Yahoo – AFP,
November 7, 2017
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| Bono from U2 has said he is "distressed" after being caught up in the Paradise Papers leaks (AFP Photo/JACQUES DEMARTHON) |
Paris (AFP)
- Apple, Bono and Queen Elizabeth II are just a few of the big names and
companies revealed in the Paradise Papers leak to have shifted money across the
globe to cut tax.
The
spotlight on the tax affairs of the rich and powerful comes after a trove of
documents was released by the US-based International Consortium of
Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), detailing secretive offshore deals that,
while not illegal, are embarrassing for those concerned.
Here are
some of the most well-known names caught up in the controversy:
Politics
- Britain's
Queen Elizabeth II has, through the Duchy of Lancaster which provides her
income and handles her investments, placed around £10 million ($13 million, â¬11.3 million) of her private money
in funds held in the Cayman Islands and Bermuda.
The funds
were reinvested in an array of businesses, including controversial rent-to-own
retailer BrightHouse which has been accused of exploiting the poor.
- US
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross holds a 31 percent stake in maritime transport
company Navigator Holdings through a complex web of offshore investments.
Navigator
Holdings runs a lucrative partnership with Russian energy giant Sibur, linked
to President Vladimir Putin's inner circle. Russia is subject to US sanctions.
- In
Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's top fundraiser and senior advisor
Stephen Bronfman, heir to the Seagram fortune, moved some $60 million to an
offshore haven in the Cayman Islands.
- Brazil's
economy and agriculture ministers, Henrique Meirelles and Blairo Maggi, are
also cited in offshore companies in tax havens.
Celebrities
- U2
frontman Bono is shown in the leak to own a stake in a Maltese company that
bought in 2007 a Lithuanian shopping mall via a Lithuanian holding company,
which may have broken tax rules by using an unlawful accounting technique.
- Britain's
four-time Formula One champion Lewis Hamilton avoided paying taxes on a private
jet, receiving a £3.3 million VAT refund in 2013 after it was imported into
the Isle of Man, a low-tax British Crown Dependency.
Multinationals
-
Technology giant Apple shifted much of its offshore wealth from Ireland to the
Jersey tax haven in the British Isles to adapt to the tightening of Irish tax
laws in 2015.
- US
sportswear giant Nike used a loophole in Dutch fiscal law to reduce, via two
companies based in the Netherlands, its tax rate in Europe to just two percent
compared to the 25 percent average for European companies.
- The
taxi-hailing ap Uber and the manufacturer of Botox, the Allergan pharmaceutical
laboratory, allegedly used similar methods to Nike.
- The
Paradise Papers also reveal that Russian companies with links to the Kremlin
invested hundreds of millions of dollars in Twitter and Facebook.
The
Internet giants are under fire, notably in the US Congress, for the use of
their platforms to spread Russian rumours during the 2016 US presidential
election.
#ParadisePaper leaks prompts EU to draw up blacklist of tax havens https://t.co/H24zKC0cGc pic.twitter.com/jw4s8MLUYv— AFP news agency (@AFP) November 7, 2017

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