Labour leader piled the pressure on David Cameron during a speech in Essex on 5 April
Carl Court/ Getty Images
Jeremy Corbyn has
urged David Cameron to consider imposing "direct rule" from the UK on
the British Virgin Islands and other territories in a bid to crackdown
on tax havens. The Labour leader's radical request comes amid a scandal
over the financial affairs of the world's elite.
Millions of leaked documents from the Panama law firm
Mossack Fonseca reportedly revealed wealthy clients were able to shelter
their money offshore over 40 years. HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) as well as other tax authorities across the world have launched investigations into the explosive papers.
But Corbyn has gone one step further and suggested the UK
could take the British Virgin Islands, where Mossack Fonseca apparently
incorporated some companies, under direct control of the government.
"They
are self-governing, yes, but they are British crown dependent
territories. Therefore, surely, there has to be an observance of UK tax
law in those places," Corbyn told the BBC.
"If
they have become a place for systematic evasion and short-changing the
public in this country, then something has to be done about it. Either
those governments comply or a next step has to be taken."
The 11.5m document leak explained
IBTimes UK
Cameron
has called for more transparency in tax havens, but a spokeswoman for
the British prime minister insisted to the press lobby that his
family's investments are a "private matter".
Elsewhere, Mossack Fonseca co-founder Ramón Fonseca has
branded the leak as a "crime". The lawyer also claimed that his firm has
never been "convicted or accused or any wrongdoing".
"Privacy
is a fundamental human right that is being eroded more and more in the
modern world. Each person has a right to privacy, whether they are a
king or a beggar," he told the AfP news agency.
The government of the British Virgin Islands had not
responded to a request for comment from IBTimes UK at the time of
publication.
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