Arab Times

Kansai Electric boss has no plans to resign

Company hit by scandal

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TOKYO, Oct 3, (RTRS): The president of Japan’s Kansai Electric Power Co has no intention of resigning, he said on Wednesday, after admitting that he and 19 company employees had received payments and gifts worth 320 million yen ($3 million).

The scandal, at a time when the Japanese public’s trust in nuclear power companies is already at rockbottom, suggests that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s push for better corporate governance still has a long way to go in the world’s third-largest economy.

Shigeki Iwane, who admitted last week to receiving payments, told a news conference he wanted to stay in his position and regain the public’s confidence.

“I want to fulfil my responsibi­lities by taking leadership in finding the cause of what happened and taking preventive measures,” Iwane told a news conference broadcast live on NHK.

Kansai Electric earlier announced that its internal investigat­ion found that 20 executives, including Iwane, had received cash, gift certificat­es and business suits from Eiji Moriyama, the now deceased deputy mayor of Takahama, where the company has a nuclear power station.

The report did not give an overall total of how much had been paid, but Iwane has previously said he and the others received 320 million yen in cash and gifts over a seven-year period.

Moriyama exerted influence over local government officials, the internal report said, and sought to influence them to support the local economy and use local businesses as suppliers.

The payments raise governance concerns because they were disclosed only after the matter was raised by the local tax bureau, said Moody’s analyst Yukiko Asanuma.

“The cash payments ... add to existing negative public sentiment around nuclear power generation,” Asanuma said.

Iwane said on Wednesday that he was once given a gift by Moriyama that he thought contained sweets.

“When I opened it, I found gold coins in it. I tried to return the box but was told by our staffers it is difficult to return gifts to him. So I kept it in a safety box at our office,” he said.

Iwane said that none of the executives had any intention of keeping the gifts and many had returned them to Moriyama.

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