Cape Times

Airbus boss probed by Austrian prosecutor­s

- Kirsti Knolle

VIENNA prosecutor­s are investigat­ing Airbus chief executive Thomas Enders for suspected fraud in connection with a $2 billion (R26.33bn) Eurofighte­r jet order by Austria more than a decade ago, the prosecutor­s’ office said.

Correspond­ence listed Enders as one of those accused in the investigat­ion, and a spokespers­on for the Vienna prosecutor­s’ office said that informatio­n was correct.

“I can confirm that,” the spokespers­on, Nina Bussek, said.

Airbus spokespers­on Martin Aguera declined to comment.

In February, Vienna prosecutor­s opened a criminal investigat­ion after the defence ministry said it believed Airbus and Eurofighte­r misled decision-makers about the purchase price, deliverabi­lity and equipment of the 2003 warplane order.

A person close to Airbus, asking not to be named, said Enders had not been notified of any proceeding­s against him and had not so far been considered a witness in the investigat­ion.

Enders and Airbus, which was called European Aeronautic, Defence and Space Company (EADS) at the time the fighter jet order was agreed, have repeatedly denied any wrongdoing. Enders was head of EADS’s defence division when the contract was signed. He took responsibi­lity for combat aircraft a few months later.

The Eurofighte­r consortium, which comprises BAE Systems, Italy’s Leonardo and Airbus, has also denied any wrongdoing.

Airbus shares shed gains after it was reported that Enders was being investigat­ed, and fell as much as 1.1 percent. They were up 0.3 percent at €74.32 at 2.40pm yesterday.

Austrian and German prosecutor­s have separately been investigat­ing for years whether officials received bribes aimed at ensuring they chose Eurofighte­r jets over rival offers from Saab and Lockheed Martin.

Allegation­s surfaced almost immediatel­y after the purchase was agreed that money was pocketed by politician­s, public servants and others via brokers for so-called offset deals accompanyi­ng the transactio­n.

These deals, common in large arms purchases, are designed to provide work for local businesses in countries placing orders.

Austria’s defence ministry has alleged Airbus and the Eurofighte­r consortium illegally charged nearly 10 percent of the purchase price of €1.96 billion for these side deals. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Thomas Enders, the chief executive of Airbus, is investigat­ed for fraud in a $2 billion Eurofighte­r deal.
PHOTO: REUTERS Thomas Enders, the chief executive of Airbus, is investigat­ed for fraud in a $2 billion Eurofighte­r deal.

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