lunes, 2 de julio de 2007

Swiss firm unhappy as US calls it 'terrorist state' sponsor

Monday 2nd July, 2007

Swiss firm unhappy as US calls it 'terrorist state' sponsor
IANS Monday 2nd July, 2007

Geneva, July 2 (Xinhua) A Swiss agrochemical company has felt
'disappointed' with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
suspecting it of sponsoring terrorist states.

The SEC last week launched a website link aimed at exposing world
companies which could be 'indirectly subsidising a terrorist state', the
official Swissinfo website reported.

The blacklist is based on latest annual reports of the companies. They
are mostly non-US and include Unilever, Cadbury, HSBC, Nokia, Siemens
and Total, as well as the second biggest Swiss bank, Credit Suisse, the
agrochemical firm, Syngenta, and the engineering group, ABB.

Syngenta said it was disappointed with the US blacklist, while ABB and
Credit Suisse played down their business links with the five named
countries - Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan and Syria, Swissinfo said.

According to Basel-based Syngenta, the company should not be punished
for its transparency.

Syngenta is currently active in four of the five countries designated by
the US state department as 'sponsors of terrorism'.

'But we see no reason to change our policy,' said Syngenta spokesman
Medard Schoenmaeckers.

He added that the company's business activities in Sudan's agriculture
sector were 'minimal'.

Credit Suisse, which features on the list of all five 'rogue states',
did not comment on the SEC blacklist, according to the Swissinfo report.

A bank spokesman said Credit Suisse had withdrawn from Cuba and Iran at
the beginning of 2006.

For its part, ABB said an 'information offensive' was needed to explain
its position to investors. The engineering group has been doing business
with Iran, according to the SEC list.

The company added it had withdrawn from Sudan after investors expressed
concern over the business activities with the war-torn African country.

ABB's business activities with Iran will continue but account for less
than one percent of the company's sales, according to spokesman Wolfram
Eberhardt.

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