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Serious Pandora Papers 3 Oct 2021 : Document dump allegedly links world leaders to secret wealth...

Kee Chew

Alfrescian
Loyal
WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - A massive leak of financial documents was published by several major news organisations on Sunday (Oct 3) that allegedly tie world leaders to secret stores of wealth, including King Abdullah of Jordan, Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis and associates of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The dump of more than 11.9 million records, amounting to about 2.94 terabytes of data, came five years after the leak known as the Panama Papers, exposed how money was hidden by the wealthy in ways that law enforcement agencies could not detect.

The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, a Washington-based network of reporters and media organisations, said the files are linked to about 35 current and former national leaders, and more than 330 politicians and public officials in 91 countries and territories.

It did not say how the files were obtained, and Reuters could not independently verify the allegations or documents detailed by the consortium.

Jordan's King Abdullah, a close ally of the United States, was alleged to have used offshore accounts to spend more than US$100 million (S$136 million) on luxury homes in the United Kingdom and the United States.

DLA Piper, a London law office representing Abdullah, told the consortium of media outlets that he had "not at any point misused public monies or made any use whatsoever of the proceeds of aid or assistance intended for public use."

The Washington Post, which is part of the consortium, also reported on the case of Svetlana Krivonogikh, a Russian woman who it said became the owner of a Monaco apartment through an offshore company incorporated on the Caribbean island of Tortola in April 2003 just weeks after she gave birth to a girl. At the time, she was in a secret, years-long relationship with Putin, the newspaper said, citing Russian investigative outlet Proekt.

The Post said Krivonogikh, her daughter, who is now 18, and the Kremlin did not respond to requests for comment.

Days ahead of the Czech Republic's Oct 8-9 parliamentary election, the documents allegedly tied the country's prime minister, Babis, to a secret US$22 million estate in a hilltop village near Cannes, France.

Speaking during a television debate on Sunday, Babis denied any wrongdoing.

"The money left a Czech bank, was taxed, it was my money, and returned to a Czech bank," Babis said.
 

Kee Chew

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Loyal
IMG_20211004_104816.jpg


https://www.theguardian.com/news/20...xposes-financial-secrets-of-rich-and-powerful
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Nothing wrong with being rich and powerful. Good on them for achieving success. Keep up the good work.
 

Kee Chew

Alfrescian
Loyal
If not mentioned I will be very surprised. Sinkieland is a bonafide money laundering hub, dirty money constantly flows through this snot-sized island.

u mean through Bona Fide business Transactions such as Private Properties Investments and other forms of legitimate Transactions .
 

Kee Chew

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More than 1,000 Japanese firms, people named in 'Pandora Papers'​

Today 09:00 am JST 50 Comments

TOKYO
More than 1,000 Japanese companies and individuals including SoftBank Group Corp Chairman and CEO Masayoshi Son are listed in leaked documents on tax havens dubbed the "Pandora Papers," at a time when managing wealth through offshore tax shelters has drawn criticism worldwide.
The names found in materials obtained by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists also include Takeo Hirata, a former head of the Cabinet Secretariat section that was in charge of promoting the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics.
The documents, dubbed the Pandora Papers by the Washington-based ICIJ, are leaked internal files from 14 entities, such as trust companies and law firms specializing in establishing and managing firms in tax havens.
Kyodo News is a media partner of the ICIJ project, which came to prominence after similar leaked documents called the "Panama Papers" in 2016 brought public attention to the issue of tax avoidance by the world's wealthiest people and companies.
According to the documents, Son purchased a business jet around 2014 through a company established in 2009 in the Cayman Islands, a British territory considered a corporate tax haven.
The ownership of the aircraft was transferred to a U.S. trust company and Son pays fees when he uses the jet based on a lease contract.
It is possible for someone in that situation to reduce their taxable income by paying usage fees of such an aircraft even if they effectively own it, as the fees can be considered a loss, according to legal and financial experts.
A SoftBank spokesperson denied Son processed the fees in such a manner, saying that the Cayman Islands company is a subsidiary of a Japanese company headed by Son and that the lease contract does not constitute tax avoidance.
The Pandora Papers meanwhile showed that Hirata established a company in the British Virgin Islands in 2004 during his tenure as general secretary of the Japan Football Association, and liquidated it in 2008.
Hirata, a former bureaucrat of the then Ministry of International Trade and Industry, said he heard about tax havens from negotiating partners he encountered when working on soccer and oil-related matters.
"I wanted to learn what it was like. I did not move any money even once," said Hirata.
Hirata resigned in August from the Cabinet Secretariat section promoting the Tokyo Games following a weekly magazine report that he had used a government vehicle to go to expensive golf lessons, and that he had been offered the lessons free of charge.
Another person mentioned in the papers, George Hara, a technology venture capitalist who served as a special adviser to Japan's Cabinet Office, owns a company in the Virgin Islands.
When approached about the matter, Hara said the company needed to be set up to meet requirements when launching new businesses in different countries.
The documents show the company, created for investment activities in Japan, had assets valued at $31 million as of 2017, but Hara contests that information.
A former executive of a now-collapsed Japanese chemical company owns a firm in the Virgin Islands with assets worth around $12.7 million. The company exists for the purpose of managing a foundation in Liechtenstein.
"I donated it before the bankruptcy. I don't know what happened to it afterward and the company is not mine," the former executive told Kyodo News.
In 2013, the Don Quijote discount store chain said its founder Takao Yasuda would sell the shares he held in the retailer to a company in Singapore. But the leaked documents and other materials showed the firm in the Southeast Asian country is an asset management company owned by Yasuda.
Corporate tax and levies on income from stock dividends are lower in Singapore, where Yasuda lives, than in Japan. A Don Quijote spokesperson said the discount retailer believes the tax treatment has been made within the rules.
© KYODO
 

