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Panama Papers: Iceland PM Resigns Under Scrutiny of Officials Worldwide

Iceland's Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson leaves after holding a meeting at Iceland's Parliament in Reykjavik on Tuesday Photo: APTN / Associated Press

LONDON — Iceland's prime minister became the first major figure brought down by the leak of millions of records on offshore accounts as the scrutiny intensified around officials from other countries, including Ukraine's president.

Icelandic leader Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson is the first major figure brought down by the publication of the names of rich and powerful people linked to the leaks, dubbed the Panama Papers. He stepped aside Tuesday amid outrage over revelations he had used a shell company to shelter large sums while Iceland's economy was in crisis.

Officials in several other countries also are facing questions about possibly dubious offshore tax-avoidance schemes. They include Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko who, the leaks show, set up an offshore holding company to move his candy business offshore, possibly depriving Ukraine of millions of dollars in tax revenue.

 

Poroshenko insists he has done nothing wrong and hasn't managed his assets since being elected. Still, some adversaries are calling for his removal from office.

China and Russia, meanwhile, suppressed news of the leaks and rejected any allegations of impropriety by government officials named in the release of more than 11 million financial documents from a Panamanian law firm.

The reports are from a global group of news organizations working with the Washington-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. They have been processing records from the Mossack Fonseca law firm that were first leaked to Germany's Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper.

One of the firm's co-founders, Ramon Fonseca, said it has filed a complaint with Panamanian prosecutors, alleging that the data was stolen by a hacking attack from somewhere in Europe, but he declined to give any details.

The announcement that Gunnlaugsson was stepping down as leader of Iceland's coalition government came from his deputy, Sigurdur Ingi Johannsson, who is also the country's agriculture minister. It followed the refusal by Iceland's president to dissolve parliament and call an election, and after thousands of Icelanders protested outside the parliament building in Reykjavik.

No replacement has been named, and President Olafur Ragnar Grimsson did not immediately confirm that he had accepted the resignation. Late Tuesday, a government statement said Gunnlaugsson had suggested Johannsson take over as prime minister for "an unspecified amount of time," while Gunnlauggson would stay on as leader of his center-right Progressive Party.

Gunnlaugson has denied any wrongdoing and said he and his wife have paid all their taxes. He also said his financial holdings didn't affect his negotiations with Iceland's creditors during the country's acute financial crisis.

The leaked documents allege that Gunnlaugsson and his wife set up a company called Wintris in the British Virgin Islands with the help of the Panamanian law firm. Gunnlaugsson is accused of a conflict of interest for failing to disclose his involvement in the company, which held interests in failed Icelandic banks that his government was responsible for overseeing.

Iceland, a volcanic North Atlantic island nation with a population of 330,000, was rocked by a prolonged financial crisis when its main commercial banks collapsed within a week of one another in 2008.

Since then Icelanders have weathered a deep recession and been subjected to tough capital controls — another reason the prime minister's offshore holdings rankle many.

China, on the other hand, dismissed as "groundless" reports that the Panamanian law firm had arranged offshore companies for relatives of at least eight present or past members of the Communist Party's Politburo Standing Committee, the apex of power in China.

Among those named in the leaked documents was the brother-in-law of President Xi Jinping. State media have ignored the reports and searches of websites and social media for the words "Panama documents" were blocked.

China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said he would not discuss the reports further and declined to say whether the individuals named would be investigated.

Shell companies aren't in themselves illegal. People or companies might use them to reduce their tax bill legally, by benefiting from low tax rates in countries like Panama, the Cayman Islands and Bermuda. But the practice is frowned upon, particularly when used by politicians, who then face criticism for not contributing to their own countries' economies.

Because offshore accounts and companies also hide the names of the ultimate owners of investments, they can be used to illegally evade taxes or launder money.

Mossack Fonseca says it obeys all laws relating to company registrations and does not advise people how to evade taxes.

Members of the Group of 20 — which includes China — have agreed on paper to tighten laws relating to shell companies and make sure authorities can find out who the real owners are. Actual legislation at the national level has lagged behind the promises, however.

The appearance of offshore accounts in political scandals is far from new. Shell companies played a role in the corruption scandal involving the Petrobras oil company in Brazil. The U.S. Justice Department said in an indictment last year that offshore accounts were used to mask the transfer of bribes to officials at FIFA, the global soccer federation.

