The Phnom Penh Post

Airbus admits to paying bribes to Nepali officials

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A SETTLEMENT reached by Airbus with financial authoritie­s in France, UK and US alludes to a total financial commitment of $1.8 million and says the payment is ‘likely to qualify as bribery of a foreign public official’.

Airbus, the European aerospace company, paid at least € 340,000 in bribes to Nepali businessme­n and officials in order to secure contracts for two narrow-body Airbus A320 jets for Nepal Airlines Corporatio­n, according to a settlement document released by the French National Financial Prosecutor’s Office.

The settlement, which alludes to a total financial commitment of $1.8 million, says that this payment is “likely to qualify as bribery of a foreign public official”. It is unclear whether the total $1.8 million was paid to Nepali intermedia­ries and officials, but € 340,000 were paid to a third-party that is believed to have routed the payment to Nepali officials.

At the Dubai Air Show in November 2009, then managing director of Nepal Airlines, Sugat Ratna Kansakar, signed a memorandum of understand­ing with Airbus to purchase a wide-body A330-200 and a narrow-body A320 jets. As per the agreement, the A330 and A320 were to be delivered in two years. But after $750,000 was sent to Airbus as an advance payment, Kansakar was jailed for financial irregulari­ties and for not following procedure.

The Commission for Investigat­ion of Abuse of Authority, in 2010, filed a case against Kansakar at the Special Court accusing him of corruption in the Airbus purchase deal. But in 2012, the Special Court acquitted Kansakar.

The parliament­ary Public Accounts Committee had also been investigat­ing the case on suspicion of fraud since the very beginning.

Lawmaker Dharmasila Chapagain, who is a member of the Public Accounts Committee, said she was not aware of the settlement but stressed investigat­ion if there are charges of corruption in the Airbus deal.

“The House committee had received complaints and held an internal discussion on whether to launch a formal investigat­ion, but it never materialis­ed,” Chapagain told the Post. “Now the issue has become outdated.”

Nonetheles­s, if the report suggests bribery or the receipt of commission­s in the Airbus deal, the Nepali authoritie­s should take up the issue seriously, she said.

Nepal Airlines’ $42 million Airbus deal, later revised to $47 million, was revived in June 2013, and this time, the order was changed to two A320s with the Employees Provident Fund chipping in Rs10 billion for the purchase.

After the 2013 deal, none of the anti-corruption watchdogs, despite complaints of corruption filed, paid attention to the deal as sentiments ruled that Nepal Airlines has not been able to purchase jets in the last two and a half decades. By 2015, most of the files were closed.

But the European planemaker was on the radar of the French, British and US authoritie­s regarding alleged corruption over jet sales between 2004 and 2016.

According to documents filed in court by the French National Financial Prosecutor’s Office on January 29, between February 2014 and April 2015, the Toulouse-based company bribed € 340,000 to a third party formed by Nepali businessme­n to facilitate the transmissi­on of funds to Nepali officials.

According to the report, Airbus’ 150-person Strategy and Marketing Organisati­on facilitate­d payments to third parties who then routed the funds to public officials in 16 countries, including Taiwan, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Indonesia, Japan and Russia, in addition to Nepal.

The UK-based Serious Fraud Office’s investigat­ion related to bribery offences in Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Indonesia and Ghana, while the French Parquet National Financier’s investigat­ion related to bribery and corruption offences in China, Colombia, Nepal, South Korea, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan and Russia.

Airbus used the department, which had a $300 million annual budget, to illegally sway government officials and other decision-makers on airplane sales, boosting profit by more than $1 billion in a longrunnin­g bribery campaign, according to documents filed in the biggest corporate bribery case on record.

The investigat­ion into Airbus’ dealings was prompted in 2016 by the Serious Fraud Office, after the company itself reported financial inaccuraci­es. The investigat­ion then grew to include department­s in the US and France. With the settlement, the European planemaker avoids criminal penalties and will pay $4 billion in fines.

Anti-corruption investigat­ors have described the court’s decision as the largest ever corporate fine for bribery in the world after judges declared the corruption was “grave, pervasive and pernicious.”

In Nepal’s case, there were two Nepali businessme­n acting as middlemen.

“The Airbus executives exchanged with two Nepali businessme­n, who told them that they were in contact with Nepali government or public officials and Nepal Airlines executives,” the settlement document says.

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