By : LEE WEI LIAN
KUALA LUMPUR : US
multinational Tyco has agreed to pay US$26 million (RM80 million) to settle
charges by the US government that it engaged in corrupt practices in more than
a dozen countries in Asia and the Middle East, including Malaysia.
According to documents from
the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Tyco is alleged to have bribed
officials, including an employee of a Malaysian government-controlled entity,
in order to win lucrative contracts.
The SEC said in a media
statement yesterday that the global manufacturer allegedly perpetuated schemes
that typically involved payments of fake “commissions” or the use of
third-party agents to funnel money improperly to obtain the contracts.
It also said that Tyco,
whose place of incorporation was shifted to Switzerland in 2008, agreed to pay
more than US$26 million to settle the SEC’s charges.
Other countries that Tyco
was alleged to have engaged in bribery include China, India, Thailand, Croatia,
Serbia, Saudi Arabia, Libya, Syria, the UAE, Mauritania, Congo, Niger,
Madagascar, Turkey, Poland and Egypt.
The SEC’s charges against
Tyco claim that the latter made payments to approximately 26 employees of
customers in Malaysia, including an employee of a government-controlled entity.
It also claimed that Tyco’s
Malaysian subsidiary inaccurately described these expenses as “commissions” and
failed to maintain policies sufficient to prohibit such payments, resulting in
Tyco’ s books and records being misstated.
Tyco is a leading provider
of electronic security products and services, fire protection and detection
products and services, and valves and controls.
A Tyco spokesman was quoted
by UK’s Financial Times yesterday as saying: “We’re committed to maintaining
our rigorous compliance programmes across all of our business activities.”
Malaysia, which is
attempting to stamp out corruption, has made international news over several
other cases related to graft by multinationals in the country including one
involving Australian banknote company Securency and French telecommunications
giant Alcatel.
The headlines could
reinforce perception that Malaysia has a reputation where bribes are paid to
public officials.
Corruption was identified by
the World Economic Forum this year as one of the top five problems facing
businesses in Malaysia.
Malaysia also slipped four
spots to 60th in Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index last
year.
The Najib administration has
made corruption one of the National Key Result Areas of its Government
Transformation Programme to reform the government and make it more efficient
and transparent.
Alcatel admitted in 2010
that it had bribed Malaysian government officials some time between 2004 and
2006 to win a US$85 million contract.
Earlier this month, it was
reported that Australian central bank officials were told in 2007 that
Securency had engineered a scheme to hide a RM492,000 payment to a Malaysian
arms dealer in order to secure contracts from the Abdullah administration
despite an earlier denial.
The arms dealer — Abdul
Kayum Syed Ahmad — was charged here last year with two counts of giving
RM50,000 bribes in 2004 and 2005 to former Bank Negara assistant governor Datuk
Mohamad Daud Dol Moin in order to procure a contract to print the RM5 polymer
bank notes by Reserve Bank subsidiary Note Printing Australia Ltd.
Abdul Kayum has pleaded not
guilty.
Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi
has also denied allegations that the Australian banknote firms attempted to
bribe him for a RM100 million Malaysian currency contract during his tenure as
prime minister.
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