‘Paradise Papers’ expose ex-PM Shaukat Aziz’s offshore holdings
ISLAMABAD: Nearly a year and a half after the Panama Papers leaks shook the world elites by revealing the offshore holdings of some of the most powerful political players, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) released another treasure trove of data late on Sunday.
Dubbed the Paradise Papers, the leaks consist of 13.4 million files from “a combination of offshore service providers and the company registries of some of the world’s most secretive countries”.
The documents include loan agreements, financial statements, emails, trust deeds and other paperwork from Appleby, a leading offshore law firm with offices in Bermuda, as well as files from a smaller trust company, Asiaciti.
Rex Tillerson, Queen Elizabeth, Queen Noor of Jordan, three former Canadian PMs also named in fresh leaks
The most prominent Pakistani name that emerged from the fresh leaks was that of Shaukat Aziz, the Musharraf-era finance minister who also remained prime minister from 2004 to 2007.
Mr Aziz worked for Citibank before entering politics and was “one of the shareholders and directors of the Bahamas-registered Cititrust Limited from 1997 to 1999, along with other executives of the bank”.
“Shaukat Aziz set up the Antarctic Trust in the name of his wife, three children and granddaughter weeks before he came to Pakistan to lead the finance ministry,” ICIJ representative Umar Cheema told Geo News, adding that these assets were never declared to any Pakistani institution in financial documents Mr Aziz submitted between 2003 and 2006.
“Appleby’s Bermuda office was the trust’s protector, acting as an independent overseer. In a 2012 internal memo, the law firm’s compliance officer noted that Aziz had been accused by the opposition of false declaration of assets, corruption and misappropriation of funds,” the ICIJ website said. Antarctic Trust was closed in Sept 2015.
The ICIJ maintained that the Antarctic Trust held most of Mr Aziz’s assets earned when he worked at Citicorp and was created before he relocated to Pakistan to be appointed finance minister.
The purpose was “to insure that if he were to die, his assets would pass efficiently to his family,” Mr Aziz’s lawyer told the ICIJ.