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Release of offshore records draws worldwide response

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PurpleSkyz

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Release of offshore records draws worldwide response
UPDATED 04/12: Global leaders respond to release of offshore records.

By Mar CabraRelease of offshore records draws worldwide response Author-byline-rssMichael HudsonRelease of offshore records draws worldwide response Author-byline-birdRelease of offshore records draws worldwide response Author-byline-rssemailEmily MenkesRelease of offshore records draws worldwide response Author-byline-rssKimberley PorteousRelease of offshore records draws worldwide response Author-byline-rss

1:37 pm, April 10, 2013 Updated: 9:49 am, April 12, 2013

Secrecy for Sale


Release of offshore records draws worldwide response Secrecyforsale


The existence of a global
network of sham company directors can now be revealed. In this series,
ICIJ's worldwide research which will identify, country-by-country,
thousands of the true owners of offshore companies.

Stories in this series

Release of offshore records draws worldwide response Secrecyforsale

Release of offshore records draws worldwide response

By Mar Cabra, Michael Hudson, Emily Menkes and Kimberley Porteous

April 10, 2013

Release of offshore records draws worldwide response 630mirzanmahathir

Top Malaysian politicians use offshore secrecy

By International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

April 9, 2013

Cook Island provider a 'one-stop shop' for the mega-rich
By Nicky Hager

April 9, 2013

Release of offshore records draws worldwide response 630coverage

Highlights of offshore leaks so far

By Emily Menkes and Kimberley Porteous

April 9, 2013

ICIJ’s investigative series on offshore secrecy – which draws from a cache of 2.5 million secret records – has ignited reactions around the globe.


Since the initial release of stories by the ICIJ and its media
partners across the world, public officials have issued statements,
governments have launched investigations, and politicians and
journalists have been debating the implications of the records and the
reporting.


Among the latest reactions and responses:



  • Russian Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov is moving his offshore assets back to Russia after ICIJ's revelations that Shuvalov's wife Olga Shuvalova was either a shareholder or owner of several secretive offshore entities. The Shuvalovs had a declared income of $12.7 million in 2011, most of which was earned by Olga.
  • Spanish political party Unión Progreso y Democracia submitted written
    questions to the Spanish Congress today in the wake of French
    president François Hollande's announcement that French banks had to
    declare their tax haven subsidiaries. The questions read: Is the
    government going to present in the European institutions any initiative
    to eradicate the tax havens within the Member States? and Is the
    government going to force banks to announce the subsidiaries they have
    in tax havens and what are their activities?



  • Francois Hollande: called for tax havens to be "eradicated."French president François Hollande called for "eradication" of the world's tax havens and told French banks they must declare all of their subsidiaries.
    He also announced the creation of a special prosecutor to pursue cases
    of corruption and tax fraud. French government ministers have been ordered to declare their assets publicly within days.
  • Luxembourg's Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker announced his country plans to lift bank secrecy rules for European Union citizens who
    have savings based in the country, ending decades of bank secrecy in
    Luxembourg. "We are following a global movement," Juncker told
    parliament in a state-of-the-nation address. The new transparency regime
    would begin in January 2015. Austria is now the only EU country not
    sharing data about bank depositors. In a recent interview, Austrian Vice
    Chancellor and Finance Minister Spindelegger Fekter said: “How much
    money someone has in the bank is a matter between the bank and the
    customer and is no one else’s business."

  • Europe’s five biggest economic powers — Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain —announced they would begin regularly exchanging banking and tax information as a way of identifying tax dodgers and other financial wrongdoers.
  • Meanwhile, the British Virgin Islands (BVI) government are not fans
    of the ICIJ investigation. The BVI premier and Finance Minister Orlando
    Smith told the South China Morning Post that "BVI
    authorities are actively investigating how this private information has
    been illicitly obtained and used to attack the BVI financial services
    industry, which operates compliantly within international guidelines and the law."
  • Athens’ district attorney Panayota Fakou has started a preliminary probe to
    find out if Greeks who own offshore companies unearthed by the ICIJ
    investigation have evaded taxes or laundered money. According to the
    Greek newspaper Ta Nea, prosecutors will send information requests to
    British Virgin Islands’ financial authorities asking them to turn over
    records of 107 entities connected to Greek citizens.

