Panama Papers scandal reaches Mao Zedong and Communist China elite
Umberto Bacchi
Relatives of senior Communist Party members in China have been named in the Panama Papers scandal
Reuters
Ramifications of the Panama Papers leak run so deep that even the
name of communist China's founder Mao Zedong has been drawn into the
scandal.
A distant
relative of the capitalism foe, who oversaw the disastrous Cultural
Revolution campaign, set up shell companies in offshore tax havens,
according to leaked documents from Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca.
Mao's grandson-in-law, Chen Dongsheng, was the sole director
and shareholder of Keen Best International Ltd, a company incorporated
in the British Virgin Islands (BVI) in 2011, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) reported.
Mao Zedong’s grandson-in-law Chen Dongsheng
China Photos/Getty Images
That
same year, the 58-year-old who owns several businesses, including a
life insurance company and an art auction house, married Kong Dongmei, a
granddaughter of modern China's most revered figure.
Chen is not the only figure with ties to senior Communist cadres featured in the 11.5 million documents obtained by the ICIJ.
Relatives
of at least eight present or past members of China's powerful seven-man
politburo standing committee have offshore holdings, according to the
data trove.
Among them are Deng Jiagui, the brother-in-law of president
Xi Jinping, and Li Xiaolin, daughter of Li Peng, the man that during his
tenure as premier from 1987 to 1998 oversaw the violent suppression on
pro-democracy demonstrations in Tiananmen Square.
Deng, husband to Xi's older sister Qi Qiaoqiao, is reported
to have opened three offshore companies fancily named Supreme Victory
Enterprises Ltd, Best Effect Enterprises Ltd and Wealth Ming
International Ltd between 2004 and 2009. The companies were no longer
operative when Xi came to power in 2012.
Li Xiaolin and her husband instead incorporated a BVI-based
company named Cofic Investments in 1994, hiding their ownership of it by
use of bearer certificates that are anonymous. According to the ICIJ, even Mossack Fonesca
that helped organising the deal remained unaware that the couple were
behind the company for 20 years until an official query by BVI financial
regulators in 2014.
In all cases there was no suggestion of wrongdoing but
revelations that relatives of senior officials might have stashed their
wealth away in tax havens are to cause embarrassment to the communist
elite.
Communist Party
members are banned from investing in offshore companies and, since he
took office, president Xi has been waging a campaign against corruption
and bad behaviour within the party.
Holding offshore companies and accounts is not inherently
illegal but they can be used to hide assets from the taxman or launder
money from illicit sources.
Meanwhile, following international pressure after the leak
the Panamanian government has announced it will receive advice by an
international committee of experts on ways to improve financial
transparency.
Panama Papers scandal reaches Mao Zedong and Communist China elite
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