Sueddeutsche Zeitung, working with Germany's NDR and WDR public television stations, reported Monday that 14 German banks had used Mossack Fonseca's services to set up 1,200 letterbox companies for clients.

The report said use of offshore company registrations had spiked after the European Union introduced regulations in 2005 requiring countries to exchange tax information on individual people, but not for companies. Many of the accounts, however, have since been closed.

The EU has since tightened its rules on offshore companies under its Fourth Anti-Money Laundering Directive, which is being phased in as national governments pass local laws to comply by June 26, 2017. The new rules tighten requirements for companies to keep accurate information on their real owners and to make that available to authorities.

Story: Jill Lawless, David McHugh / Associated Press 

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McDonald's Blames Rat on Filthy Hat Yai Neighborhood

A rat cavorts among a toppings bar at a McDonald's in Hat Yai in a video posted March 21. Image: Sukanya P. / YouTube

BANGKOK — McDonald's in Thailand has apologized to customers after a video surfaced online showing a large rat scurrying around a dessert counter at one of its restaurants.

The fast-food giant confirmed in a statement that a rat had rummaged through its restaurant in a shopping mall in the city of Hat Yai in southern Thailand, and blamed the incident on local sewers.

The statement, issued Sunday, said: "We checked security footage and found that the accusation is true. A rat ran into the restaurant."

 

It said it learned of the incident the day after the video was posted and immediately ordered the restaurant to conduct a thorough cleaning and increase pest control measures.

The statement said the neighborhood is a "breeding area for rats and insects."

It added that McDonald's pays close attention to hygiene and regularly hires pest control services as does the shopping mall, Lee Garden Plaza.

As a result of the video, McDonald's has asked the mall to increase rat control measures around the complex and Hat Yai public health officials to increase inspections of street vendors and the restaurant itself, the statement said.

Story: Associated Press

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Cops Promise to Send Jenphop Case to Prosecutor This Month

The burned wreck of the vehicle rear-ended by Jenphop Viraporn on March 13, 2016, in Ayutthaya province. Two grad students burned to death inside.

BANGKOK — Police said the results of their investigation into the fatal car crash caused by Jenphop Viraporn will be forwarded to prosecutors by April 26, about six weeks after the accident drew national attention.

Deputy national police chief Pongsapat Pongcharoen said Tuesday that investigators were collecting all available evidence for the attorney general’s office to bring a court case against Jenphop, a wealthy businessman who killed two graduate students in a fiery wreck March 13.


Jenphop Sped Toward Deadly Crash at Over 250KPH


“I believe we will definitely be able to send the case to the prosecutor by April 26,” Gen. Pongsapat said.

Pongsapat said he’s confident the evidence will pin Jenphop to the crime, despite the fact he was allowed to refuse a sobriety test immediately after the accident. Jenphop remained hospitalized for what was described as head and knee injuries until this past weekend.

“I don’t think it will be any problem, because there is other evidence and components that can be used in the case, to increase the weight of conviction against the perpetrator,” the deputy police chief said. 

Jenphop has been charged with fatal reckless driving and causing the deaths of others while driving under the influence for the deaths of 32-year-old Krissana Thaworn and Thantapat Horsaengchai, 34.

Last week, police determined that Jenphop was driving at the speed of 250kph, more than twice the legal limit, when he slammed into their car.

Police have come under criticism online and off for their slow handling of the investigation; Jenphop was allowed to waive the sobriety test and was not charged with any crime until four days had passed. 

The delay led to accusations that police attempted to shield Jenphop, a scion of a wealthy family, from justice as in another of other high profile cases involving the wealthy and well-connected. 

 

Related stories:

Businessman Charged for Fatal Collision Amid Mounting Criticism

Officers In Charge of Ayutthaya Deadly Collision Removed

Jenphop Plowed Through Toll Booth Before Deadly Crash (Video)

Fresh Charge Against Jenphop as Model Student Victims Laid to Rest

 

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

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Wife Held Hostage, Man Forced to Drive Bombs Into Town

Members of a police bomb unit carry heavy tanks after they were disarmed Tuesday in Yala city.

