The Commission Against Corruption (CCAC) said in a statement yesterday that it has invited Hong Kong’s Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) to send its staff to Macau to launch a “continuous training programme on anti-corruption work for the CCAC’s investigators”.
The four-day programme, which aims to further enhance the law enforcement capacity and skills of investigators, started yesterday and covers a raft of investigative approaches and techniques in the fight against money laundering, as well as digital forensics and intelligence systems, the statement noted.
CCAC Deputy Commissioner-cum-Anti Corruption Bureau Director Ao Ieong Seong and ICAC Deputy Commissioner and Head of Operations Yau Shu-chun attended the formal launch on the training programme.
Ao Ieong, according to the statement, expressed gratitude to the ICAC for sending its staff to provide training to the CCAC’s Anti-Corruption Bureau staff, as well as in sharing their law enforcement experience.
The statement added that Ao Ieong expects the CCAC trainees to put what they will learn to good use, in order to enhance their law enforcement capacity, safeguard justice and righteousness, and support the integrity in Macau.
This handout photo provided by the Commission Against Corruption (CCAC) yesterday shows the CCAC trainees and ICAC trainers during yesterday’s formal launch of the joint training programme involving Hong Kong’s anti-graft buster in Macau.