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Poland: Arrests made over suspected price-fixing for Holocaust trips

 |  January 18, 2016

Nine officials at six leading Israeli tourism companies were taken in for questioning Monday after a probe revealed they allegedly conspired to eliminate competition in the niche of flying Israeli high-schoolers to visit sites in formerly German-occupied Poland, Israel Police and Israel Antitrust Authority sources revealed Monday.

Operating as a de-facto cartel would constitute fraud and violation of antitrust law.
Following a months-long, covert investigation in which evidence was collected, investigators at the police and IAA have now begun the open stage of their inquiry, starting with raids on six tour companies on Monday. The homes of a few company executives were also searched. Investigators confiscated property and assets. One of those detained is also suspected of bribery.

At the Rishon Letzion Magistrates Court later in the day, the police were expected to ask to extend the detention of a few of the suspects.

The Education Ministry publishes tenders for tour companies to fly the high-schoolers to Poland, to visit former concentration camps operated by the Nazis and other Holocaust-related sites. Each school was supposed to be able to negotiate among all the six companies that applied in the tenders, and to choose the cheapest alternative to transport the teenagers to Poland.

However, in practice, the police suspect, there was no genuine competition. The companies allegedly coordinated their prices and divided up the market among themselves in advance.

Full content: Israel National News

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