Luxembourg urgently needs to establish liability against legal persons for
foreign bribery and put in place sanctions that are effective, proportionate
and dissuasive, according to a report by the OECD's Working Group on Bribery.
The bill currently before Parliament, designed to introduce this responsibility
into Luxembourg law, should be amended to ensure that it meets the requirements
of the OECD Anti-bribery Convention, the Organisation has argued.
The 37-country OECD Working Group on Bribery has just completed a further review
of Luxembourg's enforcement of the Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign
Public Officials in International Business Transactions, following a special
decision taken by the Group in June 2006; previous reviews had concluded that
Luxembourg had not done enough to meet all the requirements of the Convention.
While the Working Group noted that Luxembourg has recently engaged in efforts
to implement the Convention, it expressed serious concerns that Luxembourg has not
responded to some key recommendations issued by the Working Group since 2001.
The Working Group has exceptionally decided to conduct a review of measures
taken by Luxembourg to fulfil the recommendations of the Group again one year
from now, and reserves the right to take further steps in the event of continued
failure to implement the Convention.
The main recommendations of the Working Group are that Luxembourg should:
- Introduce promptly liability of legal persons for foreign bribery. Currently,
prosecution and thus conviction of companies that engage in bribery remains
impossible because legal persons cannot be held liable for criminal offences;
- Reinforce its mechanisms for combating bribery by making it easier for
its judicial authorities to obtain information held by banking institutions
in the Grand Duchy;
- Introduce effective, dissuasive and proportionate sanctions for companies
and guarantee the jurisdiction of the Luxembourg courts over acts of bribery
committed abroad by Luxembourg companies; and
- Step up its efforts to make SMEs aware of the crime of bribing foreign
public officials, and introduce a whistleblower protection system.
Among the steps that Luxembourg has taken, the Working Group highlighted as positive the
creation of a Corruption Prevention Committee, which is expected to do much
in raising bribery awareness among the players concerned and to improve interagency
coordination. It also pointed to the introduction of anti-bribery mechanisms in agencies responsible
for export credit insurance and development cooperation.
The Group additionally welcomed the draft law on interagency and judicial cooperation,
which should enhance the capacity of the Luxembourg tax authorities to detect
bribes and to provide the judicial authorities, at all stages of criminal proceedings,
with the information needed to establish the offence of bribery.
Within one year, Luxembourg will report in writing to the Working Group on
its actions to implement the Working Group's recommendations, which will give rise to a publicly
available evaluation by the Group of Luxembourg's actions in this area.