ABB, Siemens’s CEOs to Attend ;In-Kingdom Total Value Add Conference; in Saudi Arabia

ABB and Siemens’s CEOs are traveling to Saudi Arabia to attend a supplier conference, just weeks after they pulled out of an investment event in the country following the death of a journalist.

According to Reuters, ABB CEO Ulrich Spiesshofer and Joe Kaeser from Siemens will travel to Dammam for an event organized by Saudi Aramco IPO-ARMO.SE called In-Kingdom Total Value Add. (IKTVA)

The pair had been among the executives who boycotted an earlier investment conference following the killing of Jamal Khashoggi.

Reuters wrote that during his trip Spiesshofer will visit an ABB factory in Dammam, and will also meet representatives from Saudi Aramco, one of ABB’s most important customers in the region.

Among other attendees at the IKTVA event are Paal Kibsgaard from Schlumberger and Jeff Miller, CEO of oilfield services company Halliburton.

“Alongside being a responsible partner to our customers, we act as a responsible employer to our workforce. Therefore, our CEO will meet some 200 employees at our plant in Dammam during his trip to Saudi Arabia,” ABB said in a statement on Sunday.

“In addition, the CEO will also be meeting one of our most important customers in the region in order to foster further dialogue with them.”

A person familiar with the situation said Spiesshofer was only taking part in the opening ceremony, and would not be a speaker or a panelist.

Siemens confirmed the attendance of Kaeser at IKTVA, where he is among the speakers.

“This is a business trip to the Middle East where Mr. Kaeser will visit customers and business partners in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia among others,” a Siemens spokesman said. “In Saudi Arabia, he will visit only our customer, Saudi Aramco, in Dammam.”

More than two dozen top officials and executives from the United States and Europe boycotted an investment conference last month over the killing of Khashoggi inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

Khashoggi, a critic of the Saudi government and a columnist for the Washington Post, was killed on Oct. 2 by rogue operatives in the Saudi government.

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