The Sun (Malaysia)

Singapore charges two ex-officials in Brazil graft case

Prosecutor­s and company in talks over deferred prosecutio­n agreement

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SINGAPORE: Authoritie­s here charged yesterday two former officials of Sembcorp Marine with handing bribes to Brazilian officials to advance the company’s interests in the South American nation.

Sembcorp Marine and Keppel Offshore and Marine merged in 2023 to form Seatrium, which is in talks to pay US$110 million (RM520.6 million) in a deferred prosecutio­n agreement regarding the bribery case in Brazil, the attorney-general’s chambers and Singapore’s Corrupt Practices Investigat­ion Bureau said in a statement.

Former CEO Wong Weng Sun and ex-manager Lee Fook Kang face five charges of conspiring to offer a middleman inducement­s to aid Sembcorp Marine’s Brazilian subsidiari­es, according to the citystate’s statement.

The total sum involved in the offences between 2009 and 2014 amounted to about US$44 million.

In an emailed statement, Wong said, “I have always acted in the best interests of the companies, and would never compromise them by engaging in corrupt activities,” during 35 years working in Sembcorp Marine and one of its units.

“The charges relate to the companies’ Brazilian operations, and I intend to demonstrat­e my innocence,” he added in the statement his lawyers, Wong Partnershi­p, sent to Reuters.

Lawyers for Lee said they were not in a position to comment as they had just been engaged on the matter. A lawyer for Wong did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Wong has also been charged with obstructio­n of justice after he allegedly told two Sembcorp employees in 2014 to delete an email sent by the middleman that contained evidence of bribes.

Singapore prosecutor­s were in talks with Seatrium for a deferred prosecutio­n agreement to pay a penalty of US$110 million, the statement added.

Seatrium told the stock exchange yesterday that the attorney-general’s chambers was agreeable to entering into the deferred prosecutio­n agreement.

It said it was committed to the highest standards of compliance, including zero tolerance of bribery and corruption.

Trade in Seatrium shares was suspended for the news. The stock has dropped 33% this year, underperfo­rming the benchmark stock index. – Reuters

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