YALA — Sunan Thongnet was driving back home after shopping in the morning market with his wife Renu Jitban early this morning in Yala’s Bannang Sata district when they were stopped by a group of uniformed men they thought were authorities.

The men, numbering seven or eight, put bags over their heads and separated the couple. Their abductors’ horrible intent soon became clear when they loaded their truck with two tanks of explosive gas weighing upward of 200 kilograms.

About an hour later, they took 61-year-old Renu hostage and forced Sunan, 53, to put on an explosive vest and drive the vehicle into downtown Yala city. Sunan was told if he drove in another direction or went to the police, his wife would be killed and his vest detonated, according to police Maj. Gen. Atchariya Atchariyapradit.

Driving where he was instructed, Sunan parked the truck in front of a Toyota showroom. Despite his wife’s peril, he managed to work himself free of the vest. Getting out of the truck, he then ran toward crowds of people in the area shouting that the truck was rigged to explode.

“Police did not believe him at first when he ran to the police and said there were bombs in the truck,” Atchariya said. “But when we found the tanks covered by a mat on the truck, like he said, we moved people out of a 2-kilometer area and cut off radio and phone signals.”

A police bomb unit arrived two hours later to dispose of the improvised explosive device, which was loaded in the two gas tanks and connected to a radio-triggered detonator.

And while Sunan thought Renu was in jeopardy, his wife had in fact earlier been left at the side of a road at about 2pm on Tuesday. She was unharmed.

Police believe southern separatists were behind the plot and said they are reviewing security footage to find if anyone was following Sunan in his truck, as he believes.

They are also working with military and government officers in their investigation.

 

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A bomb tech works to remove large explosive devices from a pickup truck Tuesday in Yala city.

 

Related stories:

Govt Investigates Reports of ISIS in Deep South

22 Arrested Over Yala Bombing Spree

Motorists Shot Dead, Burned By Suspected Insurgents in Yala

 

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Suvarnabhumi Seizes 87 African Ivory Tusks Worth 28 Million Baht

Thai customs officials display seized ivory in 2016 during a press conference in Bangkok. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press

BANGKOK — Officials say they seized 315 kilograms of African elephant tusks worth an estimated 28 million baht at Suvarnabhumi Airport.

Kulit Sombatsiri, director-general of the Thai Customs Department, said Tuesday that the haul of 87 ivory tusks was found March 27 in a dozen barrels sent from Mozambique on a Kenya Airways flight. A routine X-ray at Suvarnabhumi Airport detected the contraband.

Kulit said a Kenyan man was due to pick up the parcels, but is believed to have fled the country after learning they were seized.

Kulit told reporters that Thai authorities alerted Kenyan officials, who discovered 561 kilograms of ivory tusks waiting to be shipped to the same man.

He said it was the fifth African ivory seizure this year in Thailand.

The global regulator in international trade in endangered species, CITES, put Thailand on a watch list of eight countries a few years ago. This required it to formulate an action plan to fight against the illegal ivory trade through legislation and enforcement or face the possibility of trade sanctions.

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Thai customs officials display seized ivory during a press conference in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, April 5, 2016. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press

Story: Associated Press

Related stories:

Govt Shuts Down Illegal Ivory Shops

 

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Charity Run to Color Lumpini Park

Runners throw colored powder into the air at the finish line at the 2014 ‘color run’ in Bangkok’s Lumpini Park. Photo: Colour Miles for Smiles / Facebook

BANGKOK — Lumpini Park will be awash with color for an annual charity run Saturday.

Instead of a sweat-soaked day run, Colour Miles for Smiles returns for its fourth year for a 5-kilometer charity race to take place in the evening so the bodies and smiles of racers can literally glow under its “neon” theme.

The charity race will start just before sunset at the Entertainment Building on the park’s east side. Runners will race through routes in the park while throwing photoluminescent powder at the finish line together. That powder is said to be nontoxic. Its flammability was not mentioned.

Registration opens along with games, food and drinks between 3:30pm to 5pm before the run starts at 5:30pm.
 

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Photo: Operation Smile Foundation / Courtesy

 

Organized by a group of 10 international schools such as Bangkok Patana School, International School Bangkok, NIST International School and others, all funds from the event will go to Operation Smile Thailand, which provides treatment to children born with cleft lips, cleft palates and other facial abnormalities.