  • An investigation by Finnish State Televisionand ICIJ exposing the
    offshore connections of state-owned postal company Itella has been
    received with surprise by the Finnish Finance Minister, Jutta
    Urpilainen. The minister said that “state owned companies should be an example for other companies.
    That is why it is especially unacceptable that Itella owns a company in
    a tax haven.” Urpilainen said the Finnish government should adopt clear
    rules on the use of offshore jurisdictions by state-owned corporations
    and called tax havens “one of the biggest threats to the Finnish welfare
    state.”



  • Canada's national revenue minister Gail Shea says the government may pursue the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in court to force it to share the offshore leaks records.
  • Quebec Premier Pauline Marois has declared that neither she, nor
    any other elected officials in her government have dealings in the
    offshore world. Marois also supported the handover of internal documents to Canadian authorities, stating the Quebec government would not hesitate to use "all legal means" to ensure this.
  • French budget minister Bernard Cazeneuve joins the clamor from
    governments around the globe in urging ICIJ and its media partners to
    release the offshore tax haven files to them, to "aid justice and help them do their job." Le Monde's response: "It is up to the justice system to establish responsibilities at a time when the law might have been broken ... It is up to the press to enlighten the reader..."
  • Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann says he is ready to make
    concessions on banking secrecy, to bring the nation in step
    with Switzerland and Luxembourg. "Austria should participate in talks on banking secrecy,” Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann declared to Die Presse.
  • The European Commissioner for Taxation, Algirdas Šemeta, called for
    an automatic exchange of information between countries and a "tough
    common stance." "Recent developments,fuelled
    by the outcome of the Offshore Leaks, confirms the urgency for more and
    better action against tax evasion .... Now it is time to put words into
    action." He said he was "very pleased" to see many of the Member
    States reviewing where they stand on the issues and "intensifying their
    political will to act."
  • The Swiss government has distinguised itself from other world
    governments by publicly stating it does not want access to the offshore
    leaks records. Finance minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said Switzerland
    has worked hard in recent years to curb fraud and tax evasion and that
    much of the activity pointed to in the leaked documents can be perfectly
    legal. She says the Swiss government does not want access to the data as "it was acquired illegally and Bern wants no part of that".
  • The Philippine Presidential Commission on Good
    Government probe into the disclosure that Maria Imelda Marcos Manotoc,
    the eldest daughter of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, was a beneficiary of a secret offshore trust in the British Virgin Islands, will release its report within two weeks.
    “We are duty bound to investigate and, depending upon informed
    preliminary findings, decide whether to pursue the matter,” said Andres
    Bautista, the chairman of the Presidential Commission on Good
    Government, tasked with recovering the Marcos family’s alleged
    ill-gotten wealth.
  • The president of the Association of German Banks denied that his
    group’s members had helped customers engage in tax evasion. “First in
    line are the individuals and the organizations that invest their money
    in tax oases,” Andreas Schmitz said."
  • The Berne internal revenue service authorities announced they will re-open the Gunter Sachs case after ICIJ's revelations about the former Mr. Brigitte Bardot's intricate offshore scheme.
  • In Canada, a Liberal senator urged his caucus colleague, Senator
    Pana Merchant, to answer questions in the wake of CBC News and ICIJ
    reports that she has been listed as beneficiary of an offshore trust created
    by her husband, a well-known class-action attorney. "We're all innocent
    until proven guilty in this country, but I want to hear her
    explanation," Senator Percy Downe told CBC News in an interview.
  • In the Philippines, two lawmakers dismissed a report by an ICIJ media partner, the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ), that they had offshore holdings. Senator Manuel Villar said
    his offshore entity was a “1-dollar shell company” that he wasn’t
    required to report, because he hadn’t made any real investment in it.
    Villar said that he hadn’t conducted business with the British Virgin
    Islands company “because I decided to concentrate in the Philippines.”
    Congressman Joseph Victor ‘JV’ G. Ejercito suggested the
    story about him was politically motivated. “To the best of my
    knowledge, I have truthfully and accurately declared all my assets,
    liabilities, and net worth” on required disclosures forms for public
    officials, he said in a statement.
  • Germany's Economics Minister Philipp Rösler urged the media to pass the data on to the government, stressing that tax evasion was a "criminal act."



