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BackMondelez CEO Defends Continued Business in Russia, Cites Job Protection
Mondelez CEO Defends Continued Business in Russia, Cites Job Protection
En développement
BBC Business16.06.2026Business2 dk okuma

Mondelez CEO Defends Continued Business in Russia, Cites Job Protection

L'essentiel

  • Mondelez CEO Dirk Van de Put defended the company's decision to continue operating in Russia, citing job protection and preventing Kremlin seizure of assets.
  • He admitted dissatisfaction with paying taxes that fund the war in Ukraine but believes pulling out would be worse.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

Mondelez continues to operate in Russia despite the ongoing war in Ukraine, a decision that has drawn criticism from politicians. The company also operates in Ukraine, facing direct conflict.

Taille de police

The boss of Cadbury chocolate-maker Mondelez has defended its decision to continue doing business in Russia but admitted he is "not pleased" the firm's taxes are funding the war with Ukraine.

Chief executive Dirk Van de Put said it was the "right decision" to stay after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, saying pulling out would risk thousands of jobs and leave Modelez vulnerable to the Kremlin taking control of its local operations.

Others remained but Modelez said it had discontinued new investment in its Russian business and suspended spending on advertising.

In an in-depth discussion as part of the BBC's Big Boss Interview series, Van de Put said: "I think over time you try to be neutral in the whole conflict. We're not trying to take any side.

"I think we did the right thing for our people in Russia. Can we be criticised for that? Yeah, of course. We pay taxes in Russia that helps the war. I'm not pleased about that."

Since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the country has generated sales of between $1bn and $1.4bn a year for Mondelez.

Last year, more than 70 MPs signed a letter from the All Party Parliamentary Group on Ukraine to Van de Put calling for Modelez to sever its business ties with Russia.

Alex Sobel, chair of the parliamentary group, wrote: "Continuing to operate in a nation responsible for the deaths of countless Ukrainian civilians and the abduction of thousands of children cannot be justified under any definition of 'business as usual'."

Van de Put told the BBC he believed if Modelez pulled out of Russia: "They would have confiscated our plant. It would have probably given them a much bigger source of income, keep on selling our products to fund the war.

"So I feel that in the end it is not the most popular decision, but I think it was the right decision."

Modelez, which also produces Philadelphia cream cheese, Ritz crackers and triangular chocolate Toblerone, continues to operate in Ukraine although the conflict is never far away.

On the morning he spoke to the BBC, Van de Put said an office building there had been hit. "Everybody's safe," he said. "But yes, it's the reality of the situation."

Modelez operates two manufacturing plants in Ukraine - one in Trostyanets, near the Russian border and one in Vyshhorod, close to the capital Kyiv.

"One plant got hit twice, we've rebuilt it twice, " said Van de Put, adding that it costs tens of millions to do so.

"We've agreed that we will rebuild every single time there so we keep on investing in the country. We doubled everybody's salary when the conflict started, and we have not fired anybody.

Questions ouvertes

  • What are the specific job numbers at risk?
  • What are the long-term financial implications of continued Russian operations?
  • Will further political pressure force Mondelez to reconsider its stance?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by BBC Business.

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