Scandal-plagued Siemens now faces possible charges of public corruption in Argentina. Police in Buenos Aires raided Siemens’ office there in connection with a bribery investigation. The United States, Greece, Italy, China, Hungary, Indonesia and Norway are also investigating whether Siemens broke anti-corruption laws.
Here’s a dispatch from the August 16, 2008 online edition of Deutsche Welle:
Argentine authorities on Friday searched the Buenos Aires offices of German technology giant Siemens, in an investigation of the payment of bribes during the 1989-99 government of former Argentine president Carlos Menem.
German media reported in recent days, based on court documents, that Menem allegedly received a direct payment from Siemens of $16 million (10.9 million euros). The firm reportedly expected to pay $100 million in bribes to Argentine officials including Menem and the then ministers of finance and interior.
Siemens’ Argentine headquarters, located near the historic Plaza de Mayo in central Buenos Aires, were searched in an effort to secure evidence on an order from Judge Ariel Lijo.
Former Siemens officials claimed — in the context of a broader investigation against the German multinational firm — that the company paid bribes in Argentina. German courts forwarded the information to authorities in Buenos Aires.
Siemens in the 1990s was seeking a $1.26-billion contract to digitalize Argentine identity documents and other services, the daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung reported. The contract was signed under Menem in 1998 but cancelled in 2001 by his successor, President Fernando de la Rua.
Later, Siemens allegedly paid further bribes until 2004 — under former Argentine president Nestor Kirchner, husband of current President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner — in an effort to have the contract restored.
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