|
Budapest, Hungary. November 4, 2008.
In an international breakthrough for whistleblower protections,
the Prime Minister of Hungary has proposed anti-corruption legislation
which includes whistleblower protections modeled on the United States
False Claims Act.
The proposal came after Her Excellency April Foley,
the U.S. Ambassador to Hungary, invited Stephen Kohn to meet with
leading Hungarian leaders in order to explain educate these officials
on the success of the False Claims Act in exposing and rooting out
corruption in public contracting. The following articles appeared in the Hungarian Press: MTI Daily Bulletin, Népszabadság Online and hvg.hu.
In private meetings with the U.S. Ambassador and the Minister of
Justice and the Minister of the Economy, Kohn explained how the U.S.
government was able to recover billions of dollars every year through
the False Claims Act's whistleblower provision. The U.S. Embassy also
arranged for Kohn to meet with the editors of the leading Hungarian
newspapers, to discuss the the role of the press in defending
whistleblowers and he also meet with Members of Parliament from the
four major political parties in Hungary to outline a legislative plan
for whistleblower protections. The highlight of the trip was an
opportunity for Kohn to address the Hungarian government's
anti-corruption committee. This committee is chaired personally by the
Minister of Justice, and its members include representatives from every
major ministry involved in the anti-corruption efforts, the Prime
Minister's office and representatives of significant NGOs, including
Transparancy International and the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union.
As a direct result of the efforts of U.S. Ambassador April Foley
and Kohn's visit, the Prime Minister of Hungary announced that his
broad anti-corruption legislative package would include whistleblower
protections similar to those proposed by Kohn to the Anti-Corruption
Committee.
|