4On the definition of corruption, see also D. BAIZEAU, T. HAYES, The Arbitral Tribunal’s Duty and Power to Address Corruption Sua Sponte; A. MENAKER (ed.), International Arbitration and the Rule of Law: Contribution and Conformity, ICCA Congress Series, Vol. 19, Kluwer 2017, pp. 225 - 265 at p. 228 f.
5For instance, facilitation payments (otherwise known as ― speed or ― grease payments) to foreign public officials, which are payments made with the purpose of expediting or facilitating the provision of services or routine government action which an official is normally obliged to perform, are condemned under the UK Bribery Act 2010, though they are not specifically prohibited under the OECD Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions (“OECD Convention”), which leaves state parties to decide whether such payments are unlawful. Facilitation payments are expressly permitted within the defined limits in the United States by virtue of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act 1977 (“FCPA”). See M. HWANG S.C., K. LIM, Corruption in Arbitration – Law and Reality, Herbert Smith-SMU Asian Arbitration Lecture, 4 August 2011, Singapore, para. 4 with further references, available under https://cdn.arbitration-icca.org/s3fs-public/document/media_document/media013261720320840corruption_in_arbitration_paper_draft_248.pdf.
6Art. 15 UNCAC deals with the bribery of national public officials. Art. 16 of the same Convention defines the bribery of foreign public officials and officials of international organizations. Art. 21 of the Convention reprimands corruption in the private sector.
50See in particular the works of Transparency International which describes itself as a non-profit “Global Anti-Corruption Coalition”.
51D. BAIZEAU, T. HAYES, op. cit. at footnote 4, p. 227.