Windows Customer Support

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Corporate Integrity: Two Oxford University Press Africa Subsidiaries Oust from World Bank Contracts

Posted on 13:01 by Unknown



http://www.ventures-africa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/oxford-university-press.jpg
Two wholly-owned subsidiaries of Oxford University Press (OUP), Oxford University Press East Africa Limited (OUPEA) and Oxford University Press Tanzania Limited (OUPT), have been blacklisted from participating in World Bank projects and other agency projects which have an agreement with the World Bank like the African Development Bank.
In their place, Oxford’s archrivals Kenya Literature Bureau (KLB), Longhorn Kenya and state owned Jomo Kenyatta Foundation (JKF) are expected to be the major beneficiaries of the three-year ban.
According to the World Bank, the Kenyan and Tanzanian subsidiaries were blacklisted for irregular payments to government officials for two contracts to supply text books under programmes funded by the Bretton Woods institution.
Oxford East Africa was penalised and delisted by the World Bank Integrity Vice Presidency (INT)from the World Bank’s multi-billion shilling project for three years after it was linked in a bribery scandal with top government officials. The publishing house parent company, Oxford University Press (OUP), was billed Sh292 million as part of the settlement.
Oxford’s debarment comes one year after donors pulled out of the $80 million (Sh6.7 billion) Kenya Education Sector Support Programme (KESSP) citing rampant fraud involving senior officials at the Ministry of Education.
The bribery scandal investigation that culminated in a penalties and sanctions started in May last year and closed early this year after establishing that the subsidiaries bribed government officials directly and through agents to win tenders and publishing contracts for textbooks. Investigators found that Oxford East Africa was involved in widespread bribery that spanned five countries including Burundi, Malawi, Rwanda, Sudan and Uganda.
 “This debarment is testimony to the bank’s continued commitment to protecting the integrity of its projects,” said Leonard McCarthy, the World Bank Integrity vice-president.
“OUP’s acknowledgment of misconduct and the thoroughness of its investigation is evidence of how companies can address issues of fraud and corruption and change their corporate practices to foster integrity in the development business,” he added.
The World Bank Integrity Vice Presidency (INT) is responsible for preventing, deterring and investigating allegations of fraud, collusion and corruption in World Bank projects, capitalizing on the experience of a multilingual and highly specialized team of investigators and forensic accountants.
The Oxford University Press is to pay the World Bank $500,000 (Sh42 million) for flouting agreed procurement rules and additional £1.9 million (Sh250 million) to the UK’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) for the same offences.
Oxford University Press voluntarily reported the bribery scandal to the World Bank and SFO on suspicion of the underhand dealings at its regional subsidiaries.
“We do not tolerate such behaviour,” said Nigel Portwood, Oxford’s chief executive adding that the company was committed to maintaining the highest ethical standards.
Oxford’s debarment follows a similar one on its rival Macmillan which was banned from bidding for world-bank funded contract till 2014 for bribery linked to an education project in Sudan. Macmillan was asked to pay Sh1.5 billion penalty to SFO after investigations revealed that it had bribed government officials in pursuit of public and World Bank-funded contracts in Africa.
In July last year, Macmillan paid a Sh1.5 billion penalty to SFO after investigations revealed that it had bribed government officials in pursuit of public and World Bank-funded contracts in Africa. The publishing house was found to irregularly won tenders for the supply of text books to public schools in Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia between 2002 and 2009. The publisher remains banned from bidding for World Bank–funded contracts up to mid-2014.
After the scandal, Macmillan sold its Kenyan and Ugandan subsidiaries to veteran publisher David Muita for Sh300 million.
Since 1970, foreign publishers like Thomas Nelson, Heinemann, and Longman have exited the Kenyan publishing market thereby creating more room for local publishers.
Kenya has about 100 publishing house, a far cry from the 6  it had at independence

.To read a copy of the release issued by the Apex financial Bank, World Bank, Please click on this link: http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/2012/07/03/world-bank-sanctions-oxford-university-press-corrupt-practices-impacting-education-projects-east-africa




Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Tanzania Farmers Gets More Revenue As Got Switches To Green Economy
    Investors from various parts of the country are racing to strike deals with farmers in Kilolo District, Iringa Region in partnerships set to...
  • South Africa Welcomes Pakistani Investment - Ventures Africa
    South Africa Welcomes Pakistani Investment - Ventures Africa
  • Pick n Pay Wants Skipjack Tuna With "Gold Standard"
    The global demand for MSC sustainable skipjack tuna has now also reached Africa. Today South Africa’s largest retailer – Pick n Pay – announ...
  • Fanisi Capital Invest in Kenyan Pharmacy Chain
    Fanisi Capital, managers of theFanisi Venture Capital Fund, a USD50m fund investing in the East African region, has announced its acquisitio...
  • Kenya Leads In Africa Mobile Banking
    A report released by global market research company, TNS, has revealed that east African nation, Kenya is ahead of other African nation coun...
  • New York Film Maker Documents Oil Rich Niger Delta Intrigues
    Andrew Berends, a  New York Filmmaker,  has released a preview of the intrigues going on in the Nigeria Niger Delta domain. The film in view...
  • Fastjet To Launch First International Route On September 27
    Fastjet is launching its first international route, between Tanzania and South Africa, on September 27. The African low-cost airline today a...
  • Intertek Expands Services With New Oil Condition Monitoring Laboratory In Southern Africa
    Leading quality solutions provider to industries worldwide, Intertek, has announced the opening of a state-of-the-art lubricant and oil cond...
  • World Bank President Sets Goal To Eliminate Extreme Poverty By 2030
      The World Bank Group President, Jim Yong Kim, has called for ambitious new goals to help end extreme poverty by 2030. In a speech at Georg...
  • “Nike Davies Okundaye: Building A Family Enterprise” Wins 2012 Emerald And Association Of African Business Schools (AABS) Case Study Competition
      VENTURES  AFRICA - Lagos Business School faculty member and Entrepreneurship lecturer, Henrietta Onwuegbuzie, has won the 2012 Emerald ...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (235)
    • ►  November (5)
    • ►  October (2)
    • ►  September (12)
    • ►  August (39)
    • ►  July (18)
    • ►  June (8)
    • ►  May (24)
    • ►  April (56)
    • ►  March (1)
    • ►  February (34)
    • ►  January (36)
  • ▼  2012 (201)
    • ►  December (18)
    • ►  November (19)
    • ►  October (11)
    • ►  September (15)
    • ►  August (11)
    • ▼  July (28)
      • Africa Financial Stakeholder Will Meet With UNIDO ...
      • Cambria Africa’s Chairman, Director Increase Stake...
      • CNN: Land grab- the scramble for africa
      • Nigeria FG Plans To Reduce Minimum Age of 15 Years
      • Ghana’s "asomdweehene", John Fiifi Evans Atta Mil...
      • Nigeria’s AdHoc Committee Wants Ibru and Akingbola...
      • AWES Canvass Capital Deployment For African Women ...
      • Ecobank Transnational Wins Euromoney “Best Bank In...
      • Philips Reaffirms Investment Commitment To Africa
      • Africa Union Gets First Woman Leader
      • China Investment Ties To Africa: "Africa is not an...
      • ECOWAS, NEPAD Signs €1 million Business Incubator ...
      • Tunis Report: African Governments Must Invest In H...
      • TInfineon Technologies Supply Smart Card For SASSA...
      • Doing Business In South Africa Through the Somali ...
      • Turbomeca Africa Has Grown Bigger in 10 Years
      • Access Bank Takes Social responsibility campaign t...
      • Kenya’s Consolidated Bank To Be Privately Owned In...
      • Fluor Begins Sasol’s Tar Separator Project
      • Kenya Becomes Second Sub-saharan African Country T...
      • Mwana Africa’s Increase In Gold Production To Rest...
      • What Consequence Will Ghana's GIPC Law Have On Her...
      • Diageo Announces Winners of 2012 Business reportin...
      • Corporate Integrity: Two Oxford University Press A...
      • Meridian Tragic Love Story Competition Winner Gets...
      • JSE Improves Trading Speed
      • Nigeria’s Foreign Reserves Continue Decline
      • Kaspersky To Expand AFfrica MArket Frontier
    • ►  June (23)
    • ►  May (38)
    • ►  April (33)
    • ►  March (1)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (3)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile