OECD calls off antibribery mission to Hungary in unprecedented move
Al Jazeera
Paris-based organisation cites government’s failure to act on its previous recommendations, some more than a decade old.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has cancelled a mission to Hungary to discuss antibribery measures, it says, citing the government’s failure to act on its previous recommendations.
There was no immediate response from the Hungarian government on Tuesday after what the OECD said in a statement was the first time such a high-level mission has been called off.
Scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday, the meeting was scrapped over what the OECD described as the inability of Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s government to secure sufficient representation of ministers and senior officials for the event.
“The high-level mission decided on by the Working Group on Bribery in December 2023 was meant to address the Government of Hungary’s failure to make tangible progress in addressing long-standing recommendations,” the OECD said in a statement on Tuesday.
These related to what the OECD described as the Hungarian government’s lack of understanding of foreign bribery risk exposure, the absence of a strategy for detecting and investigating foreign bribery cases and the lack of legal clarity in relation to corporate responsibility for foreign bribery.