The Borneo Post

Japan raids firms over alleged maglev bid-rigging

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TOKYO: Tokyo prosecutor­s yesterday raided two major constructi­on firms over suspicions they colluded to secure contracts for Japan’s multi- billion- dollar maglev project that will see trains running at 500 kilometres per hour.

The state- of-the- art maglev, or magnetical­ly levitated, trains are scheduled to begin commercial service between Tokyo and Nagoya in central Japan in 2027, later extending to the western hub of Osaka.

The giant project, estimated to cost nine trillion yen ( US$ 80 billion) in total, has seen various companies competing for contracts ranging from tunnelling work to building stations.

Constructi­on firm Kajima’s headquarte­rs and another Tokyo office were raided by investigat­ors from the Tokyo District Prosecutor­s Office and the Fair Trade Commission for suspected anti-trust law violations, said a company spokesman who declined to be named.

“We’d like to decline to comment on further details as the investigat­ion is ongoing. We will continue to fully cooperate with the investigat­ion,” he told AFP.

Another general contractor Shimizu also said it was raided Monday.

The raids came after Japanese media reported that prosecutor­s would shortly raid Japan’s big four contractor­s — Kajima, Shimizu, Taisei and Obayashi — over alleged collusion.

Officials from the four companies, called ‘super general contractor­s’, met regularly to rig

We’d like to decline to comment on further details as the investigat­ion is ongoing. We will continue to fully cooperate with the investigat­ion.

bids, local media alleged.

Of the last 22 bids related to the maglev project, 15 were won by joint ventures the four groups separately formed and distribute­d almost evenly among them, the reports said.

Taisei and Obayashi were not raided yesterday.

But prosecutor­s searched Obayashi earlier this month on suspicion of obstructin­g other companies’ business.

The company reportedly pressured other contractor­s to drop their planned bids for a contract to build an emergency exit at Nagoya.

Shares in Kajima, Shimizu and Taisei dropped more than two per cent yesterday while Obayashi closed slightly higher.

Maglev trains will run at 500 kilometres per hour, roughly twice as fast as the current bullet trains in Japan.

A maglev train clocked a new world speed record in a 2015 test run near Mount Fuji, smashing through the 600 kilometres per hour mark. — AFP

Kajima spokesman

 ??  ?? Tokyo District Public Prosecutor­s Office staff enter the headquarte­rs of Kajima Corp for a raid in Tokyo. — Reuters photo
Tokyo District Public Prosecutor­s Office staff enter the headquarte­rs of Kajima Corp for a raid in Tokyo. — Reuters photo

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