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peppertree

(21,624 posts)
Tue Oct 5, 2021, 02:25 PM Oct 2021

Pandora Papers in Latin America: Three active heads of state and 11 former presidents named

Three current and 11 retired presidents, 90 politicians in the upper echelons of power, entire religious congregations, world-famous artists, billionaires and even the governor of a central bank; in Latin America, an array of influential figures have made use of tax havens over the years.

Despite inhabiting the region dogged by the most inequality in the world - top 10% earn nearly half the region's income - members of Latin America's elite have used a network of trusts, shell companies and opaque business records in places such as the British Virgin Islands and Panama to keep substantial assets from public scrutiny.

While the results of the investigation have a global impact, they are particularly earth-shattering in Latin America, where an estimated $40 billion is diverted to tax havens each year.

Of the 35 presidents or former presidents named, 14 are from this region. Most are conservative.

Among them are three active heads of state, who have all been wealthy businessmen: Chile’s Sebastián Piñera, Ecuador’s Guillermo Lasso, and the Dominican Luis Abinader.

Eleven former presidents also appear: César Gaviria and Andrés Pastrana (Colombia); Alfredo Cristiani and Francisco Flores (El Salvado); Michel Martelly (Haiti); Porfirio Lobo (Honduras); Horacio Cartes (Paraguay); Pedro Kuczynski (Peru); and Juan Carlos Varela, Ricardo Martinelli and Ernesto Pérez from Panama - itself a notorious tax haven.

Brazil's current Economy Minister and Central Bank President, Paulo Guedes and Roberto Campos Neto, were also named.

At: https://english.elpais.com/usa/2021-10-03/pandora-papers-in-latin-america-three-active-heads-of-state-and-11-former-presidents-operated-in-tax-havens.html



Guillermo Lasso (Ecuador), Sebastián Piñera (Chile) and Luis Abinader (Dominican Republic) - all of whom were revealed to have undeclared overseas accounts in the Pandora Papers.

Of the 35 current or former heads of state named worldwide, 14 are from Latin America.

Others, such as former Argentine President Mauricio Macri, don't appear in the Pandora Papers - but have siblings who do. Macri appeared over 50 times in the 2016 Panama and Paradise Papers - but was acquitted by an allied judge before leaving office in 2019.
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Pandora Papers in Latin America: Three active heads of state and 11 former presidents named (Original Post) peppertree Oct 2021 OP
It's always so convenient having allies on hand in the judiciary, isn't it? They served Macri well. Judi Lynn Oct 2021 #1
Brazil's Guedes to show prosecutors he did nothing wrong regarding offshore investment Judi Lynn Oct 2021 #2

Judi Lynn

(160,517 posts)
1. It's always so convenient having allies on hand in the judiciary, isn't it? They served Macri well.
Wed Oct 6, 2021, 01:16 AM
Oct 2021

These people undoubtedly have been getting by with murder.


So many of the Latin American names connected in this investigation have been operating in swiping everything that wasn't nailed down during their horrifying time at the helms.

It would be impossible to trust any of these guys. How can their own cronies stand them long enough to cooperate with them in their schemes, anyway? Too crazy!



Panama's Ricardo Martinelli, getting rowdy while the police were trying to
haul him off to the hoosegow.









Panama's Martinelli with Peru's President Alan Garcia, who refused to go with the nice policemen who came for him, went into another room and shot himself to death before they could stop him.

Judi Lynn

(160,517 posts)
2. Brazil's Guedes to show prosecutors he did nothing wrong regarding offshore investment
Wed Oct 6, 2021, 04:16 PM
Oct 2021

October 5, 2021
8:22 PM CDT
Last Updated 19 hours ago

Reuters

2 minute read

BRASILIA, Oct 5 (Reuters) - Brazil's Economy Minister Paulo Guedes will provide prosecutors and the Supreme Court with voluntary evidence showing he broke no laws or had any conflicts of interest in regards to offshore investments, his lawyers said on Tuesday.

The statement comes after Guedes was named in reports by the consortium of news outlets covering the so-called "Pandora Papers" data dump, which triggered a preliminary investigation by prosecutors in Brazil.

The initial inquiry by the office of Brazil's prosecutor general (PGR) does not indicate any crime has been committed.

Guedes' lawyers said the minister had removed himself from the management of the offshore investment vehicle Dreadnoughts in 2018, relinquishing any participation in the financial decisions of the company. They added that Guedes had not moved any money abroad since he joined the government.

More:
https://www.reuters.com/world/brazils-guedes-show-prosecutors-he-did-nothing-wrong-regarding-offshore-2021-10-06/

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