Toronto Star

Tour satisfies launder lust

- LEO HORNAK PRI’S THE WORLD

When you start a bus tour, it’s traditiona­l for the guide to boast a little about the city you’re about to see.

Anti-corruption campaigner Roman Borisovich does not run a traditiona­l tour of London.

“Ladies and gentlemen, I welcome you on board the Kleptocrac­y Tour,” he announces through the PA system, as soon as we are seated. “As a result of these tours, we have firmly labelled London as the most corrupt place in the world. By square foot, London has attracted a highest-ever concentrat­ion of dirty money.”

Borisovich is the host of occasional “Kleptocrac­y Tours,” organized by anti-corruption group ClampK, dedicated to exposing London’s role in global money laundering.

Britain has a reputation as a place where most people play by the rules: obey the law, pay their taxes, stand in line politely at the post office. But over the years, that stuffy stability has also proved appealing to people who make their money in less convention­al ways. People who want somewhere safe and reliable to stash that money. And London provides that — particular­ly London real estate.

This year, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal identified $5.4 billion (U.S.) worth of London properties bought by individual­s with suspicious wealth, most of them confined to a few upmarket neighbourh­oods. The Kleptocrac­y Tour takes in most of them, starting in the beautiful Georgian terraces around Victoria, and moving through the luxury apartments and mansions of Knightsbri­dge, Mayfair and Notting Hill.

According to the Guardian’s Luke Harding, who is another speaker on the tour, the use of London as a bank vault for stolen money follows an establishe­d pattern.

“Essentiall­y you have this global, rootless, transnatio­nal elite who are using London and London property as a gigantic bank,” he says. “You steal your money elsewhere, you buy these properties. And then you have it to keep. And that’s depressing. It’s wrong. It’s immoral.”

Harding is a specialist in the Russian connection to such money laundering. He has uncovered a scheme he calls “the laundromat”: stolen millions that start out dirty in Moscow, and with the help of British lawyers, accountant­s and bankers, come out clean in the West. He has identified $778 million of funds processed by British high street banks that have suspicious origins.

Leaked bank details have allowed him and other journalist­s to track this cash and watch where it’s spent. As well as property, it went toward purchases of diamonds, furs and private education.

As part of the Kleptocrac­y Tour, Borisovich’s activists have been hand-delivering letters to the doors of properties owned by oligarchs. Each contains an “Unexplaine­d Wealth Order” — a new legal instrument introduced by the British government to combat corruption. In theory, it can force property owners with mysterious wealth to explain themselves in court.

According to Arthur Doohan, another activist who works with ClampK, the ghost of the British Empire helps make the U.K. an ideal target for complex accounting. Former British colonies in the Caribbean now function as offshore tax havens, with their own semi-detached legal and tax status.

 ?? LEO HORNAK/PRI’S THE WORLD ?? Arthur Doohan delivers an “Unexplaine­d Wealth Order” to a property believed to have been bought with dirty money.
LEO HORNAK/PRI’S THE WORLD Arthur Doohan delivers an “Unexplaine­d Wealth Order” to a property believed to have been bought with dirty money.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada