Judges suspect kickbacks used for illegal party funds as president’s friends caught up in the ‘Karachi affair’ Nicolas Sarkozy’s battle for re-election has been overshadowed by a major corruption scandal after two of his closest friends were charged by judges investigating alleged kickbacks on arms sales to Pakistan. The investigation, known as the “Karachi affair”, is the biggest French corruption scandal since the second world war, Sarkozy’s political opponents said. It is a potentially murderous saga of alleged illegal party funding, suitcases stuffed with banknotes, rightwing political rivalry and, ultimately, the deaths of 15 people in a bomb attack in Pakistan. Nicolas Bazire, one of Sarkozy’s closest friends and best man at his wedding to Carla Bruni in 2008, was charged on Thursday with misuse of public funds. He is suspected of taking kickbacks from the sale of submarines to Pakistan in the 1990s. Bazire, a former political aide who is now a director of French luxury goods group LVMH, was detained by police and his home and office were searched. Thierry Gaubert, another friend and adviser to Sarkozy for many years, was also charged and placed under investigation on suspicion that he carried cash from kickbacks into France in suitcases. Judges are investigating whether kickbacks from arms sales were used to illegally fund the failed presidential campaign of former rightwing prime minister Edouard Balladur in 1995. Sarkozy was Balladur’s budget minister as well as spokesman for his campaign, which was run by Bazire. Lawyers for Bazire and Gaubert denied any involvement. The Élysée Palace issued a statement that said Sarkozy “never exercised the slightest authority in the campaign financing”. Sarkozy, who faces a presidential election in seven months, is under pressure as judges investigating the Karachi affair close in on his inner circle. A separate judicial inquiry is already looking at whether Sarkozy or his party members took cash f rom the billionaire L’Oréal heiress Liliane Bettencourt for illegal party funding . When he was elected in 2007, Sarkozy had promised an “irreproachable” France, presenting himself as a leader who would clean up corrupt French politics. This is now being ridiculed by the left. Sarkozy has not yet officially declared his candidacy in next year’s election, but he has been positioning himself to run, trying to create a more presidential image through his involvement in world affairs, in Libya and the Middle East. The Karachi saga goes beyond illegal party funding. In May 2002, a bomb attack on a bus in the city killed 15 people including 11 workers for a French naval defence company on their way to the dockyard to work on submarines that had been sold to Pakistan. French judges now believe it was a retaliation attack over unpaid government bribes. A top investigating judge has opened a fresh examination into a possible connection to kickbacks and party funding despite efforts by the state prosecutor to stop the inquiry. The arrest of Sarkozy’s friends follows another surprising twist. Two ex-wives involved in bitter and difficult divorce battles with key figures came forward and gave evidence to judges. An influential Franco-Lebanese arms broker and businessman, Zied Takieddine, was last week charged with fraud over two arms contracts with Pakistan and Saudi Arabia in which he was allegedly the middleman. His ex-wife had testified to investigators. Then the trail led to Gaubert, whose ex-wife, a granddaughter of the last king of Italy, told judges of several trips to Switzerland in 1994 and 1995 when he returned with “voluminous suitcases full of banknotes”. Yet another sleaze inquiry was opened last week into assertions by one of Sarkozy’s Africa experts that the former president Jacques Chirac and prime minister Dominique de Villepin were handed briefcases of cash from African leaders to fund election campaigns. A Chirac adviser had claimed that Sarkozy also benefited. All have denied taking cash. Nicolas Sarkozy Arms trade Pakistan France Europe Angelique Chrisafis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Former eBay CEO and California governor candidate replaces Léo Apotheker, who lasted just 11 months in the job Léo Apotheker has been fired as chief executive of Hewlett-Packard and replaced with Meg Whitman, the technology firm has announced. Following a board meeting, Whitman, the former chief executive of eBay and candidate for California governor, was confirmed as the replacement for Apotheker, who has been at the helm at Hewlett-Packard for only 11 months. Ray Lane, who has moved from non-executive chairman to executive chairman of HP’s board, said: “We are at a critical moment and we need renewed leadership to successfully implement our strategy and take advantage of the market opportunities ahead.” Referring to Apotheker, Lane said the board believes “the job of the HP CEO now requires additional attributes”. The board also plans to appoint an independent director. The management shake-up represents yet another turnaround strategy at one of Silicon Valley’s oldest – but most publicly dysfunctional – firms. Since joining HP in November, Apotheker’s strategic decisions had been drastic, and did little to inspire confidence. HP’s stock fell nearly 50% during his time at the helm. It dropped about 5% on Thursday. Hewlett-Packard’s board said it would not change its strategy to focus more on services than making computers – a change of direction designed by Apotheker. Wall Street should react favourably to a new leader, even if it would be HP’s third in six years, after Carly Fiorina (fired February 2005) and Mark Hurd (fired August 2010). But not all analysts were convinced. Although Whitman, 55, grew eBay from a 30-strong company with $86m revenues to one with 15,000 people and almost $8bn revenues, she also oversaw the ineffective $2.8bn purchase of Skype, and left in 2008. Her strengths are