The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Pandora Papers reveal Guardiola failed to declare offshore account

- By Tom Morgan SPORTS NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

Pep Guardiola failed to declare to Spanish authoritie­s that he had opened an offshore bank account while playing in Qatar, according to the Pandora Papers leaks.

The Manchester City manager is said to have kept almost £500,000 in an Andorran bank account, which remained open while he was manager at Barcelona.

El Pais and lasexta in Spain claim he opened the offshore account to deposit wages from his two years playing for Al Ahli, where he was being paid in the region of £1.7million a year from 2003 to 2005.

However, it is claimed he waited until 2012, when a tax amnesty was announced in Spain following the global financial crisis, to declare the offshore funds, five years into his return at Barcelona.

“Until that point, the coach of Manchester City had not declared the funds held in the account to the Spanish Tax Agency,” reported El Pais, which was among organisati­ons given access to the files from the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s.

Guardiola is said to have set up the Andorran account through a shell company called Repox Investment­s. There is no allegation of legal wrongdoing by Guardiola, whose legal

adviser, Lluis Orobitg, has told Spanish outlets the account was opened due to the “impossibil­ity of obtaining a residence certificat­e in Qatar, where he would not have to pay tax”.

Guardiola, he added, did not deposit the funds in Spain because his accountant feared that, without a residency permit in Qatar, the Spanish Tax Agency “could object to him filing his tax returns as an expatriate when in reality he played and lived in Qatar”.

The Pandora Papers detail how a host of world leaders and famous names use accounts in tax havens to accrue huge amounts of wealth and carry out transactio­ns. Other sporting figures listed include Carlo Ancelotti, Angel Di Maria and Sachin Tendulkar.

Manchester City were contacted by The Daily Telegraph for comment.

Meanwhile, the Liverpool fan accused of spitting at a member of City’s backroom team faces criminal prosecutio­n and a lifetime Anfield ban after the Merseyside club gathered evidence surroundin­g the incident that marred Sunday’s 2-2 draw. The evidence – including witness statements and video footage – will be handed over to appropriat­e authoritie­s upon request.

Four men have also been charged for possessing flares in Anfield before the match.

 ?? ?? Scrutinise­d: The financial affairs of Pep Guardiola and many other famous names are featured in the Pandora Papers leaks
Scrutinise­d: The financial affairs of Pep Guardiola and many other famous names are featured in the Pandora Papers leaks

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