Top Politburo relatives
named
The close relatives of some of China’s most
powerful men and women including President Xi Jinping and former Premier Wen
Jiabao have maintained secretive accounts in offshore tax havens, with the
connivance of some of the west’s biggest accounting firms and banks, according
to an explosive study by the International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists.
The account details appear in a vast trove of 2.5 million
leaked documents made available to the consortium, a network of 160 journalists
in more than 60 countries. The report, which is too comprehensive for Asia Sentinel to
print all the details, can be found online here. It shows that Xi’s
campaign to clean out corruption, which so far has netted hundreds of
relatively low-ranking cadres with a few important figures, hardly begins to
scratch the surface of illegal wealth fleeing the country.
The records show that relatives of at least five current or
former Politburo members have incorporated companies in the Cook Islands or British
Virgin Islands. Nearly 22,000 offshore clients were found to have addresses on
the mainland or in Hong Kong. The records also include incorporations by
relatives of Deng Xiaoping, former Premier Li Peng, and former President Hu
Jintao.
More than 50 reporting partners from Europe, North American
and Asia have been sifting through the documents since last April. They put
names and faces to reports that an estimated IS$1 trillion to US$3 trillion has
leaked out of China in illegal capital flight over the past decade.
How much of the funds deposited in the British Virgin
Islands, Samoa and other offshore havens is illegal isn’t clear, the report
notes. But the revelations provide an embarrassing counterpoint to efforts over
the past month to polish up the image of top Communist cadres, especially
former premier Wen. The files include specific details of a real estate company
co-owned by Xi’s brother-in-law and British Virgin Islands companies set up by
Wen’s son and also by his son-in-law, making his protestations sound thin that
he knew nothing about their wealth. The files show that at least 15 of the
country’s richest members of the National People’s Congress and executives of
state-owned companies are allegedly entangled in scandal.
The files are also an embarrassment for the international
accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers as well as the Swiss bank UBS and other
Western banks and accounting firms, which appear to have played a key role in
helping Chinese clients set up the overseas accounts. For instance, the report
notes, it was Credit Suisse that helped Wen Jiabao’s son create his BVI company
while his father was leading the country.
The files come from two offshore firms — Singapore-based Portcullis TrustNet and the BVI-based Commonwealth Trust Limited — that help clients
create offshore companies, trusts and bank accounts, according to the report.
Until now, the details on China and Hong Kong had not been
disclosed. “As the country has moved from an insular communist system to a
socialist/capitalist hybrid, China has become a leading market for offshore
havens that peddle secrecy, tax shelters and streamlined international deal
making,” the report notes. “Every corner of China’s economy, from oil to green
energy and from mining to arms trading, appears in the ICIJ data.”
The growing onshore and offshore wealth of China’s elites
“may not be strictly illegal,” but it is often tied to “conflict of interest
and covert use of government power,” said Minxin Pei, a political scientist at Claremont
McKenna College in California. “If there is real transparency, then the Chinese
people will have a much better idea of how corrupt the system is [and] how much
wealth has been amassed by government officials through illegal means.”
As the report notes, exposure of top level corruption is
extremely sensitive. Late last year the government for months delayed visas for
the New York Times and the Bloomberg business news service before finally
granting them. Both the Times and Bloomberg had written prize-winning accounts
of the wealth enjoyed by Xi and Wen’s relatives although Bloomberg later
capitulated and ordered its journalists to ease up on reporting on Chinese
graft.
Bloomberg journalist Michael Forsythe was suspended and
fired after it was revealed that it was revealed that he was one of the
reporters who spoke to the New York Times about the news ervice’s killing a
story he had been working on for about a year. Also, Paul Mooney, who had
reported critically on China for the South China Morning Post, was denied a
visa after he had moved to Reuters.
In November, the report noted a mainland Chinese news
organization that was working with ICIJ to analyze the offshore data withdrew
from the reporting partnership, explaining that authorities had warned it not
to publish anything about the material. ICIJ is keeping the identity of the
news outlet confidential to protect journalists from government retaliation.
Other partners in the investigation include the Hong Kong newspaper Ming Pao,
the Taiwanese magazine CommonWealth and the German newspaper Süddeutsche
Zeitung.
Along with the China and Hong Kong names, ICIJ’s files also
include the names of roughly 16,000 offshore clients from Taiwan. ICIJ will
continue to publish stories with its partners in the next few days and will
release the Greater China names on its Offshore Leaks Database tomorrow, the report
noted. ‘Asia Sentinel’
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