Sunday, May 23, 2010

Sex, bribes in banknote deals - AAP_Tập đoàn xuống hàng chó ngựa csVN có phần


Sex, bribes in banknote deals: witnessAAP
May 24, 2010, 7:57 am

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A Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) currency firm was willing to supply prostitutes and pay bribes to win contracts, according to a federal police witness at the centre of Australia's most serious corruption investigation.

The revelation is one of many made by a key witness in the federal police inquiry into the RBA part-owned and supervised company, Securency International, which makes polymer banknotes.

The witness has told an investigation by The Age newspaper and ABC TV's Four Corners - to be aired on Monday night - that a middleman hired by Securency to win contracts from foreign governments told him that he intended to bribe a central bank governor from an Asian country.

The witness, who was a Securency employee, has given the Australian Federal Police his diary in which he recorded the middleman telling him in 2007 that the "governor would be very happy if the commission [payment] was increased".

The witness has said that one of the most senior Securency managers told him to arrange an Asian prostitute for a visiting deputy governor of a foreign central bank.

The police witness said in an interview with Four Corners that he did not act on the request although he believed other employees had arranged prostitutes.

In a 2008 diary entry, the witness recorded that a consultant employed in Asia by Australia's overseas trade agency Austrade told him that to win contracts Securency needed to hire someone to bribe officials or "to pass white envelopes for you".

Austrade confirmed the Securency employee-turned-police-witness did report the comment to an Australian ambassador in the Asian country where it was made in 2008, but said that it had never been brought specifically to Austrade's attention.

Austrade also stressed it had never endorsed bribery.

Securency is a Melbourne-based polymer banknote company half-owned and supervised by the Reserve Bank. It has employed a network of global agents to help it convince foreign central banks and governments to buy its polymer banknote technology.

A federal police taskforce is investigating Securency for allegedly bribing government officials in countries including Nigeria, Malaysia and Vietnam.

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