Drugmaker GSK says fined $490 million in China graft probe

20 Sep, 2014

A Chinese court on Friday fined British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline 3.0 billion yuan ($490 million) following a nearly year-long bribery probe, the company said. The firm's former head of China operations, Mark Reilly who would be deported, and four other ex-officials were given suspended sentences of between two and four years in prison, the official Xinhua news agency said.
The fine levied by the Changsha Intermediate People's Court after a closed hearing in central Hunan province was the largest ever handed down by a Chinese court, according to Xinhua. It equals the precise amount that China's ministry of public security said last year had been funnelled between GSK and travel agencies since 2007. Police allege that GSK took kickbacks from travel agencies to organise conferences that never took place. The company also "resorted to bribery to boost sales of its medical products and sought benefits in an unfair manner," the court said in a statement, according to Xinhua.
"GSK bribed, in various forms, people working in medical institutions across the country, and the amount of money involved was huge. Five senior executives actively organized, pushed forward and implemented sales with bribery," the court statement added. The firm said in a statement that the court had found it guilty of "bribing non-government personnel".

Read Comments