Yahoo – AFP,
Naomi O'Leary, 4 Mar 2015
London
(AFP) - British property is a safe haven for money stolen from around the
world, with tens of thousands of London properties owned by secretive
companies, according to a corruption report released Wednesday.
Campaign
group Transparency International found 36,342 properties in London covering 3.6
square kilometres are held by companies registered in offshore secrecy havens
such as the British Virgin Islands, Jersey and the Isle of Man.
Almost one
in 10 properties in the district of Westminster, where the British government
is based, are owned by a company registered in an offshore haven, the report
found.
In 2011
alone, the report said, £3.8 billion worth of UK property was bought by
companies registered in the British Virgin Islands.
The group
said the use of British property to store stolen wealth may have helped inflate
prices -- an explosive political issue due to near-record prices and a lack of
affordable housing ahead of Britain's May election.
"There
is growing evidence that the UK property market has become a safe haven for
corrupt capital stolen from around the world, facilitated by the laws which
allow UK property to be owned by secret offshore companies," said
Transparency International executive director Robert Barrington.
"This
has a devastating effect on the countries from which the money has been stolen,
and it's hard to see how welcoming in the world's corrupt elite is beneficial
to communities in the UK."
The group
urged the government to make the Land Registry require transparency over who
owners of companies are, in order to ensure Britain is not "the
destination of choice for global corruption".
- Unpicking
the layers of secrecy -
The report
examined data from the Land Registry along with the Metropolitan Police
Proceeds of Corruption Unit.
The police
force said it had helped with the investigation as such cooperation was
important to improving understanding of corruption and how to address it.
"It
can take years to unpick the layers of corruption and secrecy which ultimately
result in the purchase of UK properties," a police spokesman said.
"Such
properties are often owned by companies registered in foreign jurisdictions and
while secrecy jurisdictions have been co-operative with our investigations,
obtaining evidence can take years."
"We
would welcome any regulation which makes it harder for corrupt officials to hide
money that has been stolen from civilians across the world, in our own
neighbourhoods."
The
campaigners said that £180 million ($277 million, 247 million euros) of
property in Britain has been brought under criminal investigation since 2004 --
described as the tip of the iceberg.
Three out
of four properties that had been brought under criminal investigation were
registered in an offshore secrecy haven, the group said.
The
campaigners published a map showing the location of the properties per borough
online at as part of the report, called "Corruption on your Doorstep: How
corrupt capital is used to buy property in the UK".
The
investigation comes at a moment when hidden wealth is under scrutiny following
a political scandal over allegations top British bank HSBC helped wealthy
clients evade tax.
In response
to the report, the British government said it was committed to tackling illicit
money flows and the misuse of companies.
"We
are taking forward world leading reform to improve corporate transparency and
working hard to encourage others to take equally ambitious action in this
space," a spokeswoman said.
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