In 2006, the United Nations initiated the establishment of the International Anti-Corruption Bureau ("UNODC" in English) with the participation of more than 100 countries, aiming to help countries combat corruption crimes and money laundering and promote the global anti-corruption fight.
On September 15, 2006, the United Nations held a meeting and initiated the establishment of the International Anti-Corruption Bureau ("UNODC" in English), with the participation of more than 100 countries.
The International Anti-Corruption Bureau is a specialized agency under the United Nations. It is mainly responsible for coordinating the global anti-corruption fight, helping countries combat corruption crimes and money laundering, and promoting international judicial cooperation and information sharing.
The main tasks of the International Anti-Corruption Bureau include: formulating anti-corruption policies and legal frameworks, providing training and technical support, collecting and analyzing anti-corruption intelligence, investigating and tracking cross-border money laundering activities, etc.
In addition, the International Anti-Corruption Bureau also cooperates with other international organizations and the private sector to jointly promote the global anti-corruption fight.
The background for the establishment of the International Anti-Corruption Bureau is that corruption has become a serious social problem on a global scale, which not only endangers the political stability and social and economic development of various countries, but also undermines public trust and support for governments and political systems.
Therefore, the purpose of establishing the International Anti-Corruption Bureau is to promote the international anti-corruption fight, promote the global governance system, and safeguard public interests and social justice.
What parties does the International Anti-Corruption Bureau mainly cooperate with?
The International Anti-Corruption Bureau mainly cooperates with other agencies under the United Nations, government departments, international organizations and the private sector, including the United Nations Development Program, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the Anti-Money Laundering Action Working Group, etc.
In 2006, the United Nations initiated the establishment of the International Anti-Corruption Bureau to help countries combat corruption crimes and money laundering and promote the global anti-corruption fight.
The International Anti-Corruption Bureau cooperates with other international organizations and the private sector to jointly promote the global anti-corruption fight and help safeguard public interests and social justice.
Legal basis: Article 155 of the Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China and the People's Republic of China. Any state functionary who takes advantage of his position to embezzle public property shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than five years or criminal detention; if the amount is huge, the circumstances are
If the case is serious, he shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not less than five years; if the circumstances are particularly serious, he shall be sentenced to life imprisonment or death.
Anyone who commits the crime in the preceding paragraph shall also have his property confiscated or be ordered to return compensation.
If a person who is entrusted by a state agency, enterprise, institution, or people's organization to perform official duties commits the crime in the first paragraph, he shall be punished in accordance with the provisions of the first two paragraphs.