INTERPOL Asian conference calls for anti-corruption measures

13 April 2006

JAKARTA, Indonesia – INTERPOL’s 19th Asian Regional Conference ended on Thursday with calls for greater international co-operation and co-ordination to combat corruption.

Delegates also proposed that the INTERPOL General Secretariat make fighting corruption one of the organization’s priority crime areas, which could include creating an INTERPOL Anti-Corruption Academy. The suggestion will now be put forward for consideration by the Executive Committee, which next meets in May.

The recommendation was one of a series approved by more than 160 senior police officials from 35 countries at the meeting to address urgent policing issues in the Asian region.

‘INTERPOL’s unique role in policing also means we have unique responsibilities, one of which is to ensure that standards are created and upheld, especially in terms of corruption, for which there is no place either in law enforcement or society as a whole,’ said INTERPOL President Jackie Selebi.

‘I welcome the Asian region’s commitment to fighting corruption and am sure that the rest of our member countries will also support us in this important work.’

Other recommendations from the three-day conference include:

  • enhancing regional and international co-operation in fugitive investigations
  • encouraging countries which have not yet established specialised structures to fight terrorism to do so as soon as possible
  • expanding access to INTERPOL’s databases beyond the National Central Bureaus to frontline law enforcement, including border checkpoints and airports.

Delegates at the conference also called on INTERPOL’s General Secretariat to support security preparations for large-scale events in the region including the 2006 Asian Games and 2008 Olympic Games, both through the Command and Co-ordination Centre in Lyon and the deployment of INTERPOL Incident Response Teams (IRTs).

‘This conference has highlighted many important issues, not just for police in Asia, but for the global law enforcement community,’ said INTERPOL Secretary General Ronald K. Noble.

‘It is through the co-operation and co-ordination promoted at this conference that fugitives will be brought to justice, we will stop terrorists crossing borders and we will win the fight against corruption.

‘Our National Central Bureaus have already achieved significant results in tackling all forms of criminality, and with support from governments to expand access to our databases, we can ensure the information which assists our NCBs also reaches the police on the streets.’

Using I-24/7, INTERPOL’s secure global police communications system, National Central Bureaus can instantly access information from an array of databases, including Stolen and Lost Travel Documents, DNA and fingerprints, in addition to international wanted persons notices and other vital police information.