Fiji Sun

World Leaders Deny Wrongdoing After Leaks

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Several world leaders have denied wrongdoing after featuring in a huge leak of financial documents from offshore companies.

Dubbed the Pandora Papers, the 12 million files constitute the biggest such leak in history.

Putin, King Abdullah reaction

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Jordan’s King Abdullah II bin Al-Hussein are among some 35 current and former leaders linked to the files.

Both have issued statements saying they have done nothing wrong.

Jordan’s royal palace said it was “not unusual nor improper” that King Abdullah owned property abroad. Leaked documents show the leader secretly spent more than £70m ($100m) on a property empire in the UK and US since taking power in 1999.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov meanwhile questioned the reliabilit­y of the “unsubstant­iated” informatio­n, after it detailed hidden wealth linked to President Putin and members of his inner circle.

“For now it is just not clear what this informatio­n is and what it is about,” he told reporters, adding that “we didn’t see any hidden wealth of Mr Putin’s inner circle in there”.

The data was obtained by the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s (ICIJ) in Washington DC, which has been working with more than 140 media organisati­ons on its biggest ever global investigat­ion.

BBC Panorama and the Guardian have led the investigat­ion in the UK.

Other leaders linked to the leak include:

■Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis, who allegedly failed to declare an offshore investment company used to purchase two villas for £12m in the south of France

■Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, who - along with six members of his family - has been linked to 13 offshore companies

■Chile’s President Sebastián Piñera, a billionair­e businessma­n, who is accused of selling a copper and iron mine in an environmen­tally sensitive area to a childhood friend, as detailed in Spain’s El Pais newspaper

■And Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev, whose family and close associates have allegedly been secretly involved in property deals in the UK worth more than £400m

Other world leaders

In a tweet thread, the Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis said the allegation­s are an attempt to influence elections scheduled for this week and insisted he has “never done anything wrong or illegal”.

Mr Kenyatta said the investigat­ion “will go a long way in enhancing the financial transparen­cy and openness that we require in Kenya and around the globe”, and promised to “respond comprehens­ively” to the leak once he returned from a state visit abroad.

The Pandora Papers show no evidence that the Kenyatta family stole or hid state assets in their offshore companies.

And a statement from Chile’s President office said he denied taking part in or having any informatio­n on the sale of the Dominga mining project.

Mr Aliyevand his family did not respond to attempts to contact them, according to The Guardian.

Meanwhile Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan has vowed to investigat­e citizens linked to the Pandora Papers.

Hundreds of Pakistanis, including members of Mr Khan’s cabinet, are linked to the leak.

The Pandora Papers is a leak of almost 12 million documents and files exposing the secret wealth and dealings of world leaders, politician­s and billionair­es.

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