Taxman, people involved react as Vietnamese
names revealed in Panama Papers
This photo
illustration of the Panama Papers is seen on the website of the International
Consortium of Investigative Journalists.
With numerous Vietnamese
names included in a huge database of secret offshore companies, including the
so-called Panama Papers and Offshore Leaks, posted online this week,
Vietnamese tax authorities and some individuals involved have responded.
The
Panama Papers, leaked by the International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists (ICIJ) from Panamanian law firm and corporate service provider
Mossack Fonseca, include 11.5 million documents, some of which date back to
the 1970s, that detail financial and attorney–client information for more
than 214,488 offshore entities.
German
newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung was the first to get access to the
Panama Papers database after a tip-off from a source named ‘John Doe’. The
newspaper then granted the ICIJ access to this resource.
The
Panama Papers, first reported by the media on April 3, illustrate how wealthy
individuals, including public officials, are able to keep personal financial
information private.
A
searchable platform of the Panama Papers database, said to be the largest
ever release of information about offshore companies and the people behind
them, was made available to the public on Tuesday by the ICIJ.
The
Panama Papers documents, including the names of the real owners of those
opaque structures, was added to an ICIJ existing database called Offshore
Leaks, a report released on April 2013 that discloses details of 130,000
offshore accounts.
A
search request with the keyword “Vietnam” made by Tuoi Tre Newson the ICIJ database on Wednesday
morning showed the names of 189 officers, both foreign and Vietnamese.
The
search results also include 19 offshore entities, 23 intermediaries and 185
addresses.
The
sets of data are a combination of information revealed in both the Panama
Papers and Offshore Leaks affairs.
Following
the revelation, Vietnam’s General Department of Taxation said on Tuesday
afternoon that it had formed an inspection team to look into issues related
to the Vietnamese names and companies revealed in the database, while some of
the individuals involved said it is no big deal to see their names there.
Verification process initiated
“This
is a complicated matter that requires a joint effort from many regulatory
bodies,” Nguyen Dai Tri, deputy head of the General Department of Taxation,
told Tuoi Tre (Youth)
newspaper later on Tuesday.
Tri
said his agency will work with the State Bank of Vietnam and the Ministry of
Public Security as well as relevant bodies in countries with which Vietnam
has signed a double taxation avoidance decree to verify the issue.
The
anti-money laundering agency under the central bank has also started
reviewing information related to those individuals and organizations that are
said by the Panama Papers and Offshore Leaks to have created offshore
companies shortly after the revelation was made online.
“We
will verify their source of funds and transfer method,” agency head Nguyen
Van Ngoc said. “It cannot be confirmed whether they have been involved in
money laundering as what we have now are only their names.”
Ngoc,
however, did assert that the verification process will “not be difficult” if
they all transfer money via the bank system.
The company logo of Mossack Fonseca is seen inside the office of Mossack Fonseca & Co. (Asia) Limited in Hong Kong, China April 5, 2016. Photo: Reuters
A
former director of the taxation general department suggested the government
set up a panel particularly tasked with studying the Panama Papers and
Offshore Leaks to verify the Vietnam links.
He
also called on such sectors as banking, customs, tax and public security to
take action. “What needs to be done first is to request that those involved
prove that their businesses and money transfer procedures are legitimate,” he
pressed.
In
the meantime, Can Van Luc, a banking expert, said many countries have begun
to review their tax policies following the Panama Papers and Offshore Leaks
affairs, and that Vietnam should follow suit.
Luc
said transferring money to offshore firms is more likely intended to avoid
taxes than to launder money. “This is a common trend in many countries,” he
said.
Insiders’ voices
According
to experts, it should be noted that having their names in the leaked database
does not necessarily mean a Vietnamese individual or organization has
violated the law or operated an illegal business.
Three
of the 189 individuals related to the resource told Tuoi Tre on
Tuesday “it is normal” to see their names in the database.
Nguyen
Thi Phuong Thao, chairwoman of the Sovico Corporation PTE Ltd, said she is on
the list because her company bought an overseas firm that already had a
relationship with Mossack Fonseca at the time of the purchase.
In
2005 Sovico Corporation won an international bid to replace Hong Kong-based
Lai Sun as the foreign investor in two companies, Furama and Best City
Finance, Thao told Tuoi Tre.
“These
are deals that are open, transparent and compliant with the laws of all
related countries,” she asserted.
Furama
was founded in 1992 and was among the clients of Mossack Fonseca.
As
Sovico Corporation own 75 percent of the stakes in Furama, it is normal for
Thao and her company to be on the list, she explained.
L-R: Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao, Dam Bich Thuy and Nguyen Duy Hung
Nguyen
Duy Hung, chairman and general director of the Saigon Securities Inc., said
opening an offshore company is a legal overseas investment activity, which is
not related to tax avoidance or money laundering.
Dam
Bich Thuy, former CEO of ANZ Vietnam, also said she was not surprised to see
her name in the Panama Papers leaked documents.
Thuy
said ANZ has a finance leasing firm, ANZ/V-Trac International Leasing
Company, registered in the British Virgin Islands as a subsidiary of the
lender.
“As
the then-ANZ CEO, I was also the person-in-charge of the finance leasing
firm, which is registered to operate under my name,” she said. “My
predecessor, Adhil Admad, is also on the list.”
Thuy
said there is nothing legally wrong for businesses to open subsidiaries in
tax haven countries.
“The
legal wrongdoings, if any, depend on how the businesses are operated,” she
said.
“We
cannot solely rely on the leaked documents to accuse a company of violations
which require adequate inspection from regulatory bodies to be confirmed.”
TUOI TRE NEWS
|
Thứ Tư, 11 tháng 5, 2016
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