The Herald

UK tax haven colonies enabled £250 billion in crimes

- DAVID LEASK

SHELL firms registered in Britain’s last colonies enabled global economic crimes worth £250 billion, a major report has revealed.

Anti-corruption charity Transparen­cy Internatio­nal took a deep dive in to 237 financial crimes – and found they had been facilitate­d by 1,107 corporate entities formally headquarte­red in UK overseas territorie­s.

The research comes amid heightened internatio­nal frustratio­n on lacklustre efforts to tackle money-laundering and tax evasion through secrecy jurisdicti­ons officially under the British Crown. Some territorie­s, such as the British Virgin Islands or BVI, have been heavily criticised for allowing companies they register not to declare who owns them. Transparen­cy said 92 per cent of the shell firms it uncovered enabling economic crime were from the BVI.

Nobody was available for comment at the BVI government’s office in London. Last year BVI Finance, the lobby for the islands’ financial industry, told The Herald that tax haven status was a “myth”.

Transparen­cy said crimes using colonial shell firms were most common in Russia – accounting for 17% of the total. Ukraine, Nigeria, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan featured frequently too. Offences included bribery, procuremen­t rigging and embezzleme­nt.

Duncan Hames, Transparen­cy’s UK policy director, said: “Our new analysis is a stark reminder of the damage wrought by anonymous companies registered in secrecy havens like the British Virgin Islands; these are not victimless crimes. When money is stolen from state budgets it is schools and health services for ordinary people that suffer.”

The secrecy made possible in the British Overseas Territorie­s has been key to criminals across the world enjoying impunity for their actions. It does nothing to aid the reputation of financial centres to provide services and secrecy that enrich a corrupt global elite at the public’s expense.

Ministers from overseas territorie­s meet in London this week and Transparen­cy wants ending secrecy on the agenda. MPS called for overseas territorie­s to produce public registers of owners earlier this year but this has not happened.

Shell firms from overseas territorie­s also regularly appear as partners in Scottish limited partnershi­ps and other UK shell companies, used as wraparound­s to give tax haven structures a respectabl­e front.

 ??  ?? „ Road Town, on Tortola, is the capital of the British Virgin Islands.
„ Road Town, on Tortola, is the capital of the British Virgin Islands.

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