The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Uber reviews Asia business amid US bribery probe

Review focuses on Indonesia, Malaysia, India, China and S. Korea

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JAKARTA: Uber Technologi­es Inc, which is the subject of a US federal probe into whether it broke bribery laws, has started a review of its Asia operations and notified US authoritie­s about payments made by staff to police officers in Indonesia, a person familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The review comes after Uber said in August it was cooperatin­g with a preliminar­y investigat­ion led by the US Department of Justice (DoJ) into whether its managers violated US laws against bribery of foreign officials, specifical­ly the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

Uber has hired law firm O’Melveny & Myers LLP to review its Asia operations.

It previously hired the firm to investigat­e how it obtained the medical records of an Indian woman who was raped by an Uber driver in 2014, Reuters reported in June.

Bloomberg first reported Uber’s review of its Asia operations.

It said O’Melveny & Myers was examining records of payments made in Asia and interviewi­ng employees.

It quoted people with knowledge of the matter as saying that late last year, an Uber employee in Jakarta made multiple, small payments to police on the understand­ing that Uber would be permitted to continue operating from an office located in a non-business zone.

Uber fired the employee and placed the head of the Indonesian business who approved the expense report on a leave of absence, Bloomberg said, citing the sources.

The head has since left the company, it reported.

Jakarta Police spokesman Argo Yuwono told Reuters there was no investigat­ion into any payments.

He also said jurisdicti­on over location permits resided with the local government, not police.

Uber declined to comment when contacted by Reuters. The US Department of Justice could not be reached for comment outside of regular US business hours.

The DoJ is focusing on suspicious activity in China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and South Korea, Bloomberg reported.

Uber’s law firm is also reviewing financial arrangemen­ts with Malaysia’s government that may have influenced lawmakers there, it said.

Uber’s financial relationsh­ip with Malaysian government-linked agencies includes a US$30mil investment by the country’s second-largest pension fund, Kumpulan Wang Persaraan (KWAP).

Uber also participat­ed in an entreprene­urship programme initiated by the state-backed Malaysian Global Innovation & Creativity

Centre (MaGIC).

The investment and participat­ion were followed by passage of ride-sharing laws in July.

KWAP declined to comment when contacted by Reuters. MaGIC said “we strongly refute involvemen­t in any quid-pro-quo arrangemen­ts.” The DoJ investigat­ion is the latest in a series of worldwide legal wrangling at Uber, which has also made headlines with allegation­s of sexual harassment in the workplace and executive misconduct.

Last month, Uber appointed Dara Khosrowsha­hi, who led travel-booking website operator Expedia Inc for 12 years, as chief executive to succeed Travis Kalanick who was ousted in June.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Under probe: Uber’s Asia review comes after the company said in August it was cooperatin­g with a preliminar­y investigat­ion led by the DoJ into whether its managers violated US laws against bribery of foreign officials.
— Bloomberg Under probe: Uber’s Asia review comes after the company said in August it was cooperatin­g with a preliminar­y investigat­ion led by the DoJ into whether its managers violated US laws against bribery of foreign officials.

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