The culture that allowed one of Sweden’s most important financial institutions to become part of a vast Russian money-laundering scandal has driven investors in the Nordic country to demand drastic changes.

Swedbank AB, which is based in Stockholm, is being investigated in Sweden, the Baltics and the U.S. amid allegations it may have handled over $100 billion in suspicious funds. The beneficiaries of its actions reportedly included convicted felon Paul Manafort and deposed Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych. Its chief executive officer was fired in late March and the bank parted ways with its chairman on Friday.

The Swedish Shareholders’ Association is now questioning the basic culture of Sweden’s oldest bank and biggest mortgage lender. The group says Swedbank appears to have fostered a tendency to “take lightly” the regulations and laws it should have followed. For that reason, the bank shouldn’t be allowed to appoint a new leadership from within its own ranks, it says.

“That culture must be stopped,” Joacim Olsson, the CEO of the association, said in an interview.

“This is such a serious mess,” he said. “Swedbank, also for symbolic reasons, needs to choose a CEO and chairman from the outside.”

On Friday, yet another top-level name in Nordic finance had his career derailed by the Russian laundering scandal, as Swedbank Chairman Lars Idermark acknowledged he needed to leave. A pattern is emerging in which Nordic banks, mostly via their Baltic operations, appear to have become conduits for enormous sums of dirty money from the former Soviet Union. Swedbank is allegedly part of the $230 billion Estonian laundering scandal that engulfed Danske Bank A/S last year. Both lenders may now be facing hefty fines.

The saga has challenged assumptions of Nordic probity, as local media almost weekly uncover new revelations of suspicious dealings within the upper ranks of the region’s financial circles. Swedish Financial Markets Minister Per Bolund says Swedbank’s actions “have put at risk the trust in both the Swedish banking sector and Sweden as a whole.”

Danske, which was also criticized for its culture before the full extent of its scandal was known, last year published a report that dwarfed all previous estimates relating to the scale of its suspicious flows. While the revelations shocked the world, they also marked a first step toward restoring confidence in the bank, because of its perceived transparency.

But Swedbank has so far been reluctant to share what it knows with the public. It released a redacted report conducted by an external consultant in March, without providing any numbers. Management said it would initiate a second report, though it also made clear it may not release its findings to the public, drawing criticism from investors.

Swedbank is the year’s worst performing European financial stock so far, having lost almost a third of its value. Meanwhile, Danske is down about 4 percent over the same period.

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