A Cypriot court on Friday jailed a former Bank of Cyprus chief executive for two-and-a-half years after finding him guilty of market manipulation in the lead-up to a financial meltdown in 2013. Andreas Eliades was convicted in December on charges of deceiving shareholders about the actual capital shortfall of BoC, the Mediterranean island's biggest bank, at an annual general meeting in June 2012.
The case is the first in a state probe into the causes of the financial crisis, which left several top Cypriot banks insolvent and forced it to seek an unprecedented international bailout. The Nicosia criminal court found that Eliades had "knowingly misled" shareholders, who had the right to be properly informed. "At the time he did not want to give the true picture," the verdict read.
More serious charges of collusion and concealing data were dropped during the trial, and four other former senior officials were acquitted. Bank of Cyprus was fined 120,000 euros ($144,000) for failing to take the necessary action to give a clear picture of the bank's finances which could have affected its share price.
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