Empresas y finanzas

Bahrain's Alba settles bribery suit with Alcoa



    By Amena Bakr

    DUBAI (Reuters) - Aluminum Bahrain (ALBA (ALB.MC) and U.S. aluminum maker ALCOA (AA.NY) said on Tuesday they had settled the Bahraini firm's racketeering and fraud suit against Alcoa in return for $85 million in cash plus long-term raw material supply contracts.

    Alba put the value of the contracts at $362 million. Alcoa declined to give a value.

    Alba had accused Alcoa of conspiring with a businessman to orchestrate bribes in Bahrain and to overcharge it for alumina, the crucial material used to make aluminum.

    The Bahraini firm filed a lawsuit in U.S. federal court in Pennsylvania - Alcoa is based in Pittsburgh - in 2008 and sought damages in excess of $1 billion and punitive damages.

    "We are very happy with this settlement, this is great news for Alba and Bahrain," Alba Chairman Mahmood Hashim al-Kooheji, who is also chief executive of Bahrain's sovereign wealth fund Mumtalakat, said in an interview from Manama.

    (Additional reporting by Steve James in New York; Writing by Amran Abocar; Editing by Tim Dobbyn)