canada is one of the few countries that provides an opportunity in law for administrative freezes. We have seen in the context of some of the Arab Spring cases and in the Ukrainian cases that I'm very personally involved in that this has meant Canada was able to act more quickly than other jurisdictions, and I encourage you to maintain and ideally to strengthen this provision and follow-up activity.
I'm jumping a little bit ahead here. I think that a country like Canada, which has significant capacity to investigate complex international financial crime, should help international efforts by itself more proactively investigating financial crime and corruption cases. That is one thing that should be encouraged through legislation or policy.
Oftentimes I see that investigators and prosecutors in countries like Canada are not very proactive. I understand why. These cases are extremely complicated, very slow, and success rates are very low. On top of that, you're supposed to co-operate with law enforcement agencies in other countries and developing countries, which are oftentimes much less efficient, and potentially with judicial systems that are very corrupt themselves.
There is not a huge incentive for law enforcement agencies in many countries, and I believe in Canada too, to actually follow through with what seems to be a government policy that anti-corruption governance is important. I emphasize that we need to find a way—you as lawmakers, as politicians—to translate these government commitments down to the actual enforcement level much more proactively, giving this tone from the top and setting the scene for Canada to be one of the leaders in this domain.
I would like to make two more points in relation to asset recovery, the first one more technical and the other more policy-oriented.
The first point relates to the fact that today we agree internationally that proceeds of corruption, assets that have been stolen from the state, do need to be returned to the country of origin that they have been stolen from. That is codified in an international treaty, the UN Convention against Corruption. What is more debated is whether proceeds of other forms of corruption—in particular, foreign bribery—should also be subject to potential repatriation or asset recovery.
As an example, a Canadian company—a fictitious case, of course—is found guilty of bribing a minister in another state to obtain a construction contract. The company in Canada is made to pay a fine to pay back the profits it made out of this case. These assets will stay in Canada at this point, and I'm not saying Canada is any different; other countries deal with it the same way.
However, the damage that was created by the bribery of this company is not so much in Canada; it's actually in the country where they have bribed someone and obtained a construction contract under dubious circumstances.
I strongly encourage Canadian lawmakers and politicians, as I do with other countries around the world—this is very much being debated at the moment—to consider recovering and returning or giving some of these assets that the companies have acquired through bribery in another jurisdiction to the victim states. That's one of the points.
My last point is one that I'm particularly passionate about. Anti-corruption and asset recovery oftentimes are seen as responsibilities of the judicial system, of law enforcement agencies, and in your case, of your development agency, because you do contribute significant amounts of money to governance and corruption programs. If, however, anti-corruption and asset recovery isn't understood as a whole-of-government agenda in the Canadian context, it can only be effective to a certain point, because additionally it will potentially hurt foreign trade objectives, foreign policy objectives, etc.
I see that over and over again. I really encourage you to be consistent and coherent in the implementation of an anti-corruption agenda as a whole-of-government approach, rather than just outsourcing it to justice and development.
I'm happy, obviously, to take any questions. I tried to give a bit of context here about the global agenda, and I hope that was, in some form or another, useful.
Thank you.