Oil giant Total fined for Iran corruption

AFP  |  Paris 

A on Friday fined Total 500,000 euros (USD 575,000) for after finding it guilty of paying bribes while bidding for a in in 1997.

The French company was accused of paying USD 30 million in bribes to middlemen, in return for help in securing the rights to the South Pars natural gas field, the world's largest.

In 2013, Total paid USD 398 million in the US to settle similar charges arising in that country out of the joint French-US investigation.

The French part of the probe, which was launched back in 2006, initially covered both the 1997 South Pars deal, worth USD 2 billion, and the 1995 concession for the Sirri A and E

Total was suspected of paying a total of USD 60 million in bribes between 1995 and 2004.

But in the end the multinational was only tried for the USD 30 million it paid in connection with South Pars after 2000, when a new French law on "of foreign public officials" came into effect.

While convicting the company the court rejected prosecutors' call for it to seize 250 million euros in assets -- investigators' estimate of the value of the proceeds of the

Total's late Christophe de Margerie, who was of exploration at the time of the payments, was also being investigated before his sudden death in a plane crash in in 2014.

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

First Published: Fri, December 21 2018. 21:25 IST