More than 3,000 runners participated last year and over 1.5 million baht was raised, according to the foundation.

Admission is 800 baht and includes a T-shirt, waterproof bag, wristband, glow stick and glow powder. Apply online.
 

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Myanmar's Former President Leaves Office, Joins Monkhood

Former Myanmar President Thein Sein joins the monkhood Monday at Dhamma Dipati Monastery outside Pyin Oo Lwin, Myanmar. Photo: MOI Webportal Myanmar / Facebook

YANGON — Myanmar's former president Thein Sein has shed his formal attire and his hair to join the Buddhist monkhood.

Thein Sein's ordination as a monk took place Monday, officials said, four days after he presided over a historic transition of power to the former opposition party headed by Aung San Suu Kyi.

Photographs circulating on social media show the former president, with his head shaved and dressed in a saffron robe, beside a fellow monk.

The Ministry of Information released a statement on its Facebook page Monday saying Thein Sein will spend five days at the Dhamma Dipati Monastery outside Pyin Oo Lwin, a scenic hill town near Mandalay in central Myanmar.

A temporary stint at a monastery is common in the predominantly Buddhist country, where boys are expected to ordain as novice monks at some point in their childhood and then return later in adulthood.

Thein Sein himself has not spoken publicly about his choice to temporarily become a monk but the official statement indicated he has been considering it at least since January when he attended a Buddhist conference in Myanmar.

"Recently, the country's most respected monk, Sitagu, urged ex-President Thein Sein to enter into the Buddhist monkhood when he attended the World Buddhist Conference," the statement from the Ministry of Information said. "Thein Sein told Sitagu that he was busy with the duties of a president and promised that he would be ordained as soon as he finished his term as president."

Thein Sein, a former general, was installed as president for a five-year term in 2011 to head a nominally civilian government after the military ended a half century of military rule.

In November, the country held its first free election in decades which Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party won by a landslide.

Thein Sein presided over the transfer of power to new President Htin Kyaw, who was handpicked by Suu Kyi, in a ceremony last Thursday.

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New Myanmar President Htin Kyaw, left, and outgoing president Thein Sein leave the room after a handover ceremony at the presidential palace in Naypyidaw on Wednesday, March 30, 2016. Photo: Ye Aung Thu / Associated Press

Story: Esther Htusan / Associated Press

 

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Panama Papers: Authorities Seek Names of 21 Thai Clients of Offshoring Company

A security guard sits outside the Mossack Fonseca law firm Sunday in Panama City. Photo: Arnulfo Franco / Associated Press

By Teeranai Charuvastra and Todd Ruiz

BANGKOK — Authorities today said they are working to find out the identity of 21 Thai clients of a Panamanian law firm whose creation of offshore shell companies was exposed in a massive leak which has become known as the Panama Papers.

Police Col. Paisit Wongmuang of the Department of Special Investigation, said he is working with the Anti-Money Laundering Office to identify the 21 Thais and promised legal action will be taken if they were involved in any wrongdoing.


Panama Papers: Massive Leak Exposes Where World Leaders Hide Money


“We are waiting for official information, because right now I only know about the names of people involved from the media,” Paisit said Tuesday. 

Police Col. Seehanart Prayoonrat, head of the anti-money laundering agency, also said he’s working on the case. He hinted that the agency may get in touch with the source of the leaks for information about the 21 Thais.

“We are trying to coordinate with the source of the information in order to verify facts and accuracy of the information,” Seehanart said Tuesday. 

The announcement comes in the wake of a massive leak of client information from Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, which set up offshore accounts to help the world's wealthiest people hide money for reasons including dodging taxes, laundering and avoiding sanctions.

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The full list of names has not been revealed from the trove of data but is said to include wealthy political, sports, celebrity and business figures. The information was originally leaked to a German media outlet and shared via the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists to news agencies worldwide.

However the 21 cases referenced by Col. Paisit is consistent with what’s known so far. An interactive map created by the Irish Times indicates 21 clients, 963 companies, 40 beneficiaries and 757 shareholders in Thailand linked to the Panamanian firm.

Other media outlets have reported 780 names linked to Thailand, but that seems erroneously derived from a previous leak compiled three years agoby the same journalism organization.

