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MAN demands millions from Swedish ex-CEO

Swedish businessman Håkan Samuelsson, the former CEO of German truckmaker MAN, has been ordered to pay €237 million in damages to his former employer for his alleged part in a major corruption scandal.

MAN demands millions from Swedish ex-CEO

The company also demanded sums from five other former managers totalling in the hundreds of millions, German daily Süddeutsche Zeitung reported on Monday.

But Samuelsson’s lawyer Wolf-Dieter von Gronau rejected the claim against the 59-year-old Swede as unfounded.

“It’s a completely ridiculous amount,” he told the Svenska Dagbladet (SvD) newspaper.

Last year, the Munich public prosecutor’s office slapped MAN with a penalty of more than €150 million for years of paying bribes to obtain foreign contracts. The company spent another €70 million righting their books and conducting an internal corruption investigation.

Now the company’s board of directors, led by Volkswagen boss Ferdinand Piëch, wants to hold its former leaders personally responsible for the damages, the paper said. VW owns 30 percent of MAN.

Though Samuelsson, former CFO Karlheinz Hornung, and the other managers stepped down in 2009 and were not personally implicated in the probe by Munich authorities, MAN has made the unusual choice to hold them liable for failing to prevent the corruption.

Piëch’s motto, according to the paper, is that battles aren’t won “with friendliness.”

“Probably no one (in a purely financial sense) has felt Piëch’s hardness as much as Hakan Samuelsson,” Süddeutsche Zeitung wrote.

It remains unclear whether MAN is attempting to cover the costs of a €200-million liability insurance policy taken out for its top managers, or whether, as Samuelsson’s lawyer claims, they are attempting to force a settlement, the paper said.

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GREENPEACE

Two hospitalized in Munich after activist crashes parachute into Euro 2020 stadium

At least two people were hospitalised Tuesday after a Greenpeace activist crash-landed on the pitch before the Germany-France match at Euro 2020 when his powered parachute microlight struck spidercam cables at Munich's Allianz Arena.

Two hospitalized in Munich after activist crashes parachute into Euro 2020 stadium
The activist lands on the turf of the Allianz Arena. credit: dpa | Christian Charisius

The pilot flew over the pitch just before kick-off in the Group F clash with “Kick out oil” written on the canopy of his parachute.

However, when the pilot hit television cables above the pitch, it knocked his microlight off balance and he landed on the turf after clipping one of the stands, where the casualties happened.

The activist was arrested soon after landing.

A Munich police spokesman told AFP that at least two people suffered head injuries and “both had to be taken to hospital, we don’t know yet how serious the injuries are”.

The police spokesman said the activist appears to have escaped injury, but “we are considering various criminal charges. Munich police has zero understanding for political actions that put lives at risk”.

UEFA also slammed the botched stunt.

“This inconsiderate act – which could have had very serious consequences for a huge number of people attending – caused injuries to several people attending the game who are now in hospital and law authorities will take the necessary action,” European football’s governing body said in a statement.

The parachutist above the stadium. Photo: dpa | Matthias Balk

“The staging of the match was fortunately not impacted by such a reckless and dangerous action, but several people were injured nonetheless.”

The stunt was a protest against German car manufacturer Volkswagen, one of the sponsors of the European Championship, Greenpeace explained in a Twitter post.

“UEFA and its partners are fully committed to a sustainable Euro 2020 tournament and many initiatives have been implemented to offset carbon emissions,” said UEFA.

Greenpeace said they regretted any harm caused.

“This protest was never intended to disrupt the game or hurt people,” read a Twitter post on Greenpeace’s official German account.

“We hope that everyone is OK and that no one was seriously injured. Greenpeace actions are always peaceful and non-violent.”

“Unfortunately, not everything went according to plan.”

READ MORE: Climate activists rage as Germany opts for drawn-out coal exit

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