Kee Chew

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Loyal
An unprecedented leak of financial records known as the Pandora Papers has revealed the offshore financial assets of dozens of current and former world leaders and hundreds of politicians from Asia and the Middle East to Latin America.
The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists obtained 11.9 million confidential documents from 14 separate legal and financial services firms, which the group said offered “a sweeping look at an industry that helps the world’s ultrawealthy, powerful government officials and other elites conceal trillions of dollars from tax authorities, prosecutors and others.”
Moving money through offshore accounts, in mostly low-tax jurisdictions, is legal in most countries, and many of the people named in the data release aren’t accused of criminal wrongdoing. But the journalist group said the 2.94 terabytes of financial and legal data -- which makes this leak larger than the 2016 Panama papers release -- shows the “offshore money machine operates in every corner of the planet, including the world’s largest democracies,” and involves some of the world’s most well-known banks and legal firms.

Here are some of the biggest revelations in the release:

Jordan king’s real estate empire​

Jordan’s monarch, King Abdullah II, used an English accountant in Switzerland and lawyers in the British Virgin Islands to secretly purchase 14 luxury homes worth $106 million, including a $23 million property in California overlooking a beach, the ICIJ reported, noting the country relies on foreign aid to support its people and house millions of refugees. U.K. attorneys for the king told the ICIJ that he was not required to pay taxes under Jordanian law, has never misused public funds and has “security and privacy reasons to hold property through offshore companies.”

French Riviera estate​

Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis, who is currently running for re-election, “moved $22 million through offshore companies to buy a lavish estate on the French Riviera in 2009 while keeping his ownership secret,” ICIJ said. The five-bedroom Chateau Bigaud, which is owned by a subsidiary of one of Babis’s Czech companies, sits on 9.4 acres (3.8 hectares) in a hilltop village where Pablo Picasso spent the last years of his life, the group said.

The Queen and Azerbaijan​



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The data release revealed that Azerbaijan’s ruling Aliyev family traded around $540 million worth of U.K. property in recent years, reported the Guardian, one of the ICIJ’s media partners. Queen Elizabeth II’s Crown Estate bought one property worth almost $91 million from the family, and is currently in the middle of an internal review into the purchase, the Guardian said. “Given the potential concerns raised, we are looking into the matter,” a spokesperson for the Crown Estate told the paper, which added the Aliyevs declined to comment.

South Dakota, Nevada havens​

One of the most “troubling revelations” for the U.S. was the role of South Dakota, Nevada and other states that have adopted financial secrecy laws that “rival those of offshore jurisdictions” and demonstrate America’s “expanding complicity in the offshore economy,” said the Washington Post, one of the ICIJ’s media partners. A former vice president of the Dominican Republic finalized several trusts in South Dakota to store his personal wealth and shares of one of the country’s largest sugar producers, the paper said.

Pakistan’s political elite​

Several members of Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan’s inner circle, including current and former cabinet ministers, “secretly owned an array of companies and trusts holding millions of dollars of hidden wealth,” the group reported. That could create a political headache for the former cricket star, who campaigned for the South Asian country’s highest office as the head of a reformist party that promised a strong anti-corruption agenda. Before the release of the Pandora papers, a Khan spokesperson told a news conference Khan had no offshore company, but ministers and advisers “will have to be held accountable” for their individual acts.

Tony Blair property purchase​

The documents show former U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair and his wife saved around $422,000 by using an offshore company to purchase an almost $9 million office in London’s Marylebone area that was partially owned by the family of a Bahraini minister, the Guardian reported. The paper said there was nothing illegal about the deal, but it “highlights a loophole that has enabled wealthy property owners not to pay a tax that is commonplace for ordinary Britons.”


 
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