New York (AFP)

Credit Suisse on Tuesday reached agreements with the American, British and Swiss authorities, including the payment of $ 475 million, to end the lawsuits related to loans granted to Mozambique state-owned enterprises at the heart of a vast affair of corruption.

The transactions in question, organized by the Swiss firm between 2013 and 2016, were partly used to pay bribes even though they were presented to investors as a means of financing the development of fishing in Mozambique, the authorities detailed in separate press releases.

The Swiss establishment has not at the same time fully disclosed the extent of Mozambique's indebtedness, and therefore the risks of non-repayment, and has shown significant deficiencies in its internal controls, accuse the authorities.

The Swiss bank, which is already facing the fallout from the Greensill and Archegos scandals, was consequently sentenced in total to $ 547 million in penalties, fines and restitution in the United States and the United Kingdom, said the US Department of Justice.

The number two in the Swiss banking sector having already paid certain sums, it will have to pay another 475 million dollars: 200 million to the British financial authority FCA, nearly 100 million to the American market policeman, the SEC, and 175.5 million at the US Department of Justice.

The bank also agreed with the British authorities to cancel for $ 200 million owed by Mozambique.

- Scandal of the "hidden debt" -

At the same time, the institution has entered into an agreement with the Swiss Financial Markets Authority (Finma), providing for third-party verification of measures intended to improve its internal control and risk management system at group level.

Finma has also imposed, for a limited time, specific conditions on any new credit operation organized by the bank on behalf of countries "financially weak or exposed to corruption".

This case is part of a large scandal of loans granted to three Mozambican public companies - ProIndicus, Ematum and MAM - by Credit Suisse and the Russian bank VTB, theoretically to finance projects of maritime surveillance, fishing and shipyards.

They would in fact have largely served to maintain corruption for the benefit of those close to power.

The affair erupted in 2016, when the Mozambican government revealed that it had contracted these loans without notifying Parliament or its donors.

After this scandal, the IMF and most of the country's donors, one of the poorest in the world, suspended their aid.

As a result of this so-called "hidden debt" scandal, Maputo was forced to stop paying its debt and its currency, the metical, collapsed, plunging the country into the most serious financial crisis since its independence in 1975.

Credit Suisse, which claims to have already taken measures to strengthen its governance and processes, has posted a charge of $ 230 million in its accounts for the third quarter.

The bank says it is "satisfied" with the end of the lawsuits initiated by the American, British and Swiss authorities, which allow it to "draw a line" on this part of the scandal.

Credit Suisse was already shaken in the spring by the bankruptcy of the British company Greensill, in which 10 billion dollars had been invested, then by the implosion of the American fund Archegos, which cost it some 5.5 billion dollars.

The Russian bank VTB for its part agreed to pay $ 6 million to the SEC in the Mozambique loans affair.

© 2021 AFP