Turkish ministry probes drug maker over bribe claims
Turkey's Health Ministry has said it launched an investigation into allegations a drug-maker, which it did not name, secured $85 million in business advantages through bribery.
Reuters reported this week an anonymous whistleblower accused Swiss company Novartis of paying bribes through a consulting firm to secure advantages worth an estimated $85 million.
"The allegations carried in the press were taken as a tip-off and will be investigated," the ministry said in a statement on March 31.
The Turkish unit of Novartis said allegations against it were "unfounded" and based on a former complaint.
"It emerged in 2013 as a result of an internal investigation that these allegations were completely unfounded," Novartis Turkey said in a statement.
It said the Labor Ministry launched an investigation concerning the allegations in 2014 and "concluded that all the allegations were completely unfounded and the ministry did not see it as necessary to take any action."
The anonymous whistleblower said Novartis had paid a government relations consultant the equivalent of $290,000 plus costs during 2013 and 2014, before the Turkish Social Security Institution launched an investigation in 2015, leading the drug-maker to end the association.
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