ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Peter Eigen - Founder, Transparency International
As a director of the World Bank in Nairobi, Peter Eigen saw firsthand how devastating corruption can be. He's founder of Transparency International, an NGO that works to persuade international companies not to bribe.

Why you should listen

From the website of Transparency International comes this elegant definition: What is corruption? Corruption is the abuse of entrusted power for private gain. It hurts everyone whose life, livelihood or happiness depends on the integrity of people in a position of authority.

Peter Eigen knows this. He worked in economic development for 25 years, mainly as a World Bank manager of programs in Africa and Latin America. Among his assignments, he served as director of the regional mission for Eastern Africa from 1988 to 1991. Stunned by the depth and pervasiveness -- and sheer destructiveness -- of the corruption he encountered, he formed the group Transparency International to take on some of the main players in deals with corrupt officials: multinational corporations.

Eigen believes that the best way to root out corruption is to make it known. Thus, Transparency International works to raises awareness of corruption, and takes practical action to address it, including public hearings.

More profile about the speaker
Peter Eigen | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxBerlin

Peter Eigen: How to expose the corrupt

Filmed:
844,612 views

Some of the world's most baffling social problems, says Peter Eigen, can be traced to systematic, pervasive government corruption, hand-in-glove with global companies. In his talk, Eigen describes the thrilling counter-attack led by his organization, Transparency International.
- Founder, Transparency International
As a director of the World Bank in Nairobi, Peter Eigen saw firsthand how devastating corruption can be. He's founder of Transparency International, an NGO that works to persuade international companies not to bribe. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:15
I am going to speak about corruption,
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but I would like to juxtapose
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two different things.
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One is the large global economy,
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the large globalized economy,
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and the other one is the small, and very limited,
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capacity of our traditional governments
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and their international institutions
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to govern, to shape, this economy.
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Because there is this asymmetry,
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which creates, basically,
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failing governance.
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Failing governance in many areas:
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in the area of corruption and the area of destruction of the environment,
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in the area of exploitation of women and children,
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in the area of climate change,
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in all the areas in which we really need
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a capacity to reintroduce
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the primacy of politics
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into the economy,
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which is operating in a worldwide arena.
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And I think corruption,
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and the fight against corruption,
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and the impact of corruption,
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is probably one of the most interesting ways
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to illustrate what I mean
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with this failure of governance.
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Let me talk about my own experience.
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I used to work as the director
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of the World Bank office in Nairobi
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for East Africa.
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At that time, I noticed
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that corruption, that grand corruption,
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that systematic corruption,
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was undermining everything we were trying to do.
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And therefore, I began
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to not only try to protect
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the work of the World Bank,
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our own projects, our own programs
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against corruption,
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but in general, I thought, "We need a system
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to protect the people
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in this part of the world
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from the ravages of corruption."
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And as soon as I started this work,
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I received a memorandum from the World Bank,
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from the legal department first,
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in which they said, "You are not allowed to do this.
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You are meddling in the internal affairs of our partner countries.
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This is forbidden by the charter of the World Bank,
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so I want you to stop your doings."
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In the meantime, I was chairing
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donor meetings, for instance,
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in which the various donors,
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and many of them like to be in Nairobi --
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it is true, it is one of the
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unsafest cities of the world,
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but they like to be there because the other cities
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are even less comfortable.
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And in these donor meetings, I noticed
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that many of the worst projects --
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which were put forward
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by our clients, by the governments,
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by promoters,
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many of them representing
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suppliers from the North --
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that the worst projects
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were realized first.
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Let me give you an example:
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a huge power project,
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300 million dollars,
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to be built smack into
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one of the most vulnerable, and one of the most beautiful,
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areas of western Kenya.
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And we all noticed immediately
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that this project had no economic benefits:
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It had no clients, nobody would buy the electricity there,
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nobody was interested in irrigation projects.
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To the contrary, we knew that this project
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would destroy the environment:
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It would destroy riparian forests,
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which were the basis for
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the survival of nomadic groups,
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the Samburu and the Turkana in this area.
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So everybody knew this is a, not a useless project,
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this is an absolute damaging, a terrible project --
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not to speak about the future indebtedness of the country
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for these hundreds of millions of dollars,
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and the siphoning off
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of the scarce resources of the economy
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from much more important activities
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like schools, like hospitals and so on.
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And yet, we all rejected this project,
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none of the donors was willing
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to have their name connected with it,
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and it was the first project to be implemented.
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The good projects, which we as a donor community
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would take under our wings,
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they took years, you know,
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you had too many studies,
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and very often they didn't succeed.
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But these bad projects,
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which were absolutely damaging -- for the economy
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for many generations, for the environment,
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for thousands of families who had to be resettled --
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they were suddenly put together
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by consortia of banks,
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of supplier agencies,
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of insurance agencies --
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like in Germany, Hermes, and so on --
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and they came back very, very quickly,
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driven by an unholy alliance
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between the powerful elites
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in the countries there
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and the suppliers from the North.
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Now, these suppliers
