Former Zurich Insurance CEO commits suicide

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Former Zurich Insurance boss Martin Senn. [Photo/Zurich Insurance's official account on Twitter]

Former Zurich Insurance boss Martin Senn has committed suicide six months after leaving the company under a cloud, a tragedy that comes less than three years after Zurich's finance chief took his own life.

Senn, 59, shot himself at his family's Alpine resort home in Klosters, Swiss newspaper Blick reported. He had quit as chief executive of Zurich in December following a series of profit warnings and a botched takeover of British rival RSA.

"Martin Senn's family has informed us that Martin committed suicide last Friday," the company said in a statement yesterday, adding it was "stunned and deeply shaken."

His death follows the suicide of Zurich's finance chief Pierre Wauthier in August 2013, which brought into sharp focus the pressures facing senior corporate executives in Switzerland and elsewhere.

Wauthier, 53, killed himself after writing a suicide note addressed "To whom it may concern" in which he described becoming demoralised by what he called a new, more aggressive tone at Zurich under then-Chairman Josef Ackermann.

Ackermann, a former head of Deutsche Bank, denied any wrongdoing but quit soon after Wauthier's death.

Weeks before Wauthier's death, Swisscom Chief Executive Carsten Schloter had taken his own life.

Senn had been CEO since 2010 at Zurich, which he joined after stints with Swiss banks in Asia. He was married to a Korean musician and had two grown children.

Acquaintances, who asked not to be named given the sensitivity of the situation, described him as withdrawn and reclusive following his departure from the company, which Zurich said at the time was by mutual agreement.

"He wasn't doing so well," a former colleague said, but added that Senn had not given the impression of being suicidal.

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