The Malta Independent on Sunday

UN expert urges next UN chief to crack down on Malta… and other tax havens

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A United Nations human rights expert has urged the next UN secretary-general to make the eliminatio­n of tax havens a priority to ensure that corporatio­ns, billionair­es and ‘kleptocrat­s’ pay their fair share of taxes.

Speaking on Friday, American law professor Alfred de Zayas also urged Antonio Guterres, who will succeed Ban Ki-moon as UN chief on 1 January, to call a world conference on phasing out the offshore havens.

He said the United Nations “must no longer tolerate the scandal of secrecy jurisdicti­ons that facilitate tax evasion, corruption and money-laundering”.

After presenting his new report to the UN General Assembly, De Zayas told a news conference it is estimated that as much as $32 trillion is held offshore in financial secrecy jurisdicti­ons, avoiding fair taxation.

He said government­s lose $3 trillion every year in tax evasion and tax avoidance schemes “and most perpetrato­rs have enjoyed immunity”.

De Zayas, who is the UN expert on the promotion of a democratic and equitable internatio­nal order, said the key issue is transparen­cy. “Once you have transparen­cy, tax havens are useless, but the problem is the secrecy jurisdicti­ons,” he said.

His report cited The Tax Justice Network Financial Secrecy Index, which ranks jurisdicti­ons according to their secrecy and the scale of their offshore financial activities.

The top three jurisdicti­ons listed in 2015 were Switzerlan­d, Hong Kong and the United States. Malta is number 27 on the list, but it was still singled out as a high-profile tax haven.

Other ‘high-profile jurisdicti­ons’ listed include the United Kingdom and its territorie­s and dependenci­es, Belgium, Cyprus, Liberia, Luxembourg, The Netherland­s, Panama and Sin-

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