Английская Википедия:Foreign Illicit Assets Act

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The Foreign Illicit Assets Act (FIAA) (Шаблон:Lang-de, Шаблон:Lang-fr, Шаблон:Lang-it), is a Swiss federal law that provides for the freezing, confiscation and restitution of assets of foreign politically exposed persons (e.g., heads of state, senior politicians, close associates) that have been acquired through corruption or other criminal means, and which have been deposited in Swiss banks.[1]

It was adopted on 18 December 2015 by the Federal Assembly and came into force on 1 July 2016. It replaces the Restitution of Illicit Assets Act (Шаблон:Lang-de, Шаблон:Lang-fr, Шаблон:Lang-it) from 2010.[2]

Switzerland was first confronted with the issue of the return of illicit assets in 1986, during the fall of the Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos, where it froze USD 685 million of assets and restituted them to the Philippines. However, until the law of 2010, these measures were taken on an ad hoc basis by relying on the provisions of the Swiss constitution, lacking a formal legal basis.[3]

The FIAA is administered by the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs.

Key provisions

Conditions for freezing and confiscation

Under the law, assets can only be frozen if the following four conditions are met (art 3. para. 2):

  1. the government of the country of origin has lost power or is about to lose power;
  2. the level of corruption in the country of origin is notoriously high;
  3. the assets were likely acquired through corruption, criminal mismanagement or other felonies;
  4. the safeguarding of Switzerland's interests requires the freezing of the assets.

Assets can also be frozen for purpose of confiscation if three conditions are met (art. 4 para. 2):

  1. the assets are subject to a provisional seizure order in criminal matters initiated at the request of the country of origin
  2. the country of origin is unable to meet the requirements for mutual legal assistance due to the failure of state structures
  3. the safeguarding of Switzerland's interests requires the freezing of the assets.

Assets can be frozen for a maximum of 10 years (art. 6).

Restitution

The assets can be restituted to the country of origin for the purposes of improving the living conditions of the inhabitants, or to strengthen the rule of law in the country of origin therefore contribute to the fight against impunity (art. 17).[4]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

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