Arab News

Airbus ordered to pay $127m to settle Taiwan missile dispute

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PARIS: Airbus said on Saturday it had been ordered to pay €104 million ($127 million) in fines over a missile sale to Taiwan in 1992, the latest French arms company to reach a settlement over disputes arising from one of France’s biggest ever arms sales.

The scandal around French arms sales to the island in the early 1990s was one of a series of cases that underpinne­d accusation­s of widespread corruption during the final years of late French President Francois Mitterrand.

Airbus said in a statement that its subsidiary behind the missile contract, Matra Defense, was “reviewing the award before evaluating the next steps to take.”

The arbitratio­n fine comes three months after Dassault Aviation, radar supplier Thales and engine maker Safran said they had been fined a combined €227 million ($276.80 million) in Taiwan to settle the 25-year-old dispute over the wrongful use of commission­s in the sale of 60 Mirage fighters to the island.

“This was a commercial dispute and not a corruption allegation,” said an Airbus spokesman.

In a separate case, Airbus said it was in talks with Munich prosecutor­s that could lead to the terminatio­n of their investigat­ion into alleged corruption in the sale of Eurofighte­r combat jets to Austria in 2003.

That investigat­ion is one of several corruption cases still facing Europe’s largest aerospace company.

Airbus did not mention the status of a parallel Austrian investigat­ion into the same arms deal.

The company and individual­s including CEO Tom Enders are being investigat­ed in Vienna over industrial deals that were built into the Eurofighte­r sale and have denied any wrongdoing.

Separately, Airbus faces UK and French investigat­ions into the use of middlemen in commercial airliner sales. —

 ??  ?? Airbus is the latest arms company to reach a settlement over disputes arising from one of France’s biggest ever arms sales. (Reuters)
Airbus is the latest arms company to reach a settlement over disputes arising from one of France’s biggest ever arms sales. (Reuters)

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