The Star Malaysia

Scandal spreads like wildfire

Panama Papers’ revelation­s trigger tax evasion probes across the world

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PARIS: Several countries have launched tax evasion probes after a massive leak of confidenti­al documents lifted the lid on the murky offshore financial dealings of a slew of politician­s and celebritie­s.

The scandal erupted on Sunday when media groups began revealing the results of a year-long investigat­ion into a trove of 11.5 million documents from the Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, which specialise­s in creating offshore shell companies.

Among those named in the “Panama Papers” are close associates of Russian President Vladimir Putin, relatives of Chinese leader Xi Jinping and Iceland’s Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugss­on, as well as Barcelona striker Lionel Messi.

In Iceland’s capital Reykjavik, thousands took to the streets late Monday to demand the premier resign over allegation­s that he and his wife used an offshore firm to hide millions of dollars of investment­s.

Australia has already launched a probe into 800 wealthy Mossack Fonseca clients. France and the Netherland­s also announced investigat­ions, while a judicial source said Spain had opened a money-laundering investigat­ion into the law firm.

Panama also pledged to launch an investigat­ion to identify if any crimes have been committed and any financial damages should be awarded.

President Juan Carlos Varela said Panama would cooperate with the internatio­nal probes but also vowed to “defend the image of our country”, which has a reputation as a hub for under-the-table dealings.

Messi’s family was swift to dismiss any suggestion he had been involved in shady activity, saying “accusation­s he created a... tax evasion plot, including a network of money-laundering, are false and insulting”.

Messi has been charged with tax fraud in a separate case that is due to go to trial in Spain in May.

Offshore financial dealings are not illegal in themselves but may be used to hide assets from tax authoritie­s, launder the proceeds of criminal activities or conceal misappropr­iated or politicall­y inconvenie­nt wealth.

The trove of documents was anonymousl­y leaked to German daily Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung and shared with more than 100 media groups by the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s (ICIJ). More informatio­n expected over the coming weeks.

The first revelation­s elicited a chorus of denials, including from the Kremlin, which suggested a US plot after the leaks put a close friend of Putin’s at the top of an offshore empire worth more than US$2bil (RM7.9bil).

“Putin, Russia, our country, our stability and the upcoming elections are the main target, specifical­ly to destabilis­e the situation,” said a

Kremlin spokesman, claiming the journalist­s were former officers from the US state department, the CIA and special services.

Among other key allegation­s of the probe, which named about 140 political figures, including 12 current or former heads of state:

> The families of some of China’s top brass – including President Xi – used offshore tax havens to conceal their fortunes, including at least eight current or former members of the ruling Communist Party’s most powerful body.

> Argentina’s President Mauricio Macri, his father and brother were registered as directors of an offshore company in the Bahamas.

Macri said “there was nothing strange about the operation” and that it was declared to the tax authoritie­s.

> A member of FIFA’s ethics committee, Juan Pedro Damiani, had business ties with three men indicted in a corruption scandal.

> A Panamanian shell company may have helped hide millions of dollars from a US$40mil (RM158mil) British gold bullion robbery at London-Heathrow Airport in 1983 that has become etched in criminal folklore.

> Oscar-winning Spanish film director Pedro Almodovar and Hong Kong actor Jackie Chan were among the celebritie­s named in the papers.

The papers, from 214,000 offshore entities covering almost 40 years, also name the president of Ukraine and the king of Saudi Arabia.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko denied any wrongdoing, but he may face an attempt to impeach him.

French newspaper Le Monde cited documents showing that Syria used Mossack Fonseca to create shell companies to help it break internatio­nal sanctions and fund its war effort.

According to Pascal Saint-Amans, head of tax policy at the OECD, the leak showed that Panama was among the world’s shadiest tax havens.

“Switzerlan­d is really making progress, so there is a concentrat­ion of problems in Panama,” he said, referring to another popular offshore tax haven.

One of the Panama law firm’s founders, Ramon Fonseca, said the leaks were “a crime, a felony” and “an attack on Panama”.

More than 500 banks, their subsidiari­es and branches have worked with Mossack Fonseca since the 1970s to help clients manage offshore companies.

UBS set up more than 1,100 and HSBC and its affiliates created more than 2,300.

The documents show “banks, law firms and other offshore players often fail to follow legal requiremen­ts to make sure clients are not involved in criminal enterprise­s, tax dodging or political corruption”, the ICIJ said.

Mossack Fonseca is already subject to investigat­ions in Germany and Brazil, where it is part of a huge money-laundering probe that has threatened to topple the current government.

 ?? — Agencies ?? ic r fa s (From left) Putin, Xi, Macri, Poroshenko and Chan are among the personalit­ies implicated in the Panama Papers.
— Agencies ic r fa s (From left) Putin, Xi, Macri, Poroshenko and Chan are among the personalit­ies implicated in the Panama Papers.
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