GAP Praises New MDB Whisleblower Policies
Senators Lugar & Leahy Win "Best Practices" Mandate for Banks
Dylan Blaylock - November 17, 2005 - News Wire
www.commondreams.org/news2005/1117-13.htm
WASHINGTON - November 17 - The Government Accountability Project (GAP)
today praised breakthroughs in whistleblower protection included as
part of greater accountability and transparency standards signed into
law Monday, November 14. The reforms are included in the FY06 Foreign
Operations appropriations bill for multilateral development banks
(MDBs) such as the World Bank. The new policies echo provisions of
legislation by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Dick Lugar
(R-In.). A bi-partisan team headed by Senator Patrick Leahy’s
staff championed the appropriations victory.
The legislation sets policy for U.S. Executive Directors at MDBs, whose
votes are of great importance as the largest or second-largest
stakeholder in each institution. The whistleblower provisions were an
unqualified victory for reform advocates. Mandated transparency reforms
protecting free expression and access to information include:
Protection for employees and "affected persons" to publicly bear
witness against wrongdoing.
Free speech rights for all relevant parties to challenge any misconduct
threatening a bank’s public service mission, elevating the bar
beyond institutional self-interest.
Modern, fair, legal burdens of proof to govern whether reprisal victims
win their cases.
Access to independent, external adjudicative parties or forums for
alternative dispute resolution - those bearing the power to hold those
who retaliate accountable.
Cancellation of all direct and indirect consequences of reprisal when
whistleblowers win, such as lost income, responsibilities and threats
to residency.
GAP International Program Director Melanie Beth Oliviero gave the
measure qualified praise, stating "These new policy commitments are a
signal that the United States is prepared to lead other governments to
similarly endorse protections for whistleblowers serving the public
interest. Now the challenge begins: Convincing the banks to honestly
implement this paper victory."
GAP Legal Director Tom Devine noted, "The current MDB policies are
little more than institutionalized gag orders routinely used to fire
whistleblowers. Congress has mandated state-of-the-art whistleblower
protection. If implemented, they will be a transparency revolution at
institutions where corruption has been as much a tradition as secrecy."
Other reforms include financial conflict of interest disclosures,
publication of loan terms, tighter procurement controls, debarment as
accountability for violating anti-corruption rules, and reinforcement
of internal watchdog units as well as inspection panels for those
aggrieved by the activities.
The legislated reforms reflect the recommendations by GAP and other
organizations in last year’s Ford foundation-financed studies of
MDB whistleblower policies: Challenging the Culture of Secrecy. They
also mirror the "best practices" cornerstones for whistleblower
protection approved by the Organization of American States in 2000
after it commissioned GAP’s Devine and American University Law
Professors Robert Vaughn and Keith Henderson to draft model law
approved to implement the Inter-American Convention Against Corruption.
This spring Vaughn completed a still-unreleased internal report for the
World Bank recommending an analogous overhaul for its whistleblower
program.
The five MDBs are the World Bank, African Development Bank, Asian Bank,
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and Inter-American
Bank. GAP’s International Reform program is committed to
advocating for stronger whistleblower protections at MDBs and other
international bodies. GAP has led the campaigns for passage of nearly
all U.S. national whistleblower laws, and has been relentlessly pushing
for international freedom of expression to be a cornerstone of
globalization.