Resignation
follows a report regarding a A$200,000 payment allegedly made by Australian
gambling giant Tabcorp
The head of Australia’s main
stock exchange resigned on Monday amid an investigation into allegations that a
gambling company he once ran made a bribery payment several years ago to the
family of Cambodia’s prime minister.
The resignation of
Australian Securities Exchange CEO Elmer Funke Kupper is effective immediately,
ASX chairman Rick Holliday-Smith said in a statement. Funke Kupper has denied
any wrongdoing.
The resignation follows a
report published last week by Australia’s Fairfax newspapers regarding a
A$200,000 (HK$1.2 million) payment allegedly made by Australian gambling giant
Tabcorp to a consulting company linked to Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen’s
family in 2010.
At the time, Funke Kupper
was Tabcorp’s CEO and the company was reportedly looking to launch an online
gambling operation in Cambodia. Tabcorp would have needed permission from Hun
Sen or his senior officials to obtain a Cambodian gambling license.
Funke Kupper, who has been
CEO of the ASX since 2011, told Fairfax that he couldn’t recall any such
payment. But the Australian Federal Police has confirmed it is investigating
whether Tabcorp violated any foreign bribery laws.
“The ASX Board accepted that
Elmer wanted to direct his full focus to the investigations which may be made
into the Tabcorp matter and not have them interfere with the important role of
leading the ASX,” Holliday-Smith said in the statement.
Funke Kupper did not
immediately respond to a request for comment, but told the Australian
Financial Review on Monday that he had done nothing wrong.
“I have not been told I am
being investigated,” he told the newspaper. “My job is to take control of the
situation. I am not doing this because I have done anything wrong under the
law.”
In Cambodia, an assistant to
Hun Sen, Seng Tieng, said he was unaware of any bribery case involving a
gambling license.
“I, personally, have never
heard this news,” Seng Thieng said.
Last week, Tabcorp confirmed
that it had explored a business opportunity with Cambodia in 2009, but said it
ultimately chose not to pursue it.
Holliday-Smith said he will
take over as executive chairman of the ASX until a new CEO is chosen.
South
China Morning Post
No comments:
Post a Comment