The Jerusalem Post

Panama Papers: The big game’s in Africa, but safari companies are offshore

- • By WILL FITZGIBBON

WASHINGTON – Each year, tourists cross the plains of central Zimbabwe to sleep near the roar of Victoria Falls, track elephants, cheetahs and pangolins, and dine under the stars.

The visitors are accompanie­d every step of the way by John Stevens, a man who has been called “perhaps the finest guide to come out of Zimbabwe.”

And while Stevens’ safari business is very much Zimbabwean, his financial universe is a classic creation of offshore globetrott­ing.

Stevens’ financial affairs, outlined in years of correspond­ence with Mossack Fonseca, the law firm at the center of the Panama Papers leak, reveal how the poetry of Africa’s savannahs mixes with the day-to-day paper-pushing of offshore management.

Created in 2011, Stevens’ Guided Safaris Africa Inc. was headquarte­red on paper in the British Virgin Islands, a speck of land in the Caribbean nearly 100 times smaller than Zimbabwe’s largest safari reserve. It was set up to manage the Stevens family wealth and to act as a booking agent for an estimated $250,000 a year in “safari revenue,” according to files received by Mossack Fonseca.

The company held a bank account in the Isle of Man, an offshore financial center thousands of miles away in the Irish Sea between England and Ireland, and was owned by the Stevens family trust.

Stevens’ company is one of at least 30 offshore African safari businesses created by Mossack Fonseca, according to an analysis of the Panama-based law firm’s records. While most of them are officially based in the British Virgin Islands, their day-to-day ventures are safaris that operate across southern and eastern Africa, from Namibia through Zimbabwe and Botswana up into Tanzania and Kenya.

Mossack Fonseca is one of the world’s largest creators of offshore companies, businesses that have few or no employees and are usually located not where the company operates but where taxes are low or secrecy is high.

“We merely help incorporat­e companies,” the firm said. “And before we agree to work with a client in any way, we conduct a thorough due-diligence process, one that in every case meets and quite often exceeds all relevant local rules, regulation­s and standards.”

Tourists who come to Africa to view the continent’s beauty might think that their dollars, euros and yen stay in local economies, but this might not always be the case. The activities of some safari companies created by Mossack Fonseca in secrecy-conscious tax havens such as the British Virgin Islands – which are known in shorthand as the BVI – concern transparen­cy advocates and some government­s that rely on tourism as a source of official revenue.

“In general, there is no legitimate reason why a tourism operator would need to route their transactio­n via a highly secretive jurisdicti­on such as the BVI,” said Savior Mwambwa, a tax reform campaigner at ActionAid Internatio­nal, a South Africa-based anti-poverty organizati­on. “There is also nothing special about the tourism sector in Africa which would warrant offshore arrangemen­ts for payments from abroad. €¦ I can’t see any legitimate reason to channel bookings through the BVI and the Isle of Man, apart from tax minimizati­on.”

Stevens did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

Fifty-six million visitors came to Africa in 2014, according to the United Nations. In some countries, including Zimbabwe, safaris and other kinds of tourism represent up to 5 percent of the gross domestic product.

Alvin Mosioma, executive director of the advocacy group Tax Justice Network-Africa, said tourism is a sector that’s prone to questionab­le tax practices because it is “almost impossible” to nail down a market value for services. That makes it easy for companies involved in the industry to book profits and costs in a way that shifts their tax burdens to low – or no-tax jurisdicti­ons, he said. THE OFFSHORE system’s global sprawl provides plenty of choice in how to structure a financial scheme.

In 2013, representa­tives of a BVI-based company called Nature Trails Internatio­nal Limited wrote to its registered agent, Mossack Fonseca, to discuss its accounts. The company “receives payment from bookings for tours and travel in East Africa and from time to time contracts to pay local Kenyan tour operators for their services,” a business plan shared with Mossack Fonseca explained. Nature Trail’s sole shareholde­r was a company based in the secretive island nation of Mauritius, where Nature Trails also owned a bank account.

The company’s business plan said it sought to take advantage of tourism’s “momentum of rapid growth in the eastern African countries during the recent years.” The company was dissolved in 2014 for reasons not specified in Mossack Fonseca’s files.

A second company, Far Horizons (1998) Limited, existed “to organize, design and sell safari expedition­s and adventures” through Africa. This company also held a bank account in Mauritius.

Yet another company, Safaris Inc., was incorporat­ed in the Seychelles and held bank accounts in Luxembourg. A fourth company, operating in Namibia, was headquarte­red in the BVI, owned a bank account in Liechtenst­ein and held meetings in Switzerlan­d.

In Tanzania, Gerard Pasanisi, one of the country’s oldest and best-known safari guides and elephant conservati­onists, owned shares in at least four companies created by Mossack Fonseca. The first, Gerard Pasanisi Safari Corp., was created in the 1980s and used a Swiss bank account to pay routine bills from Mossack Fonseca. Pasanisi’s string of offshore companies remained active with Mossack Fonseca into 2015. They included a Dubai-based company, Tanganyika Expedition­s Ltd., which banked in Switzerlan­d and which and carried out “photograph­ic safaris” in Tanzania.

Lawyers for Eric Pasanisi, Gerard Pasanisi’s son and the manager of the businesses, told ICIJ that the four companies are currently administer­ed from the United Arab Emirates and that their legal and tax statuses are transparen­t in both the UAE and Tanzania. At the time the companies were incorporat­ed, lawyers said, BVI and Panama were “the most popular and recognized jurisdicti­ons.” The lawyers said “the companies regularly fulfill all their respective tax obligation­s in both countries.”

Above the border in Kenya, one of the leading safari dynasties, the Carr-Hartley family, asked Mossack Fonseca in 2001 to help create Safariland Inc.

According to a prospectus shared with Mossack Fonseca in 2013, Safariland Inc. helped deliver “extreme comfort with a taste of wild places off the tourist beat, where one can feel the rhythm and heartbeat of wild Africa, yet want for nothing.”

Safariland Inc. was based in the British Virgin Islands and used directors-for-hire with no connection to the Kenyan family. Safariland Inc. expected to make half a million dollars a year, the Carr-Hartleys told Mossack Fonseca in documents sent in 2013.

Robert and William Carr-Hartley – fourth-generation Kenyan brothers who learned to ride rhinos before they learned to ride horses – had a busy relationsh­ip with Mossack Fonseca as their luxury safari empire expanded across Africa.

Robert Carr-Hartley also created The Raw Foundation in Panama in 2000 to distribute money to himself and his family. Mossack Fonseca offers private foundation­s to its clients as a way to pay no tax on their assets and guarantee secrecy and little paperwork, calling them “an ideal vehicle in the offshore industry.”

The Carr-Hartleys did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

The Raw Foundation also owned every share of another Panama company, Munga Munga Inc. In a poem shared in 2010 on Facebook, the Carr-Hartley brothers recalled having climbed – or “munga munga’ed” – up waterfalls in search of the mythical Kenyan Yeti.

Back in Panama and deep inside Mossack Fonseca’s electronic files, however, the company’s purpose was simply listed as “e-commerce.” – Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s/TNS

(The Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s coordinate­d a group of more than 300 journalist­s internatio­nally, including McClatchy correspond­ents, examined millions of pages of leaked documents from the Mossack Fonseca law firm in Panama City.)

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? A SIGHT on a Zimbabwe safari. Is one safari business a classic creation of offshore globetrott­ing?
(Courtesy) A SIGHT on a Zimbabwe safari. Is one safari business a classic creation of offshore globetrott­ing?

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