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UK offshore havens have missed a deadline to publish their
plans to improve corporate transparency, as MPs criticised the British Virgin
Islands (BVI) in particular for launching a financial crime-fighting cartoon
mascot before new legislation.
Jurisdictions including the BVI and Bermuda pledged last
year to approve laws allowing access to company ownership data to those with a
“legitimate interest” by April 2025, with implementation to follow in June.
But four British overseas territories – the BVI, Bermuda,
Anguilla and Turks & Caicos – have failed to meet the deadline, the
Guardian understands.
Any further delay is likely to fuel lingering concerns that
UK offshore centres famed for their secrecy are dragging their feet on the UK’s
transparency push, risking a clash between Westminster and the islands’
governments.
The BVI, named in multiple international investigations into
alleged financial wrongdoing, has yet to introduce legislation to make its
registers of beneficial ownership available to those with a legitimate interest
in seeing the information.
In the meantime, the islands’ government has launched a cartoon bird, called Riley Right, whose stated mission is to encourage “responsibility, integrity, global awareness, honesty, and transparency”.
The bird, which appears to be a green parakeet wearing a
suit, is part of a larger action plan published by the BVI’s National
Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism Coordinating
Council.
Joe Powell MP, who leads a UK cross-parliamentary group
(APPG) examining financial crime and tax, said: “The British Virgin Islands
have not only missed a key deadline they committed to at the joint ministerial
council, but are now making a mockery of UK values by unveiling a cartoon
mascot instead of taking real action against economic crime.
“If the BVI wishes to do business under the British flag and our rule of law, they must also uphold the standards of transparency and integrity we expect. This trivialisation of serious global financial threats undermines our fight against money laundering and kleptocracy – and it ultimately makes Britain less safe.
“It is deeply disappointing that the BVI and other overseas
territories continue to delay the implementation of vital transparency
measures. The UK must now look seriously at how to ensure these longstanding
commitments are delivered.”
Granting access to ownership data to those with a
“legitimate interest” is seen as a stepping stone to full publicly accessible
registers of beneficial ownership , a measure that ministers and campaign
groups believe should become the global norm in an international crackdown on
financial crime
.
Phil Brickell, who is a member of the same APPG that Powell
chairs, said: “While I welcome efforts to promote doing business the right way
anywhere, surely time and money would be better spent lifting the veil of
corporate secrecy in the British Virgin Islands which has been used by the
world’s crooks and kleptocrats to clean and stash their dirty cash.”
A spokesperson for the BVI said Riley Right was a “simple and effective way to engage the wider community and enhance understanding”.
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