Companies House crackdown
Business directors will be forced to verify their identity with Companies House under new proposals from the UK government to crack down on a system that has allowed infants and an unborn child to own firms.
Officials said they plan to introduce a new verification system to make it harder for fraudsters to take advantage of the UK’S notoriously lax rules for its official database of businesses.
The proposals, which were welcomed by campaigners, also include new powers for officials at Companies House to remove false information.
Campaigners at Global Witness in 2018 found about 4,000 beneficial owners on Companies House were under t wo years old, including one who had not been born at t hat point.
At the moment, one person can have dozens of profiles on the database, making it hard for law enforcement, j ournalists, activists and potential business partners to find which profiles are linked to which person.
Directors’ month and year of birth are disclosed but with common names it can be difficult to connect the profiles, while the information can also contain mistakes.
Under the new proposals, profiles for company directors and owners - known as persons of significant control - will be linked into one page, with all their appointments brought together.
“This will allow searchers of the public register to view all directorships held by an individual and whether that individual is also a person with significant control, and will provide certainty that an individual is who they say they are,” the Ukgovernment said.
Campaign group Transparency International welcomed the move.
It has found more than 900 UK shell companies were used in 89 global corruption and money laundering cases that caused around £ 137 billion in damage.