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"Putin. Offshore, Impeachment." -- A lone protester holds up a sign in Moscow protesting over the fact that Russian President Vladimir Putin is seen to have been implicated in murky financial dealings revealed in the Panama Papers
"Putin. Offshore, Impeachment." -- A lone protester holds up a sign in Moscow protesting over the fact that Russian President Vladimir Putin is seen to have been implicated in murky financial dealings revealed in the Panama Papers

Live Blog: The Panama Papers

Follow all the latest developments as they happen

Final Summary for April 13

-- The Russian cellist linked by the Panama Papers to murky offshore finances says the money came from donations.

-- German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has outlined details of a plan to combat tax havens in the wake of the Panama leaks.

-- British Prime Minister David Cameron is set to announce that new legislation making companies criminally liable if employees aid tax evasion will be introduced this year

-- -- Cameron had earlier published his tax records in an attempt to draw a line under questions about his personal finances raised by the mention of his late father in the Panama Papers for setting up an offshore fund.

-- The unauthorized use of the International Red Cross's name by entities listed in the Panama Papers poses "enormous" risks for its operations and staff, the head of the humanitarian body said.

-- Several thousand people filled a big square in Malta's capital on April 10 and demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Joseph Muscat after the leaked Panama Papers said two of his political allies had offshore accounts.

-- Police have raided the El Salvador offices of the Panama-based law firm at the heart of the "Panama Papers" scandal that has revealed how the wealthy in many countries stashed their riches offshore.

11:15 8.4.2016

The Panama papers may also end up changing the way the secretive world of art dealing works. The Guardian looked at that angle in depth.

The Panama Papers reveal enough art in private collections to fill a museum. They show the extent to which art has become a commodity – its value used for everything from the guarantee for a loan to the settlement for a divorce.

And the BBC also reports that the Panama leaks may have solved the mystery of who owns a classic 1918 painting by Italian artist Amadeo Modigliani:

A Paris art dealer's estate wants the art-collecting Nahmad family to return Amadeo Modigliani's Seated Man With A Cane, which it claims the Nazis seized in World War Two.

The family claimed in court it was held by International Art Center (IAC).

The leaked papers have now shown the company is owned by the Nahmads.

And one more on the art angle here from the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ).

Locked in the files of a Panama law firm are the answers to mysteries involving Van Goghs, Picassos, Rembrandts and other masterworks.

10:52 8.4.2016

We have to spice up the Panama papers story with some comic relief to keep us all from going insane. Here's a piece from The Onion.

“Wow, I haven’t thought about that in years. How much was it again? $30 million? $40 million? Anyway, I’m glad they reminded me. Who knows how long that would have slipped my mind.”

And you can get a few more laughs by using Google images to come up with "Panama papers cartoons."

10:48 8.4.2016

We have heard a lot about Panama, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, and the like. But the U.S. state of Delaware also belongs on this roster of corruption, The Guardian reports, citing the work of Transparency International.

In 2015, in a ranking of tax havens most attractive for those looking to hide assets, the US came in third – surpassing Cayman and Singapore. The two places that were even better suited as tax havens for the rich were Switzerland and Hong Kong, according to the Tax Justice Network that published the ranking.

What was Panama’s ranking? It was 10 spots behind the US, at 13.

10:43 8.4.2016

An editorial on The Economist website today tries to draw some lessons and offer a reform agenda in the wake of the Panama leaks.

Cleaning up tax havens will not end graft. The prime responsibility for this lies with national governments, many of which should do more to make their finances transparent and their safeguards against cronyism stringent. But it would help if kleptocrats were less able to hide their stashes. Hence co-ordinated global efforts are required to crack down on corporate anonymity and to stop the middlemen who make it so easy for crooks to launder their loot.

Many schemes described in the Panama papers involve anonymous shell companies, whose real owners hide behind hired “nominees”. Such vehicles are known as the “getaway cars” for tax dodgers, launderers and crooked officials. It is time to untint their windows by creating central registers of beneficial ownership that are open to tax officials, law-enforcers—and the public. The penalties for lying when registering a firm should be stiff. Britain and a few smaller countries have led the way in this. Others should follow.

Next, regulate the law firms and other intermediaries that set up and husband offshore companies and trusts. They are supposed to know their clients, weeding out the dodgy ones. But too many are paid to act as buffers, offering an extra layer of protection against those who pry. Governments make great efforts to ensure that global banks comply with anti-money-laundering rules, while this shadow financial system is barely policed. That must change.

The Atlantic has a piece that expresses some of the same ideas, saying the shocking thing about the revelations isn't the illegal activity but the exposure of what is actually legal:

The U.K. is far from unique in holding this conflicted position relative to the offshore world, and nations like Panama know it. For example, the U.S. has been very aggressive about cracking down on overseas tax avoidance in recent years. But it has also become a popular tax and secrecy haven in its own right, earning it the nickname “the new Switzerland.” Thus, calls by European and North American countries for crackdowns on “harmful tax competition” are increasingly met with derision and anger offshore. Panama and other offshore financial centers know that individual firms like Mossack Fonseca are just part of a web of “legal corruption” that reaches virtually every country in the world. Destroying that web would bring down many firms, and probably a few governments as well. So far, no one has been willing to do more than pull at a few strands at a time.

10:32 8.4.2016

RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service is working through the implications of the Panama leaks for President Petro Poroshenko. Here is the first long section of their investigation in the original Ukrainian and in a Google-translate version.

10:20 8.4.2016

Although there has been very little reaction to the Panama papers revelations in Russia and a very muted response from the state-dominated media, one Russian is not ignoring the developments. Nikolai Suvorov, a resident of a village in Saratov Oblast, has filed a lawsuit with the regional arbitration court naming Russian President Vladimir Putin as "an enemy of the people, a friend of oligarchs and bureaucrats" and charging him with "robbing Russia; impoverishing the Russian people; and enriching the bureaucrats, bankers, and robber-billionaires."

The suit asks the court to remove Putin from his post as president.

A preliminary hearing in the case has been scheduled for April 28, and both Suvorov and Putin have been informed.

10:13 8.4.2016

Here is an interview with McClatchy Newspapers journalist Tim Johnson, who has been working on the Panama papers project from the beginning. About 4 minutes into the interview, he responds to the WikiLeaks charge that the investigation is a U.S. plot to smear America's enemies.

"Baloney," Johnson says. "We went into this just like you would walk into the Library of Congress and find 20,000 boxes there. We had no idea what we would find."

09:58 8.4.2016

This article might be too technical for the average reader, but it sheds some light into how the Mossack Fonseca computer system might have been hacked.

"The MF website runs WordPress and is currently running a version of Revolution Slider that is vulnerable to attack and will grant a remote attacker a shell on the web server."

09:51 8.4.2016

Putin's Russia chooses not between guns and butter, but between guns and cellos:

09:49 8.4.2016

British Prime Minister David Cameron continues to take heat from the Panama papers revelations, admitting now that he personally benefited from his father's tax-sheltered investments:

"Admitting it had been 'a difficult few days', the prime minister said he held the shares together with his wife, Samantha, from 1997 and during his time as leader of the opposition. They were sold in January 2010 for a profit of £19,000."

The Guardian, by the way, has aggregated all of its Panama papers coverage here.

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