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   World Bank Group
  Resolute against Corruption 
  amid Historic Global Challenges in Fiscal Year 2022 
  WASHINGTON, October 12, 2022 — The World Bank Group today highlighted its
  efforts to advance the  
  fight against fraud and corruption in the development projects
  it finances, with the release of its Sanctions System Annual Report for fiscal year 2022. 
  The joint report of the World Bank Group’s Integrity Vice
  Presidency (INT), Office of Suspension and Debarment (OSD), and Sanctions
  Board, illustrates how in a time of increasingly complex global challenges
  and historic development support by the World Bank Group, the institution’s
  sanctions system was resolute in maintaining its anticorruption oversight of
  the institution’s development financing. 
  “While our institution continues to provide historic levels of
  support around the world, it remains critical that these funds are used in a
  transparent and accountable manner and only for their intended purposes. We
  must be continually vigilant against corruption in the projects supported by
  the Bank Group,” noted World
  Bank Group President David Malpass in the report’s foreword. “The
  offices that comprise the sanctions system work together to send a clear
  message: corruption has no place in development.” 
  INT is the independent unit within the World Bank Group that
  works to detect, deter, and prevent fraud and corruption in World Bank
  Group-financed operations and by World Bank Group staff and corporate
  vendors. OSD is the first tier of the World Bank’s adjudicative system and is
  tasked with impartially reviewing whether there is sufficient evidence that
  an entity investigated by INT has engaged in sanctionable misconduct and, if
  so, determining an appropriate sanction. The Sanctions Board is an
  independent administrative tribunal that serves as the second and final tier
  of review for contested sanctions cases.  
  Together, the offices of the sanctions system
  play a critical role in helping the World Bank Group safeguard the resources
  it deploys from the damaging impacts that fraud and corruption can have on development. 
  In fiscal year 2022, the World Bank Group
  sanctioned 35 firms and individuals, of which 32 were debarred with
  conditional release, making them ineligible to participate in project and
  operations financed by the institutions of the World Bank Group. Three firms
  were sanctioned with conditional non-debarment, leaving them eligible, as
  long as they continue to meet certain agreed-upon conditions while under
  sanction. 
  The institution also recognized 72
  cross-debarments from other multilateral development banks (MDBs), while 30
  World Bank Group debarments were eligible for recognition by other MDBs. 
  A full list of the firms and individuals
  currently debarred by the World Bank Group can be found here: www.worldbank.org/debarr. 
  Fiscal Year 2022 Summary 
  The World Bank Group’s sanction system
  continued to carry out its anticorruption mission and helped support the
  institution in bringing greater integrity, transparency, and accountability
  to the development operations supported by the World Bank Group’s financing.
  In fiscal year 2022: 
  
   - INT received 3,380 complaint submissions, opened 330
       new preliminary external investigations, and started 48 new external
       investigations, while closing 31 existing external investigations. INT
       submitted 18 sanctions cases, and 12 settlements to OSD for review. An
       additional three settlements were submitted to the IFC Evaluation
       Officer for review.
 
   - OSD reviewed 15 cases and 12 settlements, temporarily
       suspended 14 firms and six individuals, and sanctioned 11 respondents
       via uncontested determinations.
 
   - The Sanctions Board published four fully-reasoned decisions resolving
       four contested sanctions cases against six respondents. The Sanctions
       Board convened virtual hearings in one of those cases.
 
   
  Each of the sanctions related to a finding
  that the firm or individual engaged in at least one of the institution’s five
  sanctionable practices—fraud, corruption, collusion, coercion, or
  obstruction—in connection with a World Bank Group-funded project. 
  
   - The Integrity Compliance Office (ICO), which sits
       within INT and works with sanctioned firms and individuals to institute
       reforms in alignment with the World Bank Group’s Integrity Compliance Guidelines and
       to reduce the opportunities for future misconduct, engaged with 81
       sanctioned parties toward meeting their conditions for release.
 
   - In addition, the ICO determined that 22 entities had
       met their conditions for release from sanction and that two entities had
       met the conditions for the conversion of their debarments with
       conditional release to conditional non-debarments.
 
   
  The offices of the sanctions system also
  continued to share their anticorruption knowledge and insights: 
  
   - INT developed and facilitated trainings to nearly
       2,800 World Bank Group and project implementation staff, government
       officials, and private sector representatives across multiple regions
       aimed at building local capacity to identify, manage, and mitigate
       integrity risks in development operations.
 
   - OSD led the organization of a two-day symposium on
       Supranational Responses to Corruption in Vienna, Austria, addressing
       current and prospective anticorruption efforts at the supranational
       level.
 
   - OSD organized multiple events regarding the Global Suspension & Debarment Directory,
       which captures data and information on the exclusion systems of 23
       different countries and institutions.
 
   - The Sanctions Board Secretariat and OSD jointly
       organized and hosted the second MDB workshop among first-tier officers
       and appellate body secretariats to discuss substantive sanctions issues
       and other matters of common interest across the major development
       institutions.
 
   - The Sanctions Board Secretariat authored timely
       thought pieces on the topics of expedited reviews and provisional relief in
       Sanctions Board processes and the fair and appropriate imposition of debarments.
  
  Contacts: 
  
  
  News Release 
  2023/017/INT 
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