Toronto Star

Barclays, former execs charged over Qatar deal

Indictment­s are first in U.K. against a bank and leadership for activities in 2008 crisis

- DANICA KIRKA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON— British regulators charged Barclays bank and four former executives, including then-CEO John Varley, with conspiracy to commit fraud when they asked Qatar for £6.1 billion ($10.21 billion) to avoid a government bailout at the height of the financial crisis in 2008.

The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) announced the charges Tuesday following an investigat­ion into two rounds of fundraisin­g from Qatar in June and October of 2008. The probe centred on two side agreements under which Barclays paid the Qatari investors £322 million over five years, the bank disclosed in 2013.

The charges are the first in Britain against a bank and former executives for activities during the 2008 financial crisis.

The fundraisin­g efforts in 2008 came as banks around the world struggled to keep their doors open. Britain’s Northern Rock was forced out of business, while Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group were forced to accept billions of pounds of state aid and the government oversight that came with it.

The SFO’s announceme­nt comes as another blow to current Barclays CEO Jes Staley, who is trying to repair the bank’s reputation following a series of scandals while facing an investigat­ion into his own conduct after he attempted to identify a whistleblo­wer. Barclays shares were down 1per cent in late trading on the London Stock Exchange.

Barclays said it is “considerin­g its position” and “awaits further details of the charges from the SFO.”

Varley, 61; former investment banking chief Roger Jenkins, 61; Thomas Kalaris, 61, who headed the bank’s wealth management division; and Roger Boath, 58, head of the European financial institutio­ns group, were all charged with conspiracy to commit fraud by false representa­tion in relation to the first round of fundraisin­g. Barclays, Varley and Jenkins were charged with another count in regard to the second round, as well as a separate charge of providing unlawful financial assistance.

The four are scheduled to appear at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court on July 3, together with a representa­tive of the bank.

 ?? PAUL ELLIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Barclays asked Qatar for £6.1 billion to avoid a government bailout in 2008.
PAUL ELLIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Barclays asked Qatar for £6.1 billion to avoid a government bailout in 2008.

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