http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/mass-leaks-reveal-secret-world-of-tax-havens.aspx?pageID=238&nID=44306&NewsCatID=344

Mass leaks 'reveal secret world of tax havens' 
LONDON - Agence France-Presse 

 
The French businessman Jean-Jacques Augier poses on April 4, 2013 in Paris. 
French President Francois Hollande's one-time campaign treasurer Jean-Jacques 
Augier holds shares in two companies registered in the Cayman Islands tax 
haven, a report said on April 4. AFP photo 

Millions of emails and leaked records from offshore tax havens have exposed the 
identities of thousands of holders of offshore accounts, including the family 
of the president of Azerbaijan and French President Francois Hollande's 
one-time campaign treasurer, the Guardian and Le Monde newspapers reported on 
April 3.

The alleged involvement of Jean-Jacques Augier adds to the pressure on 
Hollande, who is already on the defensive after his former budget minister 
Jerome Cahuzac was charged in a tax fraud probe.

Britain's Guardian said the information came from a leak of two million 
documents and emails which mainly concern the British Virgin Islands, but also 
the Cayman Islands.

The investigation into offshore accounts has been carried out by a variety of 
media organisations in conjunction with the Washington-based International 
Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ).

The Guardian says there is no suggestion that any of the individuals named in 
its report have behaved unlawfully and that the only thing they have in common 
is that "they have used a jurisdiction which provides them with secrecy", 
allowing them to avoid tax.

One of Mongolia's most senior politicians, former finance minister Bayartsogt 
Sangajav, told the ICIJ he was considering resigning after the study claimed he 
had set up an offshore entity and a secret Swiss bank account which at one 
point contained more than $1 million (780,000 euros).

"I shouldn't have opened that account. I should have included the company in my 
declarations," he said. "I should probably consider resigning from my 
position." The Guardian said three entities were set up in the British Virgin 
Islands in 2008 in the names of Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev's daughters 
Arzu and Leyla. The companies list Hassan Gozal, a wealthy businessman whose 
company has won major contracts in Azerbaijan, as a director. None of the 
parties involved made any comment.

The Guardian and French newspaper Le Monde reported that Augier, who controlled 
the purse strings for the last year's election campaign of President Hollande, 
holds shares in two companies registered in the Caymans, including a 
distributor based in China.

Augier told Le Monde he had done "nothing illegal" and said they had been set 
up to form partnerships with foreign entrepreneurs. But the report is another 
headache for Hollande, who is reeling after Cahuzac, his former budget 
minister, was charged in a tax fraud probe after he admitted having a secret 
foreign bank account which he had repeatedly denied having.

Another case cited by the Guardian was the wife of Igor Shuvalov, a businessman 
close to President Vladimir Putin who has been first deputy prime minister 
since 2008, who is recorded as setting up several offshore companies. Olga 
Shuvalova made no comment.

The ICIJ's exploration of offshore accounts began when it obtained a hard drive 
packed with corporate data as a result of Australia's Firepower scandal, a case 
involving fraud and offshore havens.

The European Commission reacted to the reports by calling on EU states to do 
more to tackle tax fraud, estimating it costs their cash-strapped governments 
around one trillion euros a year.

"For the Commission, there can be no exceptions whether for individuals, 
companies or third countries who ... abet tax evasion," Commission spokesman 
Olivier Bailly said.

April/04/2013


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