WARSAW (Reuters) - Poland's
government said on Wednesday that Hewlett-Packard Co. was preparing to
acknowledge "corrupt activities" at its Polish unit after an
industry-wide investigation into bribes allegedly paid in exchange for
government computer contracts.
The
U.S. company's Polish unit was not available for comment and its head
of communications for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Neta Tully,
could not immediately be reached by telephone.
Polish
officials said dozens of people had been charged as part of a graft
investigation, among them representatives of major information
technology (IT) companies, government officials and former police
officers.
Bartlomiej
Sienkiewicz, the Polish Interior Minister, said HP would make an
announcement later on Wednesday about its local unit, one of the biggest
IT operations in Poland.
"It's
a breakthrough moment in Poland when a great international company
acknowledges its corrupt activities in Poland," Sienkiewicz told Polish
public radio.
The minister
said Poland's Central Anti-Corruption Bureau (CBA) had cooperated with
the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Securities and Exchange
Commission on the issue.
Asked
by Reuters for more details, CBA spokesman Jacek Dobrzynski said the
agency launched an investigation of major IT companies in Poland in
2011. He said close to 70 charges had been brought against 41 people.
Zbigniew
Jaskolski, a spokesman for the Appellate Prosecutors' office in Warsaw,
which handles major cases, said the central suspect in the
investigation was the former director of the IT Projects Center, a state
agency which oversees IT systems for government institutions.
That
official, said Jaskolski, "faces charges of accepting financial
benefits worth over 3 million zlotys ($992,800). Overall charges in this
case include offering and accepting bribes, and taking part in
collusion over tenders".
He
said the investigation was still in progress and that, to his knowledge,
prosecutors had not yet applied to a court to begin prosecutions in the
case.
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