http://blogs.wsj.com/corruption-currents/2012/01/26/military-owned-businesses-pose-unique-corruption-risks/
Commentary and news about money laundering, bribery, terrorism finance and 
sanctions. 
January 26, 2012, 6:31 PM
Military-Owned Businesses Pose Unique Corruption Risks
  a.. Businesses owned by militaries around the world pose unique corruption 
risks to the sectors in which they operate, a new report found.
   
  Bay Ismoyo/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images 
  Indonesian Defense Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro holds a PT Pindad PM2 assault 
rifle during an exhibition at the military headquarters in Jakarta on Jan. 18, 
2012.The report, released Thursday by Transparency International’s U.K. Defence 
and Security Programme, looks at how military-owned businesses are structured, 
what the inherent corruption risks are for these firms, and why and how the 
countries have made reforms to their military-owned companies.

“Once the military begins to engage in economic activities, it is often 
difficult to end such practices. In most situations, corruption becomes rampant 
and a major problem which (sic) harms the state and the national economy as 
well,” the report said.

Introducing a profit motive into the military increases the chance for 
distraction, the report said. Looking at case studies in China, Indonesia, 
Turkey and Pakistan, the report found that distraction often leads to outright 
graft, and in the more extreme cases that manifests itself in the form of 
embezzlement of state funds, tax fraud and even brutal coercive practices on 
workers.

One case study examined in the report showed the challenges countries face when 
trying to reform firms owned or controlled by militaries. In Indonesia, 
Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. disclosed that it paid millions to the 
Indonesian Armed Forces for security services.

Since 2003, the company has avoided making payments directly to individuals in 
the military, instead making them to headquarters. However, the story has still 
remained in the news: The United Steelworkers sent a letter in November 2011 to 
the U.S. Justice Department calling for an investigation into violations of 
U.S. foreign bribery law over the payments.

At the time, the company said it reports all the financial contributions it 
makes to governments.

Indonesia, meanwhile, passed several laws in 2004 officially requiring the 
government to shut down or take over businesses owned by the military by 
October 2009, but the report said that effort has only been “partially 
successful.”

The reasons for a lack of success? The laws were unclear and didn’t explicitly 
require the military to surrender its businesses. Moreover, the military isn’t 
exactly volunteering to hand over the companies, and the oversight team 
supposedly in charge of the effort didn’t have the power to force it to happen.

“Despite the good intentions of the government’s reform agenda, it has failed 
to see it through. Nonetheless, they have managed to eliminate a vast 
proportion of the military’s commercial enterprises,” the report said of 
Indonesia’s efforts.

Read the report below:

TI UKDSPMilitaryownedbusinesses


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