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Saturday, June 15, 2013

British PM strikes 'tax havens' deal ahead of G8

Google - AFP, Robin Millard (AFP), 15 June 2013

David Cameron makes a speech at Lancaster House in central London
on June 15, 2013 (Pool/AFP, Steve Parsons)

LONDON — Britain on Saturday struck a deal with its overseas territories clamping down on tax evasion, giving Prime Minister David Cameron a stronger hand as he prepares to host a G8 summit focusing on trade, tax and financial transparency.

The two-day summit at a luxury resort in Northern Ireland, which starts on Monday, will also centre on the Syria conflict.

During pre-G8 talks at his Downing Street office, Cameron reached an agreement with territories such as the Cayman Islands and the crown dependencies of Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man, which are often seen as tax havens.

They agreed a series of actions aimed at promoting transparency and exchange of information between tax jurisdictions.

"It is a very positive step forward and it means that Britain's voice in the G8 and the campaigning on this issue around the world for proper taxes, proper companies and proper laws ... will be stronger," Cameron said afterwards.

"Let's be clear why this tax issue matters. If companies don't pay their taxes or individuals don't pay their taxes we all suffer as a result."

British Prime Minister David Cameron
(3rd L) heads a meeting with the heads
of the overseas territories, June 15,
2013 (Pool/AFP, Nick Ansell)
He said his programme for the Group of Eight world powers was about "proper companies, proper taxes and proper global rules ensuring that openness delivers the benefits it should for rich and poor countries alike.

"Aid is important but these things matter just as much. Now is the time. This is the agenda. The world should get behind it."

There was progress late Friday towards what Cameron has admitted would be the biggest prize of the summit -- the start of formal negotiations between the European Union and the United States on a free trade agreement.

EU trade ministers finally thrashed out an agreement on how to negotiate for a deal, after meeting a French demand to exclude the key audiovisual sector.

But the Syrian conflict looks set to dominate the talks after Washington upped the ante by pledging military aid to rebels seeking to oust President Bashar al-Assad.

The White House said for the first time on Thursday that the regime had used chemical weapons, notably sarin gas, on multiple occasions against the opposition -- crossing what it has described as a red line.

The issue of Syria topped the agenda of an hour-long pre-summit videoconference on Friday between Obama and the leaders of France, Germany, Britain and Italy.

"They discussed the situation in Syria and how G8 countries should all agree to work on together a political transition to end the conflict," a Downing Street spokeswoman said.

Officials said Washington would increase military support to the rebels, a move welcomed by Britain and France who successfully pushed for a lifting of the EU arms embargo on Syria last month.

Damascus rejected the US accusations as "lies", while Moscow, a key player due to its long-standing support for Assad, said they were "unconvincing" and hurt efforts to make peace.

Russian President Vladimir Putin was to meet Cameron in London for pre-summit talks on Sunday and then hold a bilateral meeting with Obama in Belfast on Monday.

The US and Russian leaders will kick-start the G8 discussions on Syria, which British officials hope will get all parties in the conflict closer to the negotiating table.

Moscow and Washington have jointly proposed a peace conference in Geneva, building on a similar meeting last year, but no date has yet been set.

Cameron said he wanted G8 summits to "get back to a fireside chat" in which leaders sit together "without a lot of advisers and without a lot of communiques, addressing problems of the world that they want to do something about".

"International gatherings are worthwhile, if they are done in the right way. The trouble is too many of them are about long communiques with endless textual arguments," he told The Guardian newspaper.

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