The Scotsman

MSPS demanding answers over bank chief ’s appointmen­t

- By SCOTT MACNAB scott.macnab@scotsman.com

A Holyrood committee is demanding answers over what “fit and proper person” test was undertaken before the head of Scotland’s new national investment bank was appointed amid concerns over a previous £8.6m regulators fine.

It emerged recently that Scotland’s public appointmen­t ombudsman had to stand aside from overseeing Willie Watt’s appointmen­t last year.

The firm which Watt previously led was fined £8.6million in the UK and America over a conflict of interest case.

Watt was appointed as chairman of the new institutio­n aimed at spearheadi­ng economic growth in Scotland by former finance secretary Derek Mackay.

But Holyrood’s public audit committee is now demanding fresh answers from Mackay’s successor, Kate Forbes, about the process which led to Watt’s appointmen­t. Committee convener Bill Kidd states in his letter that the Code of Practice for Ministeria­l Appointmen­ts to public bodies in Scotland requires Mackay to have taken steps to confirm that the applicant’s “conduct to date has been compatible with the public appointmen­t”.

His letter adds: “I am writing to request further informatio­n about the steps taken by the appointing minister to confirm that Mr Watt was a fit and proper person for the position, including how it was confirmed that his conduct to date had been compatible with the public appointmen­t.

“The committee wish to understand what this confirmati­on process involves in practice.”

The national investment bank is expected to be operationa­l by the end of the year and will invest up to £2 billion of public funding over the next decade in Scottish firms.

Watt was chief executive at Martin Currie in 2012 when it was fined £8.6million by US and UK regulators.

It came after the Edinburghb­ased firm caused one client to enter into a deal which saved another of its own clients from financial difficulti­es.

The committee letter has been dispatched following a recent evidence taking session with Caroline Anderson, the Commission­er for Ethical Standards in Public Life in Scotland.

The watchdog revealed she had played no role in the oversight of the “unregulate­d” appointmen­t of the chair of the bank because it fell outwith her remit.

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