Transparency International's weekly newsletter and supplement to our Daily Corruption News, 27 October 2017

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Hi there,

All this week teasers have been circulating of a major new exposé of the offshore financial sector. 

Remember the Panama Papers back in 2016? That was when thousands of documents from a Panamanian law firm called Mossack Fonseca were leaked to journalists, leading to a flood of stories about how people and companies were trying to hide money, some of it corrupt.

While we won’t know all the details of these latest revelations until Sunday evening, some appear to be related to an offshore law firm, similar in some respects to Mossack Fonseca.

Already last week, early indications suggested that some of the allegations will centre around wealthy individuals avoiding tax on their private jets

Whatever emerges over the weekend, one thing is clear: the era of financial secrecy has to end.

Too many places are acting as safe havens for illicit cash. The same kinds of complex financial structures that enable the wealthy to reduce their tax burden are also susceptible to money-laundering and other illegal activity.

Oversight is often lacking, and regulators aren’t using the legal tools they have.

In the United States, the week began with news that senior political operatives had been indicted for illicit financial transactions using a “tangled skein of offshore companies”.

These hidden payments may be related to efforts to lobby on behalf of a foreign government, without disclosing the amounts of money being paid or their source.

Isn’t that reason enough to demand closer scrutiny?

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Where are the offshore watchdogs?

In all the excitement about breaking news stories on tax havens, a crucial question risks being overlooked: where are the regulators that are supposed to provide oversight of offshore providers like Appleby or Mossack Fonseca?

 

Uzbekistan: How to support the real victims of grand corruption

What do you do when assets stolen from a country’s state coffers by corrupt individuals have been recovered and can now be returned to the country - but the government is still controlled by corrupt people?

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Proposed “transparency” legislation in Poland must be rethought and revised

Transparency International and its partner in Poland, the Stefan Batory Foundation, are calling on the government to consult more widely and revise proposed legislation on transparency in public life.

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Corruption in the news this week

Top Stories

Global: U.S. to exit global anti-corruption effort aimed at oil cash
Bloomberg (2 November)

The Trump administration said it will exit a global anti-corruption effort that compels oil, gas and mining companies to disclose the payments they give governments worldwide.

 
Global: Singapore police examine Goldman’s role in 1mdb deals
Bloomberg (2 November)

Singaporean prosecutors and police are examining Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s relationship with the Malaysian state investment fund at the center of global money laundering probes, people with knowledge of the matter said.

 
Global: Bermuda, Isle of Man lobbied UK government to escape revealing companies' owners
MLex Market Insight (1 November)

Bermuda and the Isle of Man directly lobbied the UK government during the passage of a key anticorruption law that threatened to force them to open up their company-ownership registers, MLex has learned.

 
European Union: Lawyer says Foreign Office told her to ignore EU corruption evidence
The Guardian (2 November)

Foreign Office (FCO) diplomats wanted a whistleblower to “turn a blind eye” to evidence of corruption at the European Union’s biggest foreign mission, according to documents placed before a tribunal on Monday.

 
Latin America: A culture of corruption
The World Weekly (2 November, TI mention)

Corruption in Latin America has grave social, political and economic implications. Can the region hope for a more honest future?

 

Blog/Opinion

Global: The do’s and don’ts of kleptocracy
The New Yorker (30 October)
 
South Africa: One year later: How we miss Thuli Madonsela
Huffington Post (2 November, TI mention)
 
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