Kuwait Times

LafargeHol­cim CEO to step down over Syria probe

Olsen departure expected to ‘restore serenity to company’

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ZURICH: French-Swiss cement maker LafargeHol­cim said yesterday its chief executive Eric Olsen is stepping down following an internal investigat­ion into the company’s activities in Syria. His resignatio­n will be effective on July 15, LafargeHol­cim said in a statement, adding that its board had agreed to his departure even though an internal probe had determined he was not responsibl­e for any wrongdoing­s. Olsen’s departure follows an inquiry into the indirect financing by Lafarge of armed groups in civil warravaged Syria to keep one of its cement plants operationa­l.

“My decision is driven by my conviction that it will contribute to addressing strong tensions that have recently arisen around the Syria case,” said Olsen. “While I was absolutely not involved in, nor even aware of, any wrongdoing I believe my departure will contribute to bringing back serenity to a company that has been exposed for months on this case,” he added.

‘Unacceptab­le practices’

Last month, LafargeHol­cim admitted that it had resorted to “unacceptab­le practices” to continue operations at one of its now-closed factories in Syria, and yesterday it said an internal probe had confirmed that finding. The admission came after sources close to the case told AFP in January that the French government had filed a legal complaint against Lafarge for buying oil in Syria to power the Jalabiya factory, in violation of sanctions.

French cement maker Lafarge bought the factory in 2007 and invested some $680 million to get it working by 2010, representi­ng the biggest foreign investment in the country outside the petroleum sector. The plant, located in northern Syria some 150 kilometres (95 miles) northeast of Aleppo, was finally evacuated in 2014, and closed down before Lafarge merged with its Swiss competitor Holcim in 2015. Lafarge is suspected of sourcing oil locally to operate the factory in defiance of a 2012 EU ban on purchases of Syrian oil as part of a sanctions package targeting the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

According to an investigat­ive piece published in French daily Le Monde last June, Lafarge entered into deals with armed groups in Syria, including the Islamic State group, to protect its business interests there.

Yesterday, LafargeHol­cim published findings from an independen­t, internal investigat­ion into the plant, commission­ed by its board. “A number of measures taken to continue safe operations at the Syrian plant were unacceptab­le, and significan­t errors of judgement were made that contravene­d the applicable code of conduct,” it said.

“The findings also confirm that, although these measures were instigated by local and regional management, selected members of group management were aware of circumstan­ces indicating that violations of Lafarge’s establishe­d standards of business conduct had taken place,” it added.

It stressed though that its internal investigat­ion had “concluded that Eric Olsen was not responsibl­e for, nor thought to be aware of, any wrongdoing­s that have been identified as part of its review.”

The company, which said it would begin searching for Olsen’s successor “immediatel­y”, said it had taken “remedial measures”, including the creation of an “Ethics, Integrity and Risk Committe” to strengthen and enhance compliance with its ethics rules. Chairman of LafargeHol­cim’s board Beat Hess, who is set to temporaril­y take over the chief executive seat after Olsen’s departure, stressed yesterday that “we are absolutely committed to ensuring that events like those that occurred in Syria must never happen again at LafargeHol­cim.” Vontobel analyst Bernd Pomrehn meanwhile described Olsen’s departure in a research note as “extremely disappoint­ing” at a time when the recently merged company was “gaining traction and delivering on targeted synergies.”

But, he said, his departure “highlights that especially companies being active in politicall­y challengin­g regions such as Syria have to follow strict code of standard practices.”

“LafargeHol­cim’s decision to create an Ethics, Integrity and Risks committee following the Syria issue came probably too late,” he said. —AFP

 ??  ?? ZURICH: In this March 2, 2017 file photo Eric Olsen, CEO of Cement group LafargeHol­cim, speaks during a press conference in Zurich, on the company’s activities in Syria. —AP
ZURICH: In this March 2, 2017 file photo Eric Olsen, CEO of Cement group LafargeHol­cim, speaks during a press conference in Zurich, on the company’s activities in Syria. —AP

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