The World Economic Forum on Friday said its board had completed an investigation into allegations against WEF founder Klaus Schwab and found that "there is no evidence of material wrongdoing" by him.
The World Economic Forum had launched an investigation in April into Schwab following a whistleblower letter alleging misconduct by him. The announcement of the investigation came after Schwab said he was resigning as chairman in April, without stating a reason.
The Geneva-based organisation also said it has appointed BlackRock CEO Larry Fink and Roche Holding's Vice-Chair Andre Hoffmann as interim co-chairs of its board.
The World Economic Forum had launched an investigation in April into Schwab following a whistleblower letter alleging misconduct by him. The announcement of the investigation came after Schwab said he was resigning as chairman in April, without stating a reason.
The Geneva-based organisation also said it has appointed BlackRock CEO Larry Fink and Roche Holding's Vice-Chair Andre Hoffmann as interim co-chairs of its board.
You may also like
Putin pays tribute to Soviet pilots buried on American land; Alaska visit recalls WWII ties - watch
Tijjani Reijnders relishes Premier League challenge, excited to play under Pep Guardiola
Midcap and smallcap indices rally, over 20 stocks gain 10-50 pc this week
Trump says Peace Agreement and not ceasefire is best way to end 'horrific' Russia-Ukraine war
They are trying to weaken democracy: RJD's Sanjay Yadav accuses NDA ahead of LoP Gandhi's Bihar visit against SIR