Yahoo – AFP, Juan José Rodríguez, April 4, 2016
Panama City (AFP) - The law firm at the heart of the "Panama Papers" scandal was in lockdown on Monday, with private security guards keeping a small but growing pack of news photographers and cameramen at bay.
Panama City (AFP) - The law firm at the heart of the "Panama Papers" scandal was in lockdown on Monday, with private security guards keeping a small but growing pack of news photographers and cameramen at bay.
The bland,
mirrored exterior of the building housing the Mossack Fonseca firm in Panama's
main banking zone sits back upon a tidy lawn.
Half a
dozen journalists trained lenses on it from the sidewalk. There were no police
officers in sight.
Revelations
from a massive dump of leaked data from Mossack Fonseca's servers detailing how
the world's wealthy -- politicians, footballers and some criminals -- used its
lawyers to set up offshore companies is sending shock waves around the world.
One of
Mossack Fonseca's two founders, Ramon Fonseca, on Sunday told AFP the leak of
11.5 million documents from his firm was the result of a "limited
hack."
But he said
publishing the information from it was a "crime" because "each
person has a right to privacy, whether they are a king or a beggar."
He also
claimed it was an attack on Panama, "because certain countries don't like
it that we are so competitive in attracting companies."
![]() |
The Panama
Papers: key facts on the huge journalists' investigation into tax
evasion (AFP
Photo/Thomas Saint-Cricq, Philippe Mouche)
|
Panama
'regret' over leak
Panama's
foreign minister and vice president, Isabel De Saint Malo, said on her Twitter
account on Monday as she was visiting Italy: "We regret (the) news at a
global level that is affecting Panama."
Her
government has sought to rid the Central American nation of a reputation as a
hub for shady transactions helping money launderers and tax avoiders.
The
government has vowed to cooperate "vigorously" with any judicial
requests that might emerge from the scandal.
But while
Panama has managed to get off an international money-laundering blacklist, its
foot-dragging over lifting banking secrecy and automatically exchanging client
financial information has kept it in the sights of other nations, particularly
the US and in Europe.
De Saint
Malo reiterated that her country had taken "drastic" steps to improve
transparency and put some restrictions on the creation of offshore companies.
Reforms
include cracking down on the use of bearer bonds -- shares that are owned by
whoever physically holds the paper -- as well as regulating free-tax zones,
casinos, property, construction and money-change firms.
OECD
pushes Panama
![]() |
View of a
sign outside the building where
Panama-based Mossack Fonseca law firm
offices
are placed in Panama City on
April 3, 2016 (AFP Photo/Rodrigo Arangua)
|
The head of
the OECD's tax policy center, Pascal Saint-Amans, said on Sunday that
"Panama has become the most opaque place on earth."
On Monday,
the OECD's secretary general, Angel Gurria, said: "The 'Panama Papers'
revelations have shone the light on Panama's culture and practice of secrecy.
Panama is the last major holdout that continues to allow funds to be hidden
offshore from tax and law enforcement authorities."
Gurria, a
Mexican economist, noted that, while the leaked data exposed "nefarious
activities," they also showed a decline in the use of offshore companies
and bearer bonds, which he attributed to the OECD's campaign against tax havens.
He said a
G20 meeting of finance ministers from the world's top economies in London next
month "will be critical" in eradicating banking secrecy and tax
evasion.
'Panama Papers' law firm under the media's lenses https://t.co/m8gCZ9ZGz5 pic.twitter.com/2wNv9zcKuz— AFP news agency (@AFP) April 4, 2016
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