  • Luxembourg's Finance Minister Luc Frieden says he is open to greater transparency of its banks in order to cooperate further with foreign tax authorities.
  • The Indian Finance Minister P. Chidambaram said an inquiry had been initiated by the authorities against individuals whose names figured in
    the global media report. “Yes. We have taken note of the names and
    inquiries have been put in motion in respect of the names that have been
    exposed,” he told a press conference.



  • The Mongolian Deputy Speaker, Sangikav Bayartsogt, admitted to an "ethics failure" over his undeclared million-dollar Swiss bank account.
    He told a press conference: “It is true that there is 1,658 Euros or
    2.9 million MNT in a Swiss bank account. I opened the account to trade
    in international stocks with three other acquaintances in 2008. My
    failure of responsibility is that I did not include the company in my
    declaration of income. I have admitted my ethic failure and I am ready
    to take responsibility."
  • Philippine government officials said they will investigate evidence that Maria
    Imelda Marcos Manotoc, a provincial governor and daughter of the late
    dictator Ferdinand Marcos, was the beneficiary of a secret BVI offshore
    trust.
  • George Mavraganis, the Deputy Finance Minister of Greece announced
    that the Greek government is moving to address offshore-driven tax
    dodging. Greek members of parliament asked Mavraganis what he planned to
    do about the 103 offshore companies that ICIJ found hadn’t been registered with Greece’s tax authorities.
  • George Sourlas from Greece’s Ministry of Justice said the revenue
    loss caused by offshore was huge. “By the actions of offshore companies
    in Greece, the revenue loss to the Greek government is in the order of
    40% or more of the debt of our country,” Sourlas said. “The offshore
    companies cast a shadow at this time of great crisis, when some get rich
    and many get poor.”
  • In France, President Francois Hollande denied knowledge of
    the offshore accounts held by his 2012 campaign manager, Jean-Jacques
    Augier, asserting that it’s up to the tax administration to monitor
    Augier’s private activities. Reports about Augier’s offshore dealings by
    Le Monde, the BBC and other ICIJ partners came in the wake of news
    about tax fraud charges against Hollande’s ex-budget Minister, Jerome Cahuzac.
  • The office of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev asserted there was nothing unusual about the information in the leak – which showed that his two daughters were shareholders of three offshore companies.
    The statement said the President’s daughters “are grown up and have the
    right to do business.” A spokesperson for Azersun – a holding company
    controlled by Hasan Gozal, a corporate mogul who was listed as the
    director of the daughters’ companies – said the report was biased and
    based on inaccurate information. “I regret that authority of Press
    Council doesn't go beyond Azerbaijan and there is no such institution
    worldwide to fight racketeer journalists,” the spokesman said.
  • Ex-Colombian President Álvaro Uribe Vélez publicly defended his sons’ involvement in
    offshore business. Uribe stated that his sons Tomás and Jerónimo are
    entrepreneurs and “have participated in business dealings since they
    were children” and “they are not tax evaders.”
  • In the UK, David Cameron is facing renewed pressure to take action over Britain’s entanglements within the offshore world.
    Lord Oakeshott, a senior Liberal Democrat said that the secrecy haven
    of the British Virgin Islands “stains the face of Britain.” Oakeshott
    and others are questioning whether Cameron will raise the issue in June
    of at the G8 summit of wealth nations. "How can David Cameron keep a
    straight face calling for the G8 to make big business pay tax when we
    let the BVI use British law and British protection to suck in billions
    in dirty money?" Oakeshott asked.

  • German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble stated on public radio that he was “pleased”with
    the ICIJ reports. He went on to say, “I think that such things as have
    been made known will increase the pressure internationally, and we will
    be able to increase the cooperation with those who have been more
    reticent”, a sentiment reflected in Germany’s previous lobbying to stamp
    out tax avoidance.
  • Canadian Federal Revenue Minister Gail Shea called the released of offshore banking information as “good news” for Canadians and bad news for tax evaders. Ms. Shea urged ICIJ or anyone else with information on tax cheats to come forward.
  • Pascal Saint-Amans, director of the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development, said: "Secrecy is no longer acceptable. We need to get rid of it. If the rules make it possible, then we'll change the rules.”




More stories about



Finance, Business and Finance, Business, International taxation, Offshore finance, Tax haven, Tax, Money, Anti-globalization, Wolfgang Schäuble, Itella, Jutta Urpilainen, Offshore financial centre

Thanks to: http://www.publicintegrity.org

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