The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Panama Papers put German bank in spotlight — report

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BERLIN: Cologne’s public prosecutor and tax authoritie­s are examining claims, which have come to light via the leaked Panama Papers , alleging that leading German private bank Berenberg helped clients to evade tax, news magazine Der Spiegel reports in its yesterday edition.

The German authoritie­s launched an inquiry into the allegation­s covering ‘bank officials in Germany, Switzerlan­d and Luxembourg’ earlier in the week, according to Spiegel.

Bank head Hans-Walter Peters, who has just taken over as president of the powerful German associatio­n of private bankers, is “in the (investigat­ors’) sights,” Spiegel added.

A Berenberg spokesman told AFP by email that the bank was in contact with the prosecutor’s office but added that no judicial procedure was underway against Peters. The prosecutor’s office was unavailabl­e for comment.

Peters took over from outgoing Deutsche Bank co-CEO Juergen Fitschen at the head of the private bankers’ associatio­n last week with the latter embroiled in a longstandi­ng legal case involving the collapse in 2002 of the Kirch media empire.

Hamburg-based Berenberg is mentioned several times in the huge offshore Panama Papers data dump unveiled earlier this month by internatio­nal media.

The bank said last week, “like many others,” it had managed offshore accounts for clients but insisted it had done so ‘in line with the law’. Spiegel also returned to the Panama Papers theme in alleging that Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble had ‘for years’ not engaged with a reported whistleblo­wer whom it said had offered to hand over evidence of wrongdoing regarding links between the Bundesdrue­ckerei printing house, which the ministry oversees, and shell companies in Panama.

Earlier this week the finance ministry denied it had ignored warnings from an informant in South America.

Last Sunday, Schaeuble urged countries to work together in the fight against tax cheats and money launderers by sharing national lists naming the beneficiar­ies of shell companies while warning that recalcitra­nt countries could be blackliste­d.

“We need total transparen­cy,” Schaeuble told Bild newspaper. — AFP

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