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Credit Suisse settles with star banker over spying scandal
by AFP Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) July 25, 2021

Credit Suisse reached an out-of-court settlement with former star wealth manager Iqbal Khan over a spying scandal that cost the scalp of the then-chief executive, Switzerland's second-biggest bank said Sunday.

CEO Tidjane Thiam was forced to resign in February 2020 after admitting the bank had hired investigators to follow Khan, head of international wealth management, because he had opted to move to arch-rival, UBS.

As well as sending shockwaves through banking circles, the case sparked a criminal probe in Switzerland.

"All parties involved have agreed to end the case," Credit Suisse spokeswoman Simone Meier told NZZ am Sonntag, which revealed the agreement. Meier declined to comment further when contacted by AFP.

The public prosecutor of the canton of Zurich has also ended his investigation, as the complaints have been withdrawn, NZZ am Sonntag reported.

Thiam's resignation followed a torrid six-month scandal that began with revelations in the Swiss press that Khan had been shadowed by agents from a private detective company hired after he joined UBS.

At one point, Khan physically confronted the people following him.

In October, chief operating officer Pierre-Olivier Bouee resigned, acknowledging at the end of an internal investigation that he "alone" had ordered the tailing without informing his superiors.

He had wanted to ensure that Khan was not trying to poach other employees, according to the internal investigation.

The case was reopened in December 2019 when the bank admitted to a second case of espionage, this time involving the former head of human resources, and then in February after media reports that the surveillance had also targeted the environmental organisation Greenpeace.

vog/pbr/spm

CREDIT SUISSE GROUP

UBS GROUP AG


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CYBER WARS
Amnesty urges moratorium on surveillance technology in Pegasus scandal
Paris (AFP) July 24, 2021
Allegations that governments used phone malware supplied by an Israeli firm to spy on journalists, activists and heads of state have "exposed a global human rights crisis," Amnesty International said, asking for a moratorium on the sale and use of surveillance technology. In a Friday statement, the NGO warned of "the devastating impact of the poorly regulated spyware industry on human rights worldwide." The NSO Group's Pegasus software - able to switch on a phone's camera or microphone and harv ... read more

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