SHARE
COPY LINK

POLITICS

Austria’s Raiffeisen Bank replaces ‘misleading’ Russia job ads

Austria's Raiffeisen Bank said on Tuesday that it was replacing job ads that contained 'misleading wording' implying the bank was expanding its operations in Russia.

Austria's Raiffeisen Bank replaces 'misleading' Russia job ads
The headquarters of Raiffeisen Bank International (RBI) are seen in Vienna. (Photo by ALEXANDER KLEIN / AFP)

The bank has vowed to reduce its business in Russia following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 but has so far not sold or spun off its Russian unit.

The Financial Times on Tuesday said it had found dozens of postings for Russia-based jobs, touting its growth plans in the country.

One of the job postings said the bank was “looking for a client manager who will attract clients,” the paper reported.

“The quotes from the job advertisements do not reflect the measures taken by Raiffeisen Bank International to date to reduce its Russian business, nor do they correspond to the further plans for the Russian business,” the bank said in a statement sent to AFP.

It added to be able to sell Raiffeisenbank Russia — the biggest Western bank still in Russia — “job positions that are necessary for functioning banking operations will continue to be filled or refilled”, but they are “not related to business growth”.

“The very few job ads which contained old and misleading wording are/will be replaced.” the bank said.

Raiffeisen Bank International said in its annual report for 2023 that it had made 2.4 billion euros ($.2.6 billion) in net profits. It paid 464 million euros in income tax in Russia.

The group announced in December an agreement with Austrian construction company Strabag, involving Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, who is under Western sanctions.

The deal to try to recover assets frozen in Russia before selling or spinning off Raiffeisenbank Russia has drawn the US authorities’ scrutiny.

A senior US Treasury official — in Austria in March to discuss sanctions against Russia — met Raffeisen Bank International officials in Vienna to discuss the bank’s business in Russia.

Last year, a Czech rights group filed a criminal complaint against the bank’s Czech and Austrian units, claiming the bank is financing terrorism with its activities in Russia.

Raiffeisenbank has been in Russia since 1996 and employs more than 9,000 people there.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

POLITICS

Austria ‘fully supports’ Britain’s Rwanda asylum policy, Chancellor says

Austria's Chancellor Karl Nehammer praised the UK's controversial plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda as PM Rishi Sunak makes his official visit to Vienna.

Austria 'fully supports' Britain's Rwanda asylum policy, Chancellor says

Conservative Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer said during a joint press statement with British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak that Austria “fully supports the British path”.

Under the controversial scheme set up by non-EU Britain, irregular arrivals will be denied the right to request asylum in the UK and sent instead to Rwanda.

Nehammer spoke of the UK being a “pioneer” for the European Union with its “Rwanda model”, broadcaster ORF reported. Austria and the UK are “strategic partners when it comes to ensuring that asylum procedures take place in safe third countries”, said the Chancellor. 

He added that the British model is a way to tackle organised crime and end the “dying in the Mediterranean”. However, there is still a long way to go within the EU, according to the Chancellor. 

During the brief press conference, Sunak underscored the shared commitment to addressing illegal migration, calling it ‘one of the defining issues of our time’.

Joint letter by EU leaders

PM Sunak, during his visit to Vienna, commended a joint letter by Austria and 14 other EU countries. The letter aims to propose ‘new ideas’ for handling undocumented migrants, including the possibility of sending some to third countries.

The letter to the European Commission comes ahead of June’s European Union elections in which far-right anti-immigration parties are forecast to make gains and as the bloc juggles how to implement a recently adopted overhaul of its asylum rules.

READ ALSO: Austria joins countries calling for asylum centres outside EU

Sunak expressed his enthusiasm about the proactive stance of the 15 countries, stating his intention to continue building alliances in the fight against irregular migration.

“We have to pursue new ideas, new solutions and deterrents, removals to safe third countries like the UK’s pioneering Rwanda scheme,” Sunak said.

The 15 countries said in their letter that they wanted the EU to toughen its asylum and migration pact.

They said it should be easier to send asylum seekers to third countries while their requests for protection are assessed.

Austria, Bulgaria, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Estonia, Greece, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland and Romania signed the letter, but not EU heavyweights France, Germany and Spain.

According to the bloc’s asylum agency, asylum applications in the EU surged to over one million last year, a seven-year high. Syrians and Afghans were the top groups seeking protection.

READ ALSO: Border centres and ‘safe’ states: EU gives go-ahead to major asylum changes

While Germany received nearly one-third of asylum bids, Cyprus, Austria, and Greece had the highest proportion in relation to their populations.

Austria’s anti-immigrant, far-right Freedom Party (FPOe) leads in polls to Nehammer’s conservative People’s Party (OeVP).

SHOW COMMENTS