The Australian Federal Police (AFP) have closed an investigation into
suspicious payments to officials in Cambodia by the world’s largest
mining company BHP Billiton, according to a report released by the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
Although the report, released last month, does not directly name the
firm involved, the description of the case in the study closely
resembles an announcement made by Australia’s BHP in 2010 that it was
the target of a U.S. investigation reportedly concerning payments made
to the Cambodian government.
The OECD report states that instead of conducting a domestic
investigation, the firm simply referred the matter to another agency
despite identifying evidence that could have led to convictions of its
staff under Australian foreign bribery laws. The firm is referred to in
the report as “company Z.”
“In 2010, the company announced that it had disclosed to U.S.
authorities evidence that it had uncovered possible foreign bribery….
Based on material received from the U.S., the [AFP] identified
suspicious transactions that had been recorded as legitimate business
payments,” the OECD report states.
But after consulting with U.S. authorities and the Australian
Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC), Australian police decided
against an investigation because the ASIC said the company had already
“documented the suspicious payments and disclosed them to the market,”
the report says.
The OECD expressed concern in the report that the level of foreign
bribery enforcement is extremely low in Australia and recommended that
police “take sufficient steps to ensure that foreign bribery allegations
are not prematurely closed.”
The OECD report also appears to make reference to another case involving payments to government officials in Cambodia.
The second case also bears striking similarities to OZ Minerals,
another listed Australian mining company, which bought out its Cambodian
partner in 2009 for $4.6 million, though nearly $1 million of that
payment went to the relatives of senior officials inside the Ministry of
Industry, Mines and Energy, according to a company memorandum.
In that case, according to the OECD report, “the AFP declined to open
an investigation because it received information from the AFP’s
overseas network that the transaction had been undertaken with due
diligence and that all payments were made at the joint venture partner’s
request.”
A spokeswoman for BHP in Melbourne declined to say whether Australian
police had made initial inquiries regarding the payments made to
Cambodian officials.
“Following requests for information in August 2009 from the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission, the Group commenced an in-ternal
investigation and disclosed to relevant authorities evidence that it has
uncovered regarding possible violations of applicable anti-corruption
laws involving interactions with government officials,” Fiona Hadley
said in an email, adding that the investigation is still under way in
the U.S.
The AFP declined to comment on its investigation in Cambodia.
“Australian authorities continue to closely liaise with overseas
counterparts to investigate and prosecute foreign bribery cases. Any
investigations mentioned within the [OECD] report are subject to
confidentiality,” an AFP spokesperson said in an email.
The Australian Attorney-General’s Department, however, said that any
decision to halt an investigation would have been carried out by the
AFP.
“The AFP is responsible for the investigation of foreign bribery and
makes decisions about individual investigations independently of
government,” a spokesperson from the Attorney-General’s Department said.
Suspicion fell on BHP’s operation in Cambodia in 2007 when Minister
of Water Resources Lim Kim Hor told the National Assembly that Prime
Minister Hun Sen had telephoned him from Australia in 2006 to inform him
of having received a “signing bonus” in a BHP contract to explore for
bauxite in Mondolkiri province.
Mr. Kim Hor referred to the payment as “tea money,” a term which
normally describes an unofficial commission. The minister said the
commission amounted to $2.5 million.
In 2010, after Mr. Kim Hor’s “tea money” comment, BHP announced that
U.S. authorities were investigating the company. Soon after, Australian
newspapers reported that BHP had given the Securities and Exchange
Commission a batch of emails between company executives and Cambodian
government officials which appeared to show that the payments made to
the government risked breaking anti-corruption laws in the U.S. The
government has denied any wrongdoing in the matter.
William Loo, a senior legal analyst for the OECD for the Asia-Pacific
region, said that the OECD “is of the view that Australia should at
least consider conducting its own investigations systematically,
especially when foreign bribery allegations involve a company with
significant connections to Australia.”
“There have not been convictions for foreign bribery in Australia,
and one case is currently before the courts. These figures are
substantially lower than several other parties to the Anti-Bribery
Convention,” Mr. Loo said.
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