China Releases Ex-Rio Tinto Executive From Jail

July 04, 2018 / www.4-traders.com / Article Link

By Rhiannon Hoyle

SYDNEY--Former Rio Tinto PLC executive Stern Hu, who was jailed in China for bribery, was freed from prison on Wednesday.

Mr. Hu, the Australian who previously spearheaded sales for Rio Tinto in China, was in 2010 found guilty of charges he accepted around $935,000 in bribes from steelmakers and stole commercial secrets that undermined China's steel industry.

China's Foreign Ministry confirmed Mr. Hu was released in a daily briefing.

Mr. Hu couldn't immediately be reached. A spokesman for Rio Tinto declined to comment.

Mr. Hu was the main defendant in a closely watched case against four Rio Tinto employees that dramatically swung from accusations of espionage to admissions of bribery over iron-ore sales.

The trial took place at a time of strained relations between an industrializing China--in need of iron ore for its steel industry--and Australia, which dominated global trade in the commodity, the cost of which was quickly rising.

It also came as Rio Tinto was considering a $120 billion merger with rival BHP Billiton Ltd. that China feared would create a behemoth able to dictate pricing of minerals key to its industries.

In 2010, Rio Tinto, which had initially defended its employees, fired the four of them after it found there was clear evidence they had taken bribes.

The group--comprising Mr. Hu and three subordinates, Chinese nationals Wang Yong, Ge Minqiang and Liu Caikui--was accused of steering iron-ore shipments to more than a dozen Chinese steelmakers in exchange for payments. Mr. Hu admitted he accepted bribes on two occasions from steelmakers.

Mr. Hu was ordered to pay fines of 1 million yuan ($150,600) and sentenced to 10 years in prison, starting with his detention in July 2009.

A Shanghai court twice awarded Mr. Hu six-month sentence reductions for being a model prisoner, shortening his 10-year sentence by a year, according to a court document.

Mr. Hu's three Rio Tinto colleagues received sentences ranging from seven to 14 years.

Write to Rhiannon Hoyle at [email protected]

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