Brussels
(AFP) - The EU will remove Panama, South Korea and six other countries from its
recently unveiled tax haven blacklist in a quick reversal that drew criticism
from activists.
An EU
official told AFP that the bloc's finance ministers would pare down the list at
talks next week, satisfied that the countries had made commitments to tax
reform that Brussels will monitor.
"Barring
a major surprise, EU finance ministers should remove eight countries from the
blacklist of tax havens," the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
The change
of mind comes just a few weeks after the EU announced an original blacklist of
17 non-EU countries, which drew furious reaction from several of those
targeted.
The United
Arab Emirates, Tunisia, Mongolia, Macau, Grenada and Barbados will also be
removed from the list.
The
official said the countries removed from the list now move to the EU's
so-called "grey list", jurisdictions that have made unspecified
commitments to the EU on reforming their tax laws.
"I
confirm that a dozen blacklisted third countries have since December sent
additional commitments," EU Economic Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici
told reporters in Paris.
"It's
a good sign, since the purpose of a list is to get out and to get off of it you
have to solve the problems that are identified," Moscovici added.
The lists
came a year on from the leak of the "Panama Papers" -- a massive
amount of data from a prominent Panamanian law firm showing how the world's
wealthy stash assets.
The EU
originally screened a total of 92 countries to draw up the list, which is expected
to be continuously updated.
"This
is a worrying trend. Just one month after adopting the list they are taking
people off," Aurore Chardonnet, an EU tax policy advisor at Oxfam, told
AFP.
"They
are weakening the credibility of the list... which is becoming empty," she
added.
At the time
of its adoption in December, the 28 members of the EU failed to agree on
possible sanctions against blacklisted countries.
While
France's finance minister, Bruno Le Maire, pleaded for sanctions, his
Luxembourg counterpart, Pierre Gramegna, was less in a hurry: "It's bad
enough to be on the blacklist".
Saint
Lucia, Trinidad and Tobago, as well as Bahrain, Guam, the Marshall Islands,
Palau, Samoa, American Samoa and Namibia remain on the blacklist.
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