consumer-facing, not in the enterprise. Carter Lusher, chief analyst at Ovum, said: “Whitman would do little for the confidence of HP’s enterprise customers. Whitman’s expertise lies primarily in the consumer market, and an interim leader will just prolong the sense of uncertainty.” Apotheker, who joined from the customer management software company SAP in early November, was unable to even turn to his employees for support: his approval rating among them was just 25%, according to the recruitment site Glassdoor . That figure is down from 58% a month ago; but a month ago Apotheker had not decided to shut down HP’s TouchPad tablet business at a cost of hundreds of millions, spin off its revenue-generating PC business into a separate company, and turn HP – revered in Silicon Valley for decades as a company that invented hardware such as the inkjet printer – into a services-based business to compete with IBM. The purchase of the UK search technology company Autonomy would be part of that transformation. Apotheker’s plan made financial sense. HP is a huge company, with more than 320,000 staff, annual revenues of $120bn (£78bn) – mainly from large “enterprise” customers – and profits of about $5.5bn. It has four main divisions: Services; Storage & Networking; Personal Systems Group; and Imaging & Printing. Of those, PSG, which is the world’s largest supplier of PCs, is the biggest by revenue – but its 6% profit margin is the lowest within the company by some way. The Guardian’s own analysis shows that if the PSG division could be spun off without harming other divisions, HP’s overall profitability would rise from 7.7% to 12%. That should delight investors. Yet it hasn’t. Partly it is the abrupt chopping and changing: the TouchPad was killed after just 48 days on sale , intended to ride the Apple iPad wave of interest, to widespread amazement, as the software had seemed promising. The 500-strong team behind the WebOS software are reportedly being laid off. And partly it’s that HP has messed things up, twice being forced to announce its quarterly results early after the data leaked out – an error that might be forgiven once but not twice by Wall Street traders. The recent changes left staff furious. One existing employee, a marketing director based in Boston, recently commented on Glassdoor: “The man[Apotheker] is flat-out incompetent. We’ve gone from [one] fiasco to the next under his reign.” Another was less blunt, but still excoriating: “The organisational structure is cobbled together, full of redundancies – everyone’s empowered to say no, no one is empowered to say yes. If Leo wanted to run SAP, he should have stayed at SAP.” Staff generally give the company only an “OK” rating – 2.5 out of 5. And there are murmurs too that the PSG spinoff is being reconsidered. But the PC business will not be more profitable in the future than it is now. IBM exited it smartly in 2004, selling it to Lenovo, and has become a services powerhouse since. HP owns EDS, the services company; its future would clearly lie in services. To Lusher, the damage to HP and Apotheker has already been done. “This only reinforces that HP is a company that is in severe disarray,” he said. “That the board would be considering a change in CEO less that 10 months after Apotheker took over is a damning indictment of not just the new CEO but the board itself. Having approved the recent strategy changes, it seems spineless just a month later to be potentially jettisoning that plan and its architect.” Brian White of Ticonderoga Securities said in a research note: “Leo was placed in the role on a short-term basis to take the fall for the company’s under-investment under the previous CEO … At the same time, we believe a new CEO could begin to build credibility for HP and join the company after quite a bit of damage has already been done.” Hewlett-Packard Software United States Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Palestine won’t push for an immediate Security Council vote on its push for full UN membership, because it doesn’t appear to have the requisite nine votes—even if the US weren’t promising to veto the move. “We will give some time to the Security Council,” a Palestinian negotiator told reporters,…
Continue reading …Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announces Spotify and Netflix tie-ins, as competition from Twitter and Google prompt move Facebook has unveiled sweeping changes to its website – including partnerships with major music and film companies – in a bid to transform the world’s biggest social network into a key entertainment hub. Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, on Thursday announced new partnerships with Spotify, Netflix, the Guardian and other media companies as he said that 800 million people worldwide now use the social network. “The last five years of social networking have been about getting people signed up,” Zuckerberg told Facebook’s f8 conference in San Francisco. “Until recently people weren’t sure how long the phenomenon would last. Now social networks are a ubiquitous tool used by billions of people around the world to stay connected every day.” Facebook has in recent months recently ramped up its attempts to attract and keep internet users on the site in the wake of competition from Twitter and a new rival in Google. Facebook is expected to hit the 1 billion user mark within weeks, having doubled the number of active users since February 2010. As part of the changes announced on Thursday, Facebook users will be able to automatically share activity such as viewing, listening and reading in a live “ticker” stream, once they have opted in to the feature. The new stream will be separate from the existing Facebook news feed, although popular items – such as the most frequently played songs among friends – will appear in the column. “We are making it so you can connect to