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were our big companies.
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They were the actors of this global market,
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which I mentioned in the beginning.
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They were the Siemenses of this world,
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coming from France, from the UK, from Japan,
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from Canada, from Germany,
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and they were systematically driven
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by systematic, large-scale corruption.
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We are not talking about
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50,000 dollars here,
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or 100,000 dollars there, or one million dollars there.
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No, we are talking about 10 million, 20 million dollars
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on the Swiss bank accounts,
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on the bank accounts of Liechtenstein,
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of the president's ministers,
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the high officials in the para-statal sectors.
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This was the reality which I saw,
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and not only one project like that:
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I saw, I would say,
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over the years I worked in Africa,
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I saw hundreds of projects like this.
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And so, I became convinced
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that it is this systematic corruption
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which is perverting economic policy-making in these countries,
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which is the main reason
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for the misery, for the poverty,
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for the conflicts, for the violence,
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for the desperation
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in many of these countries.
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That we have today
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more than a billion people below the absolute poverty line,
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that we have more than a billion people
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without proper drinking water in the world,
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twice that number,
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more than two billion people
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without sanitation and so on,
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and the consequent illnesses
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of mothers and children,
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still, child mortality of more than
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10 million people every year,
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children dying before they are five years old:
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The cause of this is, to a large extent,
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grand corruption.
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Now, why did the World Bank
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not let me do this work?
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I found out afterwards,
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after I left, under a big fight, the World Bank.
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The reason was that the members of the World Bank
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thought that foreign bribery was okay,
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including Germany.
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In Germany, foreign bribery was allowed.
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It was even tax-deductible.
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No wonder that most of the most important
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international operators in Germany,
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but also in France and the UK
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and Scandinavia, everywhere, systematically bribed.
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Not all of them, but most of them.
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And this is the phenomenon
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which I call failing governance,
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because when I then came to Germany
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and started this little NGO
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here in Berlin, at the Villa Borsig,
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we were told, "You cannot stop
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our German exporters from bribing,
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because we will lose our contracts.
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We will lose to the French,
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we will lose to the Swedes, we'll lose to the Japanese."
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And therefore, there was a indeed a prisoner's dilemma,
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which made it very difficult
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for an individual company,
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an individual exporting country
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to say, "We are not going to
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continue this deadly, disastrous
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habit of large companies to bribe."
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So this is what I mean
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with a failing governance structure,
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because even the powerful government,
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which we have in Germany, comparatively,
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was not able to say,
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"We will not allow our companies to bribe abroad."
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They needed help,
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and the large companies themselves
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have this dilemma.
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Many of them didn't want to bribe.
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Many of the German companies, for instance,
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believe that they are really
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producing a high-quality product
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at a good price, so they are very competitive.
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They are not as good at bribing
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as many of their international competitors are,
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but they were not allowed
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to show their strengths,
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because the world was eaten up
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by grand corruption.
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And this is why I'm telling you this:
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Civil society rose to the occasion.
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We had this small NGO,
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Transparency International.
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They began to think of
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an escape route from this prisoner's dilemma,
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and we developed concepts
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of collective action,
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basically trying to bring various competitors
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together around the table,
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explaining to all of them
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how much it would be in their interests
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if they simultaneously would stop bribing,
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and to make a long story short,
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we managed to eventually
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get Germany to sign
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together with the other OECD countries
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and a few other exporters.
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In 1997, a convention,
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under the auspices of the OECD,
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which obliged everybody
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to change their laws
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and criminalize foreign bribery.
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(Applause)
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Well, thank you. I mean, it's interesting,
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in doing this,
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we had to sit together with the companies.
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We had here in Berlin, at the Aspen Institute on the Wannsee,
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we had sessions with about
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20 captains of industry,
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and we discussed with them
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what to do about international bribery.
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In the first session -- we had three sessions
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over the course of two years.
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And President von Weizsäcker, by the way,
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chaired one of the sessions, the first one,
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to take the fear away
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from the entrepreneurs,
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who were not used to deal
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with non-governmental organizations.
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And in the first session, they all said,
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"This is not bribery, what we are doing." This is customary there.
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This is what these other cultures demand.
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They even applaud it.
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In fact, [unclear]
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still says this today.
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And so there are still a lot of people
