Business Standard

Murthy on vendetta campaign: Seshasayee

Former Infy chairman says charges against him are ‘patently offensive’

- AYAN PRAMANIK

Former Infosys chairman R Seshasayee broke his silence on Friday over accusation­s of governance lapses, appealing to co-founder N R Narayana Murthy to stop making slanderous accusation­s. Seshasayee and two former boardmembe­rs— Jeffrey Lehman and John Etchemendy — resigned last week after co-founder Nandan Nilekani came back as chairman.

His return was forced after investors discarded the Infosys stock, following the public spat between Murthy and the board soon after former chief executive officer (CEO) Vishal Sikka resigned.

On Tuesday, Murthy spoke to analysts and he quoted an anonymous whistleblo­wer accusing Seshasayee as a liar. He also said he raised his voice against failing governance at Infosys and hoped that Nilekani would set right the lapses.

“Since my resignatio­n from the board of Infosys, I have kept away from making any public statements, despite provocatio­ns, since I sincerely want the company to move forward, and not be bogged down with the issues of the past,” Seshasayee said. “Mr Murthy’s statement to the investors misleading­ly attributes words to me that are taken completely out of context, making it appear that I was not stating the truth. I wish to categorica­lly state that I have always been candid and truthful in allmy statements concerning Infosys,” Seshasayee said in a joint statement with Lehman and Etchemendy.

Seshasayee said that Murthy had invited him to be chairman of Infosys and as recently as February this year, the co-founder had called him “a man of high integrity”.

“I am, therefore, at a loss to understand the motivation­s for this persistent vendetta against me,” he said. “To quote an anonymous whistleblo­wer letter that alleged many things, which have subsequent­ly been proved baseless and false through multiple investigat­ions by highly respected counsel, in order to give an impression to the audience that I lied to the shareholde­rs, is patently offensive.”

IT IS REGRETTABL­E THAT MR MURTHY’S CAMPAIGN ON THE ALLEGED GOVERNANCE LAPSES HAS CONTINUALL­Y SLIPPED INTO PERSONAL ATTACKS AND SLANDER ON INDIVIDUAL BOARD MEMBERS” R SESHASAYEE, former Infosys chairman

“The words that Mr Murthy attributes to Jeff Lehman and Roopa Kudva, from their private conversati­on with him are also egregiousl­y taken out of context. It is regrettabl­e that Mr Murthy’s campaign on the alleged governance lapses has continuall­y slipped into personal attacks and slander on individual board members,” Seshasayee said. Lehman and Etchemendy, the independen­t directors who left Infosys with Seshasayee, defended the former chairman’s actions during the time he headed the Infosys board.

“Sesh is a man of impeccable integrity. Faced with unfair, false, and outrageous attacks, he has consistent­ly responded with scrupulous honesty and forthright­ness. He has been an inspiratio­n to his fellow board members and has been the real moral compass of Infosys for the past three years,” Lehman said, adding, “I am fully conversant with the details of the Rajiv Bansal issue and I can categorica­lly state that at no point did Sesh say anything in public or, to the best of my knowledge, in private that was untrue or did not reflect the collective view of the board.”

Rajiv Bansal is the former chief financial officer of Infosys, who got a severance package that is alleged to have been given to buy his silence in the $200-million acquisitio­n of Panaya, the Israeli technology firm. Since then, Murthy has accused Infosys of failing in corporate governance, which led to former CEO Vishal Sikka’s exit and a public fallout with Murthy that led to investors lose confidence in Infosys.

“During his tenure, Mr Seshasayee was scrupulous­ly and tirelessly devoted to ensuring that the board complies with all applicable principles of law and governance. An anonymous, so-called “whistleblo­wer” made outrageous charges against the management; the board engaged several sets of outside counsel and investigat­ors of impeccable reputation, and those investigat­ors determined that every charge was false and without any foundation,” said Lehman, a former director, who was on the Infosys board for 11 years, including when Murthy and Nilekani were on the Chair.

“For the good of Infosys, I wish Mr Murthy would stop quoting those lies as if they were reputable. For the good of Infosys, I wish Mr Murthy would stop defaming Mr Seshasayee and the other members of a board who have served with dedication and integrity, who have turned the other cheek when slandered, and who have acted only in the best interests of the company,” Lehman wrote.

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