Airbus says French probe shows firm's compliance working

Reuters  |  NEW DELHI 

(Reuters) - Chief Executive Tom Enders said on Friday he was not surprised by a French decision to investigate plane sales and said the firm had shown the effectiveness of its compliance rules by uncovering irregularities.

The French authorities on Thursday opened a preliminary into suspected irregularities over the use of third-party agents to win contracts, expanding a UK corruption probe.

"This is the result of us self-reporting on observations made on irregularities with respect to business partners," Enders said at a new pilot training centre in India, adding that the discovery of the irregularities was not a new development.

"Not surprisingly they have decided to launch an investigation," he said of the French decision.

He said uncovering the irregularities showed "very intensive company investigations" in line with Airbus's compliance codes.

Britain's Serious Fraud Office launched an in August after the planemaker uncovered evidence of false declarations over the use of agents in applying for UK export credits and reported its findings to the British authorities.

Shares in Europe's largest aerospace company fell around one percent, in a slightly stronger French market.

The decision by French and British investigators to cooperate is unusual. It could test a 2016 anti-graft law which introduces in the possibility of a "deferred prosecution agreement," a type of settlement often favoured in corruption probes and already used by Britain's SFO.

Britain last year suspended the issue of export credits to Airbus, and and Germany immediately followed suit, forcing to provide financing itself to some airlines in order to maintain aircraft deliveries.

The system remains suspended but has suggested export support may return on a case-by-case basis later this year.

(Reporting by Aditi Shah; Writing by Tim Hepher; Editing by Edmund Blair)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Airbus says French probe shows firm's compliance working

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Airbus Chief Executive Tom Enders said on Friday he was not surprised by a French decision to investigate Airbus plane sales and said the firm had shown the effectiveness of its compliance rules by uncovering irregularities.

(Reuters) - Chief Executive Tom Enders said on Friday he was not surprised by a French decision to investigate plane sales and said the firm had shown the effectiveness of its compliance rules by uncovering irregularities.

The French authorities on Thursday opened a preliminary into suspected irregularities over the use of third-party agents to win contracts, expanding a UK corruption probe.

"This is the result of us self-reporting on observations made on irregularities with respect to business partners," Enders said at a new pilot training centre in India, adding that the discovery of the irregularities was not a new development.

"Not surprisingly they have decided to launch an investigation," he said of the French decision.

He said uncovering the irregularities showed "very intensive company investigations" in line with Airbus's compliance codes.

Britain's Serious Fraud Office launched an in August after the planemaker uncovered evidence of false declarations over the use of agents in applying for UK export credits and reported its findings to the British authorities.

Shares in Europe's largest aerospace company fell around one percent, in a slightly stronger French market.

The decision by French and British investigators to cooperate is unusual. It could test a 2016 anti-graft law which introduces in the possibility of a "deferred prosecution agreement," a type of settlement often favoured in corruption probes and already used by Britain's SFO.

Britain last year suspended the issue of export credits to Airbus, and and Germany immediately followed suit, forcing to provide financing itself to some airlines in order to maintain aircraft deliveries.

The system remains suspended but has suggested export support may return on a case-by-case basis later this year.

(Reporting by Aditi Shah; Writing by Tim Hepher; Editing by Edmund Blair)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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