The widow and other family members of Zurich Insurance’s late finance chief, Pierre Wauthier, have said at the firm’s annual shareholder meeting that they could not accept the results of a probe into his suicide which exonerated the firm and its former chairman of responsibility.
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“We cannot accept your conclusion that his suicide was unaccountable,” Fabienne Wauthier told the packed hall on Wednesday. She was joined on stage by her daughter and the mother and brother of her late husband Pierre.
Wauthier’s brother added: “It was not normal pressure at the office that led to his suicide.”
Pierre Wauthier killed himself last August, leaving behind a suicide note in which he described himself as demoralised because of a new, aggressive tone at Zurich under then-chairman Josef Ackermann.
Ackermann stepped down several days later, but has denied responsibility for what he called a “very tragic event”. He declined to comment through a spokesman on Wednesday.
An investigation into Wauthier’s death, commissioned by Switzerland’s financial regulator FINMA and conducted by law firm Homburger, found “no indication that the CFO was subjected to any undue or inappropriate pressure”, Zurich said in November.
Before Fabienne Wauthier spoke, Zurich Chairman Tom de Swaan defended the probe, saying it had been conducted “carefully and conclusively”.
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Review clears Zurich Insurance in CFO’s suicide
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A review overseen by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) into the company’s role in Wauthier’s suicide found that he was not subjected to “undue pressure” at work and that Zurich’s management was not at fault. Circumstances surrounding the 53-year-old’s death had suggested otherwise. In a typed suicide note, Wauthier reportedly blamed Ackermann for…
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The “Banking: The Human Crisis” international survey published on Wednesday by UNI Global Union revealed that over 80% cent of banking and insurance unions in 26 countries cited worsening health as a major issue for their members in the past two years. More than half of the unions in 16 countries from Europe, four from…
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In a company release, Ackermann said his colleague’s untimely death had profoundly affected him and that he felt partially responsible. The 53-year-old Wauthier was found in his home in Zug on Monday morning, with preliminary reports indicating a suicide. “The unexpected death of Pierre Wauthier has deeply shocked me. I have reasons to believe that…
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