In a brief statementExternal link released on Thursday, the Oerlikon Group said it had entered into an agreement with the local management team to sell all its operations in Russia. “The business will continue to operate independently under the new owners,” said the company.
On March 4, the Swiss firm ceased all international cross-border business activities with Russia following its invasion of Ukraine. It called the sale the “final step” in ceasing all business activities within Russia.
The company employs 48 people in Russia at six sites. The cost of the transaction has not been disclosed. Last year, Oerlikon’s sales in the country amounted to less than CHF5 million ($5.2 million). Globally, the engineering and manufacturing group, which has its headquarters in Pfäffikon in canton Schwyz, employs more than 11,800 employees at 207 locations in 38 countries; it generated sales of CHF2.6 billion in 2021.
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Stay or go? The dilemma of Swiss companies in Russia
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Caught between potential damage to their image and having their businesses confiscated, Swiss firms active in Russia have a tough choice.
The announcement comes amid more scrutiny of ties between Swiss companies and Russian elites suspected of supporting Russian President Vladimir Putin. Russian billionaire Viktor Vekselberg is a minority shareholder of the Oerlikon Group as well as other industrial companies with headquarters in Switzerland.
Vekselberg and his investment group Renova were put on the US sanctions list back in 2018 following Russia’s invasion of Crimea. This forced him to reduce his personal stake in the Swiss industry to avoid exposing these firms to trade restrictions. On March 14, the US government issued a new round of sanctions that targeted a yacht and an aircraft belonging to Vekselberg.
On May 16, another Swiss industrial group, Sulzer, had to temporarily suspend the activitiesExternal link of its two legal entities in Poland due to sanctions imposed by the Polish government on Vekselberg.
Novartis back in business
Swiss pharmaceutical giant Novartis announced that it is resuming business in Ukraine after reviewing the safety situation in the country.
“After studying current safety protocols in the country, and on advice which we will regularly review, we have begun to resume business operations remotely to help the war-torn country restore some basic critical business processes,” Novartis said in a press release on June 1.
The company has condemned the war and is providing humanitarian support, financial donations and medicine to people in the country.
“The safety and security of our people remains our number one objective, and we will constantly review the situation and our business operations in Ukraine,” Novartis wrote.
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Russian oligarch Vekselberg hit with US sanctions
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US targets yacht and private jet belonging to Russian billionaire Viktor Vekselberg, who is resident in Switzerland.
Swiss football boss wants crackdown on individual hooligans
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The head of the Swiss Football League says he prefers a harsher approach to individual hooligans rather than collective punishment measures affecting all fans.
Amherd: Council of Europe is ‘as urgently needed as ever’
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The Swiss government emphasised on Sunday the vital role of the Strasbourg-based Council of Europe, 75 years after it was founded.
Swiss minister: Italy will back Switzerland in EU talks
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Bern can count on the backing of Italy as it re-enters talks with the European Union on future relations, Viola Amherd says.
Student protestors at University of Lausanne continue pro-Palestine sit-in
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Since Thursday, a hall on campus has been occupied by students calling for a boycott of Israeli academic institutions and a ceasefire in Gaza.
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Swiss public broadcasters RTS and SRF are drastically reducing their communications via the social network X (formerly Twitter).
Israel: president of Swiss universities rejects academic boycott
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Luciana Vaccaro, president of Swissuniversities, the umbrella group of Swiss universities, is not in favour of an academic boycott of Israeli universities.
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.
Read more
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Stay or go? The dilemma of Swiss companies in Russia
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Caught between potential damage to their image and having their businesses confiscated, Swiss firms active in Russia have a tough choice.
The Swiss textile machinery industry has a China dilemma
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Amid allegations of forced labour in Xinjiang, the Swiss textile machinery sector faces thorny questions about its ties to and reliance on China.
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