Executives may have broken Chinese law, says Glaxo

July 22, 2013 04:22 pm | Updated November 29, 2021 01:15 pm IST - BEIJING (AP)

A file picture shows the GlaxoSmithKline offices in London. On suspicion that its employees bribed doctors, Chinese anti-corruption officials started their investigation.

A file picture shows the GlaxoSmithKline offices in London. On suspicion that its employees bribed doctors, Chinese anti-corruption officials started their investigation.

Drug manufacturer GlaxoSmithKline, under investigation on suspicion that its employees bribed Chinese doctors, said on Monday some of its executives might have broken the law.

The British company said its president for Asia-Pacific and emerging markets met with Chinese police officials who are investigating whether GSK employees bribed doctors and hospital administrators to prescribe its drugs.

“Certain senior executives of GSK China who know our systems well appear to have acted outside of our processes and controls, which breaches Chinese law,” the executive, Abbas Hussain, said in a statement.

The police ministry has said four employees of GSK’s China unit, including a vice president, have been detained. The company says its finance director for China is barred from leaving the country but is not detained.

Police say the employees funnelled as much as 3 billion yuan ($490 million) through travel agencies and consulting firms to hide the source of bribes, according to Chinese news reports. Investigators have not made clear how much of that money was paid as bribes.

The official Xinhua News Agency said last week the employees appeared to have used that strategy to evade GlaxoSmithKline PLC’s internal anti-bribery controls.

“I want to make it very clear that we share the desire of the Chinese authorities to root out corruption wherever it exists,” said Mr. Hussain in the statement.

“We fully support the efforts of the Chinese authorities in their reforms of the medical sector and stand ready to work with them to make the changes for the benefit of patients in China,” Mr. Hussain said. “We will actively look at our business model to ensure we make a significant contribution to meeting the economic, healthcare and environmental needs of China and its citizens.”

Also on Monday, The Financial Times newspaper reported Shanghai police have detained an anti-fraud investigator who worked for GSK. The newspaper identified him as Stephen Humphrey, a British national who operates a firm in Hong Kong.

The British Embassy in Beijing confirmed that a British national was detained on July 10 in Shanghai but said it could give no other details. A Shanghai police spokesman, who would give only his surname, Xu, said he had no information on any detention of a Briton.

Last week, the Chinese drug regulator launched a crackdown on misconduct in its pharmaceutical market, though it gave no indication it was linked to the GlaxoSmithKline probe.

The State Food and Drug Administration said the campaign is aimed at stamping out unauthorized drug production, improper online drug retailing and sales of fake traditional Chinese medicines.

The new Chinese leadership that took power in November has promised to improve China’s health system and rein in surging costs of medicine and medical care that are fuelling public frustration.

Meanwhile, the Cabinet’s planning agency is investigating production costs at 60 Chinese and foreign pharmaceutical manufacturers, according to state media, possibly a prelude to revising state-imposed price caps on key medications.

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