Former Zurich Insurance chief commits suicide

Martin Senn's suicide comes nearly three years after Zurich Insurance's finance chief Pierre Wauthier killed himself


Afp May 30, 2016
Martin Senn, CEO of Zurich Insurance Group from 2010 to 2015 and pictured here in the first year of his period in charge of Switzerland's largest insurance provider, has committed suicide aged 59. PHOTO: AFP

ZURICH:

The former head of Zurich Insurance Group, Martin Senn, has committed suicide, the company said Monday, nearly three years after the company's chief financial officer took his own life.


"It is with great shock and sadness that we must inform you of the sudden death of Martin Senn," the company said of the 59-year-old who served as chief executive from 2010 until last December.



"His family informed us that Martin took his life last Friday," it said, lamenting the loss of "not only a highly valued former CEO and colleague but also a close friend."


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"Our thoughts are with his bereaved family and friends, to whom we extend our deepest sympathies," the company said, adding it would provide no further comments on the tragedy out of respect for Senn and his family.


Senn's suicide comes nearly three years after Zurich Insurance's finance chief Pierre Wauthier killed himself in August 2013, prompting a shake-up at Switzerland's largest insurance provider.


The company's powerful chairman at the time, former head of Deutsche Bank Josef Ackermann, resigned just days after Wauthier was found dead amid speculation that the two had fallen out over the group's accounts.


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Ackermann said he had decided to quit because he had reasons to believe that Wauthier's family felt he should take a share of the responsiblity, though he underlined that any allegations were unfounded.


Two independent probes meanwhile concluded Wauthier, a 53-year-old French and British citizen who had served as CFO since 2011, had not been subjected to any "undue or inappropriate pressure", and that "the financial figures were confirmed as appropriate", the insurer said later.

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