30 April 2025
Whistleblowers play a crucial role in unveiling corporate misconduct by reporting it to employers, law enforcement, or regulatory authorities. This article delves into significant legal advances concerning whistleblowers across various jurisdictions including the US, UK, EU, UAE, and Saudi Arabia. It is accompanied by a longer form article which can be accessed below.
SEC Program: Initiated in 2011, this program rewards whistleblowers with significant monetary sanctions recovery exceeding USD 1 million for original information about federal securities violations. Strong anti-retaliation measures are included.
DOJ Pilot Program: Launched in 2024, it incentivises whistleblowers with financial rewards for substantial criminal wrongdoing leading to forfeitures over USD 1 million. Focus areas include foreign bribery (non-SEC companies), financial institution crimes, US official bribery, and private insurer health care fraud.
False Claims Act (FCA): Individuals can sue on behalf of the US for fraudulent claims under civil liability provisions including triple damages. Relators receive between 15%-30% of recovered proceeds.
Current uncertainties under the Trump Administration cast doubt on the future of these programs and the constitutional challenges facing FCA provisions.
The UK lacks a unified whistleblower incentivisation program; instead, protections are offered under the Employment Rights Act (ERA) and Public Interest Disclosure Act (PIDA). These acts provide anti-retaliation measures but rely heavily on employees’ initiative against retaliatory employers.
Amid resource constraints and high-profile investigation setbacks, the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) is contemplating policy proposals for providing financial incentives to whistleblowers.
The EU Directive mandates organisations with over 50 workers to establish internal whistleblower programmes that safeguard against retaliation without offering financial rewards. Despite general implementation by member states, further improvements are needed in areas like retaliation protection.
DIFC vs ADGM Frameworks: DIFC Operating Law requires disclosure of specific conduct and shields employees from liability and retaliation when reports are made in good faith. ADGM regulations ensure anonymous reporting options along with non-retaliation protections applicable by May 2025.
Broader UAE statutory provisions offer similar protections, but fear of employer repercussions can deter effective whistleblowing practices across the region.
Saudi Arabia’s comprehensive new 2024 Law enhances protections for whistleblowers as part of broader anti-corruption initiatives. Measures include anonymity during legal proceedings and severe penalties for retaliation or breaches of confidentiality.
Financial incentives are provided for substantial disclosures leading to major recoveries overseen by Nazaha - the central body implementing protection laws through anonymous channels established online or via hotlines.
These developments underscore a global trend towards strengthening whistleblower protections while managing uncertainties posed by current administrations or newly enacted laws like those within MENA regions.
For an in-depth view on the topic, click to read a long form article via the link below. It is authored by experts Natasha Zahid, Mohammed Tartir, Ben Boorer and Norman Harrison.