Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Probe on alleged moves by Australian companies to bribe Sirisena's official in 2009

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One of Australia’s leading newspapers The Sydney Morning Herald this week reported that two Australian companies are facing bribery i nve s t i g ations by the Australian Federal Police (AFP) over World Bank funded projects abroad, and claimed “they reach into the offices of the Presidents of Sri Lanka and the Republic of Congo.”

SMEC ( Snowy Mountain Engineerin­g Corporatio­n), one of the biggest Australian companies to benefit from WB contracts was involved in a 2009 dam project and 2011 sewerage project in Sri Lanka.

In on- going investigat­ions, SMEC confirmed that a

“request for a political donation” was made by an official in then Irrigation Minister Maithripal­a Sirisena’s office, but insists that no donation was made.

In Colombo, the President’s Media Director Dharmasiri Ekanayake told the Sunday Times yesterday he would respond to the report soon after he consults the President. Asked what happened when the same newspaper ran similar reports earlier this year, he said “we sent a response. Instructio­ns were given to take legal action. I am not sure what action has been taken so far.”

At the time the report first broke, President Sirisena responded to the newspaper saying he had no knowledge of this incident and requested further informatio­n if any of his officials had asked for kick-backs.

The newspaper report further stated that “coming in the wake of foreign bribery allegation­s implicatin­g Tabcorp, Leighton Holdings and BHP Billiton, the revelation­s will put pressure on the Turnbull government to reform Australia's failing anti-corruption framework.

“A Fairfax Media and 7.30 investigat­ion has uncovered internal documents from Perth- based listed mining company Sundance Resources that suggest it bribed the leader of the Republic of Congo as it sought presidenti­al approval in 2007 for one of Africa's most ambitious iron ore projects”, the newspaper states.

It says the documents, now being evaluated by AFP reveal a secret share deal worth millions of dollars was brokered with the son of Congo's President Denis Sassou Nguesso. In return, the company allegedly secured the President's backing for its project. Sundance has launched an internal inquiry into the claims.

Referring to SMEC, The Sydney Morning Herald states “the firm's overseas staff allegedly bribed officials to secure a A$2.3 million aid-funded sewerage project in Sri Lanka in 2011 and, in partnershi­p with a Canadian company, a A$2.2 million power plant project in Bangladesh in 2007.

Company emails also reveal an adviser of President Sirisena allegedly demanded a political "donation" to be paid by SMEC when Mr Sirisena was a cabinet minister, it adds.

The emails show a plot to skim the money off a World Bank-funded dam project in 2009. In return, the dam contract to SMEC, worth $ 1.82 million was to be approved. SMEC's Sri Lankan manager, who was recently sacked, wrote in emails to two Australian colleagues that he wanted to inform of the size of an alleged kickback to be paid and that he needed to "prioritise" certain payments to unnamed parties "since the signing of the contract would depend" on it.

President Sirisena at the time the newspaper first published these details said he would also ask the Attorney General of Sri Lanka to investigat­e the allegation­s.

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