British-American Tobacco face U.K. probe over corrupt deals in Africa

Britain has opened a formal investigation into suspicions of corruption at British American Tobacco (BAT) and its subsidiaries, nearly two years after allegations of bribery in Africa first surfaced.

The world’s largest international tobacco company said in a statement it intended to cooperate with the investigation but did not provide further details.

“The SFO confirms it is investigating suspicions of corruption in the conduct of business by BAT p.l.c., its subsidiaries and associated persons,” Britain’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) said in a statement on Tuesday.

The maker of brands including Dunhill and Lucky Strike said in February last year it had appointed a law firm to investigate allegations of historic misconduct in Africa and that it was liaising with the SFO.

BAT said then it was aware of some of the allegations and had looked into them, but was bringing in outside lawyers given the number and nature of the allegations and its zero tolerance of corruption anywhere in the world.

The 2016 move came after a November 2015 BBC programme described cases of BAT employees bribing officials in East African countries including Rwanda and Burundi in an effort to undermine anti-smoking laws. The BBC cited internal documents provided by whistleblowing former employee Paul Hopkins.

Spokeswomen for BAT and the SFO declined to say which countries were covered by the investigation.

Earlier this year, BAT said it had created a board subcommittee to monitor matters relating to the investigation between board meetings. It also said it had started a project in 2016 to review and strengthen its global compliance procedures.

BAT initially appointed law firms Linklaters and Slaughter and May to investigate the allegations of misconduct and is now just working with the latter.

Shares in BAT, which tumbled 12 percent in the previous two sessions following a proposal by the U.S. government to cut nicotine in cigarettes, were 1 percent higher at 1039 GMT.

The London-based company last week unseated Marlboro maker Philip Morris International as the world’s largest international tobacco firm, following its $49 billion takeover of Reynolds American.

The world’s biggest tobacco company is state-owned China National Tobacco Corporation.

REUTERS
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