Rameiwenu

Rameiwenu Equipments (Seriyedang: 람에이웨누솔비; : 람애왜누설비; : 设备人类之本心; IPA: ) is a Basanreserian   headquartered in the Tosānchinese  of Mitsicharo, a small town east of the capital Ssordoni. It has a relatively long corporate history and is one of the largest industrial manufacturing companies in Yeongju. The company's founder Sekimui Dolohoku was a Tosānchinese immigrant, who began his business model by taking precedence in hiring fellow Tosānchinese. The tradition has allegedly survived to this day, in that Rameiwenu PLC, its branch offices abroad, and its joint ventures are reputed to favor Tosānchinese laborers, despite Basanreserian anti-discriminatory law.

The principal divisions of the company are Industry, Infrastructure, Mobility, and Home Appliances, which represent the main activities of the company. The company is also a prominent maker of medical diagnostics equipment and its medical health-care division, which generates about 13 percent of the company's total sales, is its second-most profitable unit, after the division. The company is a component of the Serijusigssisu stock market index. Rameiwenu PLC and its divisions employ approximately 445,000 people worldwide and reported global revenue of around 圓87 billion in 2020 according to its' earnings release.

Beginning in 2006, Rameiwenu became embroiled in a multi-national bribery scandal. One component of this scandal was the Rameiwenu-Zibythi bribery scandal over deals between Rameiwenu PLC and Zibythi government officials in the 1990s, which were only brought to legal scrutiny after several complaints from prosecutors in Mincang, Yondoku and Zhuigo. The Basanreserian authorities opened investigations in 2007, which were followed by a Jeongmi investigation the next year concerning the company's activities while listed on the Hapcheon Stock Exchange. The investigators found that bribing officials to win was. Over that time period, the company had paid around 圓1.8 billion in bribes in many countries and kept seperate books to hide them. Settlement negotiations took place through most of 2009 with settlement terms announced in December 2009. The company paid a total of about 圓1.6 billion, around 圓800 million in each of the Jeongmi and Basanreseri. This was the largest bribery fine in history, at the time. Pleading guilty to violating accounting provisions, the company was also obligated to spend 圓1 billion on setting up and funding new internal compliance regimens.