Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

EDC Expresses Regret For Us$41m Loan To Back Bombardier Sale To Zuma Allies

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Aug, 2019 08:01 PM

    OTTAWA - Canada's export credit agency says it regrets a 2015 decision to lend US$41 million to a South African company owned by members of a family with ties to former president Jacob Zuma.

     

    Export Development Canada executive vice-president Carl Burlock says in the months and years that followed, the agency became increasingly concerned about the loan it provided to Westdawn Investments to backstop the sale of Bombardier aircraft.

     

    Over that time, Burlock said in a statement Wednesday, allegations related to corruption and political interference were mounting against members of the Gupta family, which owns the company.

     

    "EDC's loan to Westdawn has been the subject of public interest — and for good reason," Burlock said of a story first reported by the Globe and Mail newspaper in August 2017.

     

    "During this time, EDC monitored these developments and our concern grew, as did the public's, as more information came to light."

     

    The Globe reported that the money helped the wealthy Gupta family, which has been closely connected to Zuma, buy a $52-million Global 6000 jet from Montreal-based Bombardier. The information, the report said, was contained in emails obtained by two South African investigative-journalism units.

     

    Zuma resigned as South Africa's president in 2018 after a near-decade-long tenure marked by persistent corruption allegations.

     

    Export Development Canada, a Crown corporation that backs loans and provides insurance, ended its business relationship with Westdawn in December 2017.

     

    The agency's decision to support the purchase, Burlock added, was in line with its international commitments under the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development and relied on the fact there were no formal charges or active investigations related to the allegations.

     

    The process flagged political influence concerns, but he noted it lacked an in-depth probe into the risks related to people who hold, or have held, powerful public positions.

     

    "As a result, EDC chose to proceed and acknowledges that that decision was a mistake," said Burlock.

     

    "This transaction has provided powerful lessons for EDC. It helped us see gaps that we have since filled, resulting in improvements to both our due diligence and decision-making processes."

     

    Westdawn has filed a lawsuit in the United Kingdom against the agency to contest the deal's termination, he said. The litigation is still before the courts.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Abuse Survivors Await Apology From Anglican Church For Physical Harm: Bennett

    Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett says the Anglican Church's recent apology for "spiritual harm" it has done to Indigenous Peoples is a beginning.

    Abuse Survivors Await Apology From Anglican Church For Physical Harm: Bennett

    Interviews With Family Of Highway Shooting Victim Heard In Calgary Court

    Interviews With Family Of Highway Shooting Victim Heard In Calgary Court
    The trial of an Alberta youth accused of firing a gun at a German tourist on a highway west of Calgary is having to rely on police interviews done with the family after he was shot in the head.

    Interviews With Family Of Highway Shooting Victim Heard In Calgary Court

    Younger Voters Mobilizing To Make Federal Election About Climate Change

    Several hundred Canadian millennials plan to rally in at least 30 cities across the country today, demanding a federal leaders' debate on climate change.

    Younger Voters Mobilizing To Make Federal Election About Climate Change

    Winnipeg Police Chief Shares Frustration About Addictions Resources In Letter To Officers

    Winnipeg Police Chief Shares Frustration About Addictions Resources In Letter To Officers
    There have been 25 homicides in Winnipeg this year, three more than there were in all of 2018.

    Winnipeg Police Chief Shares Frustration About Addictions Resources In Letter To Officers

    Search Continues As Quebec Entrepreneur, Teen Son Now Missing For One Week

    Search Continues As Quebec Entrepreneur, Teen Son Now Missing For One Week
    The search for a missing Quebec businessman and his teen son who haven't been heard from in a week continued today as search and rescue teams focused on a narrowed search area.

    Search Continues As Quebec Entrepreneur, Teen Son Now Missing For One Week

    Companies To Appear Before Panel Today In Public Inquiry Into B.C. Gas Prices

    Four oil and gas companies are expected to answer questions today about how they use the Trans Mountain pipeline

    Companies To Appear Before Panel Today In Public Inquiry Into B.C. Gas Prices