Ottawa Citizen

TARGETING TAX EVASION

EU may go after rogue nations

- FRANK JORDANS AND RAF CASERT

The European Union has threatened to sanction countries like Panama if they continue to refuse to co-operate fully to fight money laundering and tax evasion, after a leak of data showed the tiny country remains a key destinatio­n for people who want to hide money.

A leak of 11.5 million documents from Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca showed it had helped thousands of individual­s and companies from around the world to set up shell companies and offshore accounts in low-tax havens.

Because such accounts often hide the ultimate owner of the money, they are a favoured tool to launder money, pay bribes or evade taxes.

So far, the scandal has brought down the leader of Iceland and raised questions about the dealings of the presidents of Argentina and Ukraine, senior Chinese politician­s, famous actors, athletes and the circle of friends of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who some allege has profited indirectly from such accounts.

“People are fed up with these outrages,” said Pierre Moscovici, who heads financial affairs for the 28-nation EU. He took to task countries like Panama that facilitate such secretive, low-tax accounts.

“The amounts of money, the jurisdicti­ons and the names associated with this affair are, frankly, shocking,” he said. Speaking of countries like Panama, he said the EU has to “be ready to hit them with appropriat­e sanctions if they refuse to change.”

Panama is listed by the EU as a country that is not co-operative on tax issues, and Moscovici urged the country to “rethink its position in this regard.”

The Central American country’s government said late Wednesday it is creating an internatio­nal committee of experts to recommend ways to boost transparen­cy in its offshore financial industry.

President Juan Carlos Varela said the committee’s findings will be shared with other nations so joint action can be taken to boost transparen­cy in legal and financial centres worldwide. But Varela defended Panama against what he called a “media attack” by wealthy nations that he says are ignoring their own deficienci­es and unfairly stigmatizi­ng Panama.

Europe is also home to countries with a record of acting like tax havens and providing banking secrecy — Luxembourg, Switzerlan­d, Andorra, among others. The United States has also become a haven, with several states including Wyoming and Delaware now popular places to open anonymous accounts that are cheap to maintain and pay little or no local tax.

Since the first reports were published Sunday, prominent politician­s, celebritie­s and businesspe­ople have had their offshore business dealings dragged into the spotlight.

On Thursday, the German newspaper that first obtained the so-called Panama Papers, said it won’t publish all the files, arguing that not all are of public interest.

Süddeutsch­e Zeitung received the documents from an unidentifi­ed source more than a year ago and shared at least parts of them with dozens of other media outlets around the world.

Süddeutsch­e Zeitung said the complete set of 11.5 million documents “won’t be made available to the public or to law enforcemen­t agencies. That’s because the SZ isn’t the extended arm of prosecutor­s or the tax investigat­ors.”

The Washington-based Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s, which helped co-ordinate reporting on the leaks, also said it “will not release personal data en masse” but mine the informatio­n for details of public interest.

It was not clear if the German paper had shared all the data with the ICIJ and other media outlets or signed an accord with them on what could be reported on.

Authoritie­s have legal powers to obtain such documents from those suspected of wrongdoing, and in many cases there’s no public interest in revealing companies’ or individual­s’ offshore business dealings, the Munich-based paper said.

Responding to readers’ queries about the absence of prominent German or U.S. politician­s in the reports, Süddeutsch­e Zeitung said such names haven’t yet been found in the documents.

It said the documents include copies of the passports of 200 Americans, and about 3,500 shareholde­rs in offshore companies listed with addresses in the United States.

“One possible reason why comparativ­ely few Americans appear in the documents could be that U.S. citizens have no reason to contact a law firm in Panama,” the paper said. “That’s because offshore companies can easily be created in U.S. states such as Wyoming, Delaware or Nevada.”

Meanwhile, an Argentine prosecutor asked a judge on Thursday to authorize an investigat­ion into Argentine President Mauricio Macri’s role in offshore companies. Federal prosecutor Federico Delgado said an investigat­ion is necessary to see whether Macri “maliciousl­y” omitted his role in two offshore companies in his annual tax declaratio­ns.

And in Russia, Putin on Thursday denied having any links to offshore accounts and described the Panama Papers document-leaks scandal as part of a U.S.-led plot.

Speaking at a media forum in St. Petersburg, Russia, Putin said western media pushed the claims of his involvemen­t in offshore businesses even though his name didn’t feature in any of the documents leaked from the Panamanian law firm.

Putin described the allegation­s as part of the U.S.-led disinforma­tion campaign waged against Russia to weaken its government.

“They are trying to destabiliz­e us from within in order to make us more compliant,” he said.

The ICIJ said the documents it obtained indicated that Russian cellist Sergei Roldugin acted as a frontman for a network of Putin loyalists, and, perhaps, the president himself.

The ICIJ said the documents show how complex offshore financial deals channelled as much as $2 billion to a network of people linked to the Russian president.

People are fed up with these outrages. The amounts of money, the jurisdicti­ons and the names associated with this affair are, frankly, shocking.

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 ?? OLIVIER HOSLET/AFP/GETTY IMAGES/FILES ?? Pierre Moscovici, the EU’s economic affairs commission­er, when speaking Thursday of countries like Panama said the EU has to ‘be ready to hit them with appropriat­e sanctions if they refuse to change.’
OLIVIER HOSLET/AFP/GETTY IMAGES/FILES Pierre Moscovici, the EU’s economic affairs commission­er, when speaking Thursday of countries like Panama said the EU has to ‘be ready to hit them with appropriat­e sanctions if they refuse to change.’

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