Continue reading …Shareholders shocked by plan to raise chief’s pay to £1.5m plus bonuses WPP has stunned its major investors by suggesting that Sir Martin Sorrell, its long-standing chief executive, should be awarded a pay rise of as much as 50% that could take his salary to £1.5m – and push up the potential bonuses he might also receive. The advertising and marketing group, founded by Sorrell and home to names such as JWT and Ogilvy & Mather, has not increased Sorrell’s £1m salary since January 2007 and is now arguing that the chief executive needs a boost in his basic pay to keep pace with his rivals. Jeffrey Rosen, the chairman of the remuneration committee at WPP, has told major shareholders the company wants to increase the size of Sorrell’s bonus potential as well as raising his basic pay. Basic salaries are important for chief executives – and other board directors – because bonuses and potential long-term incentive plans are usually set as a multiple of basic pay. Sorrell, who turned a shell company called Wire & Plastic Products into an empire that also includes media buyers Mediacom, market researchers Kantar and public relations firms Hill & Knowlton and Finsbury, has often ranked high in the Guardian’s executive pay surveys. In 2005 he pocketed £50m of shares after a long-term share scheme – known as a leadership equity acquisition plan or Leap – dating back to 1993 came to fruition. Last year he took home £4.2m after his £1m salary was enhanced by benefits, bonuses and shares. The high-level discussions about increasing Sorrell’s pay are taking place after other top executives at the company were given pay rises last year. The company endured a rebellion on the issue in June when more than 40% of investors failed to back the remuneration report, largely because Mark Read, chief executive of WPP Digital, was handed a 30% rise to take his salary to £425,000. The timing and scale of the pay rise being proposed for Sorrell, who is widely admired for his business acumen and commitment to WPP, has surprised investors. One said: “This is just not the time to be pushing for a pay rise.” Another pointed out that WPP had been preparing the ground after pointing out on a number of occasions that he had not had a rise in his basic salary for 2008, 2009 and 2010. In the latest annual report , WPP explained that Sorrell’s base salary had been due to be reviewed in November 2008 but he had told the compensation committee an increase “would not be appropriate in light of business conditions”. But the annual report added: “As part of the extensive review of the executive directors’ compensation at the end of 2010, the committee considers that an increase in base salary and adjustments to incentive opportunities are appropriate. Consideration of these issues has continued during 2011 and the committee intends to consult share owners before the proposals are finalised.” That consultation is understood to have begun in the summer and is now the subject of hot debate among investors, who admire Sorrell for his drive and ambition in expanding WPP but doubt that the executive is at risk of leaving the group he has founded to go to a rival. He has likened his relationship to WPP as “the closest a man can come to giving birth” and insisted that money is not his driving force. He took a loan against his shares in advertising company Saatchi & Saatchi to enable him to buy WPP and the City began to notice him once he pulled off the takeover of advertising network J Walter Thompson in 1997. He told the Observer in July 2010 : “I think when we did our first high-profile deal, which was JWT, I was definitely the outsider.” A WPP spokesman said: “As we said in our most recent annual report, Sir Martin Sorrell’s base salary has been unchanged since 1 January 2007 and Sir Martin declined a review due in November 2008 because of business conditions at the time. We also said that the compensation committee considered that an increase in base salary and adjustments to incentive opportunities were appropriate and that the committee intended to consult share owners before finalising proposals. “We are going through the very early stages of that process now.” WPP Sir Martin Sorrell Executive pay and bonuses WPP Advertising Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Should you need another reason to pack it in and go back to bed: After falling 284 points yesterday following the Fed’s announcement of Operation Twist , which investors interpreted as yet another gloomy assessment of the economy, the Dow kicked off today by plunging even more—a lot more. The…
Continue reading …It’s been a big week for amateur scientists, as TPM points out. About 40,000 people were recognized for helping Yale University astronomers locate two new planets beyond our solar system that may have Earth-like qualities through an online crowd-sourcing project. Meanwhile, amateur astronomer Theirry Legault captured images of the giant, earth-bound NASA satellite as it passed
Continue reading …Jon Stewart has some helpful advice for Louisiana Rep. John Fleming, who laments that he only has $400,000 each year after spending $200,000 to “feed my family:” Eat at your own Subway (Fleming owns 33 of them). “There is a place where you can buy a full 12…
Continue reading …The definition of anticlimactic: Following almost two years of clashes between those who planned the so-called “Ground Zero mosque” and those who protested it, the Park51 Islamic cultural center opened its first exhibition in New York yesterday without incident. Spectators, not protesters, viewed an exhibit featuring photos of New York…
Continue reading …China is harshly denouncing a US arms deal with Taiwan announced yesterday, calling for the US ambassador to China to protest the deal and warning that it will harm US-China ties if it is not canceled. The Obama administration notified Congress of the $5.8 billion plan yesterday; it would…
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