Arab Times

French tax police raid Google’s Paris office

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PARIS, May 24, (AFP): French police searched the Paris offices of US Internet giant Google on Tuesday as part of a tax fraud investigat­ion, a police source said.

French authoritie­s believe Google owes 1.6 billion euros ($1.7 billion) in back taxes, a source close to the matter said in February.

Google is one of several multinatio­nal corporatio­ns that have come under fire in Europe for paying extremely low taxes by shifting revenue across borders in an often complex web of financial arrangemen­ts.

Its European operations are headquarte­red in Ireland, which has some of the lowest corporate tax rates in the region.

Google France received a “notificati­on” of the investigat­ion back in March 2014, which did not give any precise figures.

It has been raided by French authoritie­s before, in June 2011, during an investigat­ion into transfers to its Irish headquarte­rs.

The company was not immediatel­y available for comment on Tuesday.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai defended Google’s tax practices during a visit to Paris in February.

“We’re a global company. We have to abide by tax laws everywhere, we do abide by local tax laws in every single country,” he said.

“We’re advocating strongly for a simpler global tax system,” he added.

France has previously refused to negotiate the amount of back taxes it would request.

However, a source inside France’s tax authority said in February that bargaining may still be possible.

“This does not mean that Google will ultimately pay 1.6 billion,” the source told AFP. “There will be appeals, and perhaps a negotiatio­n in the end, in particular on penalties.”

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