Deutsche Post chief to quit amid tax-dodge probe
By Dave Graham
BERLIN (Reuters) - Klaus Zumwinkel will resign as chief executive of German mail and logistics group Deutsche Post, the company said on Friday, as a tax-dodging probe threatened to ensnare more rich Germans.
The 64-year-old, a pillar of Germany's corporate establishment who has led Deutsche Post for 18 years, came under pressure to go after prosecutors said they suspected him of dodging about 1 million euros ($1.5 million) in taxes by transferring money to tax haven Liechtenstein.
"In the interest of the company he will resign" on Monday, Deutsche Post said in a brief statement on its Web site. "The executive committee respects this decision and proposes to the supervisory board to accept."
Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck told reporters Zumwinkel had admitted evading taxes. A spokesman for his ministry told a news conference that any others who thought they could be implicated in the probe should consider turning themselves in.
"I couldn't imagine that someone who had confirmed the fact of tax evasion, who had admitted it, would remain in such important company functions," Steinbrueck said.
Deutsche Telekom said Zumwinkel would also resign his position there, where he was supervisory board chairman.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said his departure from Deutsche Post was unavoidable, while Steinbrueck said the probe had caused considerable "moral damage". The state is Deutsche Post's biggest shareholder with a 31 percent stake.
Zumwinkel could not be reached by Reuters for comment.
However, commenting on his plans to resign as Deutsche Post chief, he told newspaper Bild: "I wanted to usher in a new era, but with a different changeover than has happened now."
Zumwinkel said he would work closely with the authorities, telling Bild: "I will take an active role in clarifying the questions about my private finances."
Hundreds more rich and prominent Germans faced a visit from police as part of the sweeping probe into offshore accounts.
LIECHTENSTEIN LEAKS
More than 100 tax-dodging suspects are likely to be raided by Monday, sources close to the investigation told Reuters, adding that about 1,000 people were under suspicion.
The daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung said no other board members of firms listed in the DAX, Germany's leading share index, were targeted.
Liechtenstein-based LGT bank, controlled by the princely family in the tiny Alpine principality, said some secret data for clients of its LGT Treuhand AG trust had been passed on to outsiders after a former employee stole the files six years ago. Continued...



