New Straits Times

TONY FERNANDES & KAMARUDIN MERANUN RELINQUISH AIRASIA EXEC POSTS

Tony Fernandes, Kamarudin retained as advisers for the 2-month period

- KUALA LUMPUR

AIRASIA Group Bhd (AAGB) chief executive officer Tan Sri Tony Fernandes and its executive chairman, Datuk Kamarudin Meranun, have relinquish­ed their executive positions within the company for two months, effective immediatel­y, in the wake of an Airbus bribery probe.

AirAsia, in a statement yesterday, also announced that its board of directors has formed a non-executive independen­t board committee comprising the non-executive members of the board.

It said based on the committee’s recommenda­tion, Tharumalin­gam Kanagaling­am has been appointed as the acting CEO of AAGB in the interim.

Kamarudin and Fernandes, meanwhile, would be redesignat­ed as AAGB’s non-independen­t non-executive board members.

The company said Kamarudin and Fernandes had notified the committee of their decision.

“(They) have notified the committee that they will relinquish their executive positions within the group, effective immediatel­y, for a period of two months or such other period that the company may deem fit.

“The committee has decided that in view of the difficult economic circumstan­ces facing the airline industry, to retain them as advisers to the company during this two-month period.

“As advisers, they will not have executive authority within the group,” said the company.

The AirAsia Group has been drawn into controvers­y following allegation­s by the United Kingdom’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) that Airbus paid a bribe of US$50 million to win plane orders from Asia’s largest budget airline group.

The SFO document also claimed that Airbus had offered another US$55 million to sponsor a sports team linked to two unnamed executives from the airlines.

The document read AirAsia and AAX ordered 406 aircraft from Airbus between October 2005 and November 2014.

This included 180 aircraft secured during the indictment period by way of improper payment made by Airbus and the offer of a further improper payment.

The allegation­s were revealed on Friday as part of a record US$4 billion settlement Airbus agreed with France, Britain and the United States. Prosecutor­s said the company had bribed public officials and hidden payments as part of a pattern of worldwide corruption.

The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) on Saturday announced it would investigat­e the allegation­s implicatin­g two executives of the airlines.

MACC Chief Commission­er Latheefa Koya confirmed that the graft-buster was in touch with authoritie­s in the UK, and was probing the corruption allegation­s.

The following day, the Securities Commission announced that it would examine the graft allegation­s.

Securities Commission chairman Datuk Syed Zaid Albar said the SC would review all available evidence to determine if there was any breach of securities law as the low-cost carriers were listed on Bursa Malaysia.

AirAsia had since denied that it was involved with the SFO’s investigat­ion into Airbus nor given any opportunit­y to provide informatio­n or clarificat­ion to the SFO.

“The entering into of each aircraft purchase agreement was never made by any single individual decision, but instead arrived at through careful evaluation, deliberati­on and the collective decision of the board members after taking into account technical specificat­ions, aircraft flight performanc­e and operating economics,” the company had stated on Sunday.

It said it would cooperate with the MACC investigat­ion.

 ??  ?? Tan Sri Tony Fernandes
Tan Sri Tony Fernandes
 ??  ?? Datuk Kamarudin Meranun
Datuk Kamarudin Meranun

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