Friday, February 8, 2013


European sanctioned money launderingGlobal Witness argues the European Commission’s proposed new legislation on financial crime does not go far enough in two key areas:“Criminals currently find it easy to abuse European companies to hide their identity and therefore their assets. ‘Who owns and controls European companies should not be secret,’ said Robert Palmer, campaigner at Global Witness. ‘The names of the ultimate, beneficial, owners should be made public.’ A European Commission study found that public registries of the beneficial owners of companies would be more cost effective than other options.Instead, under the Commission’s proposal, companies will only be required to know themselves who their ultimate owners are. This will be of limited help.…The proposal does not do enough to tackle professionals that facilitate tax evasion. ‘The Commission proposal allows bankers, lawyers and accountants who facilitate tax evasion to get away with it. They should face money laundering charges for this insidious activity which costs developing countries billions every year’ said Alex Marriage, Policy and Outreach Analyst at [the European Network on Debt and Development].”

No comments:

Post a Comment