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Chinese magazines featuring former Chinese President Hu Jintao and former... (Ng Han Guan/AP)
Reports
drawn from 11.5 million leaked documents detailing how and where
politicians, businesses and celebrities hide their wealth are triggering
reactions from around the globe.
The reports by an international coalition of media outlets working
with the Washington-based International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists are based on documents from the Panama-based law firm
Mossack Fonseca, one of the world's biggest creators of shell companies.
Here's a look at some reactions the reports are drawing.
———
ARGENTINA
The office of Argentine President Mauricio Macri confirmed a
report by La Nacion newspaper that a business group owned by Macri's
family had set up Fleg Trading Ltd. in the Bahamas. But it said Macri
himself had no shares in Fleg and never received income from it.
———
AUSTRALIA A tax agency said it is investigating more
than 800 wealthy people for possible tax evasion linked to their alleged
dealings with Mossack Fonseca. The Australian Tax Office said that it
had linked more than 120 of those people to an offshore services
provider in Hong Kong, but did not name the company.
———
CHINA
The
reports say the Panamanian law firm had arranged offshore companies for
relatives of at least eight present or past members of the Communist
Party's Politburo Standing Committee, the apex of power in China. Among
those it mentioned was the brother-in-law of President Xi Jinping.
China's foreign ministery denounced the reports as "groundless." State
media are ignoring the reports and search results of websites and social
media for the words "Panama documents" were blocked.
———
CZECH REPUBLIC
The
Czech Center for Investigative Journalism said the leaked documents
show that 283 Czech citizens are associated with offshore companies. The
center said the most favorite offshore haven for Czechs are the
Seychelles, followed by the British Virgin Islands, Bahamas and others.
Interior Minister Milan Chovanec says police will investigate the data.
———
FRANCE
A
French prosecutor launched an investigation into possible money
laundering after the release of the leaked documents. Several hundred
French citizens reportedly feature among the individuals mentioned.
———
ICELAND
News
reports alleged that Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson and
his wife set up a company in the British Virgin Islands. The reports
have prompted calls for a no-confidence vote in parliament against him.
Gunnlaugsson
says there is nothing new in the information in the data leak but
offered to dissolve parliament and call a new election. The president
refused the request, but will consult with other party leaders before
agreeing to end the coalition government.
———
ITALY
Italian
weekly L'Espresso said about 1,000 Italian clients turned up in a
database of offshore accounts cited in the media investigation,
including Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, the chairman of carrier Alitalia
and head of Rome's 2024 Olympics bid.
L'Espresso said
documents showed a series of contracts set up in 2007 indicated
Montezemolo as the head of a Panama-based company named Lenville. It
said Montezemolo, who was Fiat chairman and Ferrari CEO at the time,
declined comment when contacted.
———
NEW ZEALAND
Prime
Minister John Key rejected ICIJ's characterization of his country as
among 21 tax havens used by Mossack Fonseca. "Tax havens are where there
is nondisclosure of information," Key said. "New Zealand has full
disclosure of information."
———
NORWAY
The
bank DNB said it regrets having helped about 40 customers open offshore
companies in the Seychelles with the help of Mossack Fonseca. The bank
was reacting to a report in Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten showing it
had helped customers set up shell companies in the Seychelles to avoid
taxes.
The bank said "that it was legal to set up this type
of companies doesn't mean that it was correct for us to do it for these
customers."
———
RUSSIA
Documents
published by more than 100 media outlets alleged that President Vladimir
Putin's friends, including leading cellist Sergei Rodulgin, were
engaged in an offshore scheme.
Putin's spokesman Dmitry
Peskov said there is nothing to implicate the president. Peskov
suggested that the publication was a smear campaign with Putin as a
target with a goal of influencing Russian politics.
———
SPAIN
Spanish
tax authorities said they are investigating allegations of tax
irregularities involving soccer player Lionel Messi and movie director
Pedro Almodovar.
Messi's family released a statement Monday
denying wrongdoing and threatened to sue media outlets that released the
information linking the Argentine player to accounts in Panama.
Almodovar's brother says the company for them was dissolved a few yars
after it opened in the 1990s.
———
UKRAINE
The
leaks indicate that Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko set up an
offshore holding company to move his candy business to the British
Virgin Islands, possibly depriving Ukraine of millions of dollars tax
revenue. Poroshenko had promised voters he would sell his business when
he ran for office.
Poroshenko insists he has done nothing
wrong and hasn't managed his assets since being elected. Some
adversaries are calling for his removal from office.
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