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who are not convinced that you have to stop bribing.
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But in the second session,
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they admitted already that they would never do this,
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what they are doing in these other countries,
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here in Germany, or in the U.K., and so on.
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Cabinet ministers would admit this.
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And in the final session, at the Aspen Institute,
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we had them all sign an open letter
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to the Kohl government, at the time,
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requesting that they
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participate in the OECD convention.
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And this is, in my opinion,
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an example of soft power,
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because we were able to convince them
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that they had to go with us.
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We had a longer-term time perspective.
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We had a broader,
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geographically much wider,
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constituency we were trying to defend.
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And that's why the law has changed.
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That's why Siemens is now in the trouble they are in
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and that's why MIN is in the trouble they are in.
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In some other countries, the OECD convention
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is not yet properly enforced.
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And, again, civil societies
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breathing down the neck of the establishment.
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In London, for instance,
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where the BAE got away
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with a huge corruption case,
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which the Serious Fraud Office tried to prosecute,
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100 million British pounds,
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every year for ten years,
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to one particular official of one particular friendly country,
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who then bought for
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44 billion pounds of military equipment.
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This case, they are not prosecuting in the UK.
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Why? Because they consider this
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as contrary to the security interest
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of the people of Great Britain.
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Civil society is pushing, civil society
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is trying to get a solution to this problem,
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also in the U.K.,
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and also in Japan, which is not properly enforcing,
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and so on.
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In Germany, we are pushing
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the ratification of the UN convention,
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which is a subsequent convention.
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We are, Germany, is not ratifying.
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Why? Because it would make it necessary
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to criminalize the corruption
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of deputies.
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In Germany, we have a system where
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you are not allowed to bribe a civil servant,
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but you are allowed to bribe a deputy.
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This is, under German law, allowed,
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and the members of our parliament don't want to change this,
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and this is why they can't sign
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the U.N. convention against foreign bribery --
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one of they very, very few countries
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which is preaching honesty and good governance everywhere in the world,
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but not able to ratify the convention,
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which we managed to get on the books
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with about 160 countries all over the world.
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I see my time is ticking.
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Let me just try to
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draw some conclusions from what has happened.
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I believe that what we managed to achieve
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in fighting corruption,
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one can also achieve
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in other areas of failing governance.
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By now, the United Nations
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is totally on our side.
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The World Bank has turned from Saulus to Paulus; under Wolfensohn,
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they became, I would say, the strongest
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anti-corruption agency in the world.
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Most of the large companies
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are now totally convinced
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that they have to put in place
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very strong policies
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against bribery and so on.
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And this is possible because civil society
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joined the companies
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and joined the government
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in the analysis of the problem,
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in the development of remedies,
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in the implementation of reforms,
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and then later, in the monitoring of reforms.
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Of course, if civil society organizations
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want to play that role,
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they have to grow into this responsibility.
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Not all civil society organizations are good.
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The Ku Klux Klan is an NGO.
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So, we must be aware
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that civil society
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has to shape up itself.
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They have to have a much more
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transparent financial governance.
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They have to have a much more participatory governance
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in many civil society organizations.
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We also need much more competence of civil society leaders.
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This is why we have set up the governance school
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and the Center for Civil Society here in Berlin,
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because we believe most of our educational
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and research institutions in Germany
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and continental Europe in general,
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do not focus enough, yet,
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on empowering civil society
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and training the leadership of civil society.
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But what I'm saying from my very practical experience:
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If civil society does it right
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and joins the other actors --
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in particular, governments,
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governments and their international institutions,
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but also large international actors,
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in particular those which have committed themselves
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to corporate social responsibility --
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then in this magical triangle
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between civil society,
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government and private sector,
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there is a tremendous chance
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for all of us to create a better world.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Peter Eigen - Founder, Transparency International
As a director of the World Bank in Nairobi, Peter Eigen saw firsthand how devastating corruption can be. He's founder of Transparency International, an NGO that works to persuade international companies not to bribe.

Why you should listen

From the website of Transparency International comes this elegant definition: What is corruption? Corruption is the abuse of entrusted power for private gain. It hurts everyone whose life, livelihood or happiness depends on the integrity of people in a position of authority.

Peter Eigen knows this. He worked in economic development for 25 years, mainly as a World Bank manager of programs in Africa and Latin America. Among his assignments, he served as director of the regional mission for Eastern Africa from 1988 to 1991. Stunned by the depth and pervasiveness -- and sheer destructiveness -- of the corruption he encountered, he formed the group Transparency International to take on some of the main players in deals with corrupt officials: multinational corporations.

Eigen believes that the best way to root out corruption is to make it known. Thus, Transparency International works to raises awareness of corruption, and takes practical action to address it, including public hearings.

More profile about the speaker
Peter Eigen | Speaker | TED.com

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