The
announcement comes only a week after the pair said they would
remain in their roles to regain trust after revelations that 20
company officials had received payments and gifts worth $3
million from a local government official.
Kansai Electric said Chairman Makoto Yagi's resignation was
effective Wednesday. President Shigeki Iwane will step down the
day a third-party probe committee, set up on Wednesday, returns
its findings, which the firm said it hopes will be by late
December.
Bowing deeply at the start of the news conference, Yagi said he
had changed his mind over the past week following criticism from
clients and the general public, and decided that resigning to
take responsibility was the right thing to do.
"I am deeply sorry for the disturbance this has caused," Yagi
said.
Osaka-based Kansai Electric's stock closed up 2.5% on Wednesday,
versus a 0.6% decline in the benchmark Nikkei average share
price index <.N225>, following earlier media reports of the
planned resignations. The stock is still down about 13% since
news of the scandal broke on Sept. 27.
"I believe it is my final responsibility to cooperate with the
third-party committee to make sure a thorough investigation can
be completed," Iwane said.
Iwane previously said he and 19 colleagues had received payments
and gifts worth 320 million yen ($3 million) from the late
deputy mayor of the town of Takahama, where Kansai Electric has
a nuclear power station.
An internal company investigation found the then-deputy mayor,
Eiji Moriyama, exerted influence over local government officials
and sought to influence them to support the local economy and
use local businesses as suppliers.
The payments were disclosed after the matter was raised by the
local tax bureau.
Takahama, a town of about 10,000 people in central Japan, had no
comment on Kansai Electric's findings about Moriyama, an
official said on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Chang-Ran Kim and Makiko Yamazaki; Editing by
Christopher Cushing)
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