the haney group hong kong news
article
A huge trove of tax-haven data
uncovered by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ)
is the result of a three-year investigation by its director, Gerard Ryle, into
one of Australia's biggest frauds. That fraud involved a Hong Kong-based firm
called Firepower International and offshore havens. Through connections with
Australian officials, the governments of Britain, Russia, Romania and other
nations were persuaded to believe Firepower had solutions to global warming and
the energy crisis. After the fraud was discovered, Firepower's Australian operations
were liquidated in 2008. The Australian investigation yielded one of the
biggest collections of leaked data gathered by journalists, the ICIJ said. The
offshore information totalled more than 260 gigabytes of data and more than two
million e-mails. The data originated in 10 offshore jurisdictions, including
the British Virgin Islands (BVI), Cook Islands and Singapore. It included
details of more than 122,000 offshore companies or trusts, and 130,000 records
on the people and agents who run, own, benefit from or hide behind offshore
companies. A large number of positions are held by "nominee
directors", people who, for a fee, lend their names as office holders of
companies they know little about. It is a legal device widely used in the
offshore world. To analyze such a trove of information, ICIJ investigators used
text retrieval software able to handle vast volumes of data. "I'm
surprised they got the information, because it is really quite protected,"
said John Bruce, director of operations at Hill & Associates, a Hong Kong
risk consultancy. Beyond the nominees, who were often not the real owners of an
offshore company, offshore company records did not divulge the actual
shareholders, Bruce said. "It is very hard to track BVI companies." It
was probable that some Western governments were supporting the ICIJ probe, said
Hugo Williamson, managing director of the Risk Resolution Group, a British risk
consultancy. "There is a wider story here. There is a concerted effort by
Western governments to chase high-net-worth individuals who avoid taxes through
offshore havens." The euro-zone debt crisis has compelled some Western
governments to try to alleviate their debt with the hidden wealth of the rich
who had avoided taxes through offshore havens, Williamson said. "The
British government is forcing offshore jurisdictions to make visible the holdings
of UK-based individuals." Hong Kong corporate governance activist David
Webb said: "Since the global financial crisis in 2008, Western governments
have been more interested in cracking down on people who are avoiding tax in
offshore havens. There is more international co-operation than before." However,
Bruce was sceptical that governments were behind the ICIJ investigation. It was
likely to expose people close to some governments, he said, "so it's not
government-driven".
the haney group hong kong news
article
It has hardly ever been any dissimilar in the history of mankind and this certainly hasn't changed appreciably overtime. Modern technology has simply made it easier for some people to be greedier with more efficiency thus making the economy worthless.
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