|

by Stephen Lendman
April 05, 2016
from
GlobalResearch Website
|
Stephen Lendman lives
in Chicago. He can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
His
new book as editor and contributor is titled
"Flashpoint in Ukraine:
US
Drive for Hegemony Risks WW III."
http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanIII.html
Visit
his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.
Listen
to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network. |

The International
Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) calls
itself an initiative,
"focusing
on…cross-border crime, corruption, and the
accountability of power."
Its financial backers
include,
...and
other sources.
It was used to
facilitate the
largest
ever financial leak, a reported 11.5 million
documents, revealing secret offshore holdings of
current and former world leaders, along with
numerous other high-profile public and private
figures.

The
Panama-based
Mossack
Fonseca
law
firm is at the heart of the scandal, quietly providing services for
high-profile clients, including apparently hiding wealth in tax
havens, making money trails murky in the process.
No current or earlier Western leaders or
officials so far were named, only UK prime minister David Cameron's
father, Ian. Is evidence of their possible tax avoidance, money
laundering or other illegal or suspect activities being concealed?
According to Forbes magazine,
America had 536 billionaires in 2015, Western European countries
hundreds more.
ICIJ
revealed information on 140
politicians from over 50 countries with wealth hidden in 21 tax
havens.
They include,
"heads of state, their associates,
ministers (and) elected officials."
Key national leaders named include,
-
Argentine president Mauricio Macri
-
former Georgia prime
minister Bidzina Ivanishvili
-
Saudi Arabia's king Salman
-
other current and former Middle East leaders
-
US-installed
Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko
Yet ICIJ's
Panama Papers report
prominently featured Putin's image, alleging his ties to an
"offshore network," despite no evidence suggesting it.
An earlier article discussed a Tax
Justice Network (TJN) report, titled "The
Price of Offshore Revisited," revealing an estimated $21-$32
trillion of hidden or stolen wealth stashed in largely tax-free
havens secretly.
Wall Street and other major financial
firms manage it.
Keeping funds hidden tax free attracts rich
clients. Services are offered "no questions asked."
Governments are complicit in cover-ups.
Societal costs are huge, tax justice entirely absent.
Rich, powerful
elites operate by different standards than ordinary folks, their
wrongdoing ignored.
ICIJ indicated more than 100 "media
partners" published or broadcast Panama Papers reports, including,
-
the BBC
-
London's The Guardian
-
Le Monde,
...among others.
Nothing links Vladimir Putin to ICIJ
revelations.
The BBC notoriously bashes him relentlessly, its latest
smear alleging his link to,
"a suspected billion-dollar money
laundering ring involving (his) close associates."
London's
The Guardian went further, yellow journalism at its worst,
spuriously alleging,
"(a) network of secret offshore deals and vast
loans worth $2bn has laid a trail to Russia's president, Vladimir
Putin."
"An unprecedented leak of documents
shows how this money has made members of Putin's close circle
fabulously wealthy."
"Though the president's name does
not appear in any of the records, the data reveals a pattern -
his friends have earned millions from deals that seemingly could
not have been secured without his patronage."
"The documents suggest Putin's
family has benefited from this money - his friends' fortunes
appear his to spend."
No evidence corroborates the Guardian's
specious allegations, the latest example of irresponsible Western
media Putin bashing.
The Guardian featured in bold letters:
"How to hide a billion dollars" accompanied by Putin's image, the
implication clear, evidence linking him to possible wrongdoing
absent because none exists.
His spokesman Dmitry Peskov said,
"it's
obvious that the main target of (ICIJ's report) is our president,"
aimed at discrediting him and affecting Russia's stability.
He suggested ICIJ ties to Washington.
Its dubious funding sources reveal its intention to smear Vladimir
Putin irresponsibly - destroying its own credibility in the process...
|