Stabroek News

Cayman Islands joins global money-laundering crackdown

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LONDON, (Reuters) - The Cayman Islands said on Wednesday it would make public informatio­n on the beneficial ownership of companies, prompting anti-corruption campaigner­s to call on other offshore jurisdicti­ons to follow suit as part of a global crackdown on money-laundering.

The Cayman Islands government said it expected public registers of beneficial ownership - the key to showing who is behind shell companies - to become the internatio­nal norm and would be implemente­d by European Union countries by 2023.

“We will advance legislatio­n to introduce public registers of beneficial ownership informatio­n when that occurs,” the Caribbean islands’ administra­tion said in a statement.

“While undue focus is often placed on our jurisdicti­on, we fully appreciate the need to ensure coherent and efficient registrati­on and exchange of beneficial ownership informatio­n to facilitate the transparen­t flow of legitimate capital.”

Anti-corruption campaigner Global Witness said all other British Overseas Territorie­s should take similar action.

“This commitment from the Cayman Islands to reveal the real people behind companies on their shores shows how company transparen­cy is now the global standard in financial integrity,” Naomi Hirst, a campaigner at Global Witness, said. “The writing is on the wall for the rest of the British Overseas Territorie­s who will today be feeling the pressure to follow suit and announce their own plans as a matter of urgency.”

Britain has said overseas territorie­s, such as the Cayman Islands and the British Virgin Islands, must make company ownership informatio­n public by the end of 2023.

In June, the three British Crown Dependenci­es - Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man - said they would move to reveal publicly the true ownership of firms based in their jurisdicti­ons.

Last year, British police said individual­s using complex company structures to hide their links to assets were increasing­ly moving away from British crown dependenci­es and overseas territorie­s to other jurisdicti­ons because of greater cooperatio­n with the authoritie­s. But the Cayman Islands was a destinatio­n that was still causing problems.

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