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

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Panama Papers: Authorities Seek Names of 21 Thai Clients of Offshoring Company

Thailand on an interactive map created by the Irish Times of clients and legal entities associated with the law firm at the center of the ‘Panama Papers’ leak

By Teeranai Charuvastra and Todd Ruiz

BANGKOK — Authorities today said they are working to find out the identity of 21 Thai clients of a Panamanian law firm whose creation of offshore shell companies was exposed in a massive leak which has become known as the Panama Papers.

Police Col. Paisit Wongmuang of the Department of Special Investigation, said he is working with the Anti-Money Laundering Office to identify the 21 Thais and promised legal action will be taken if they were involved in any wrongdoing.


Panama Papers: Massive Leak Exposes Where World Leaders Hide Money


“We are waiting for official information, because right now I only know about the names of people involved from the media,” Paisit said Tuesday. 

Police Col. Seehanart Prayoonrat, head of the anti-money laundering agency, also said he’s working on the case. He hinted that the agency may get in touch with the source of the leaks for information about the 21 Thais.

“We are trying to coordinate with the source of the information in order to verify facts and accuracy of the information,” Seehanart said Tuesday. 

The announcement comes in the wake of a massive leak of client information from Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, which set up offshore accounts to help the world's wealthiest people hide money for reasons including dodging taxes, laundering and avoiding sanctions.

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The full list of names has not been revealed from the trove of data but is said to include wealthy political, sports, celebrity and business figures. The information was originally leaked to a German media outlet and shared via the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists to news agencies worldwide.

However the 21 cases referenced by Col. Paisit is consistent with what’s known so far. An interactive map created by the Irish Times indicates 21 clients, 963 companies, 40 beneficiaries and 757 shareholders in Thailand linked to the Panamanian firm.

Other media outlets have reported 780 names linked to Thailand, but that seems erroneously derived from a previous leak compiled three years ago by the same journalism organization.

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

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Student Protesters Crash Speech of Head Charter Drafter

University staff seize a banner from student activists protesting against the head of the junta-appointed charter drafting committee Tuesday at Thammasat University’s Rangsit campus. Photo: Matichon

BANGKOK — A little chaos erupted this morning when three groups of activists separately interrupted a speech by the drafter-in-chief of the proposed constitution.

Three groups of student activists were led out of a conference room after they successively interrupted Meechai Ruchupan, chairman of the junta appointed Constitution Drafting Committee, at Thammasat University’s Rangsit campus on Tuesday.

“I just started reading the first from 10 paragraphs of our statement when my friends and I were taken out by university staff,” said Parit “Penguin” Chiwarak, the 17-year-old leader of Education for the Liberation of Siam, whose group was the first to protest.

Just when Meechai started to deliver his speech, Parit and two friends unfurled a banner reading “Don’t hurt the youth” and started reading their statement calling for the reinstatement of free education through Grade 12, a right stripped from the final draft of the charter expected to go before voters Aug. 7.

Meechai was speaking at the university’s Institute of East Asian Studies to speak on the occasion of a memorial day for former Prime Minister Sanya Dharmasakti.

Though they did not succeed in delivering their message to Meechai, Parit said he passed the letter through security guards in hope it would reach him.

After the three education activists were removed, the talk was interrupted again by three university students members of the League of Liberal Thammasat for Democracy, who stepped in front of the stage in masks of Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha with a banner saying “Vote No” to protest the draft constitution.

That wasn’t all. After Meechai concluded his talk, well-known activist Sirawith “Ja New” Seritiwat and several of his counterparts appeared holding a protest banner and tried to ask Meechai questions. They were quickly swept out by the university staffs.

The group said it was campaigning against the draft charter because it would allow the junta to perpetuate its hold on power long after a civilian government is installed.

Parit said he will continue to campaign to raise awareness about the draft charter before the referendum.

“I would like to ask Ajarn Meechai to be more respectful to the people’s voice when working on the law applies to everyone as the constitution,” said the Grade 11 student. “The power of issuing the law should not be held by a small group of people.”

Following the chaos, 78-year-old Meechai told reporters the protest was the normal exercise of rights as long as they were not doing it at the behest of others.

“Those who disagree can also express their opinion in the place and time that they find suitable,” he said.

 

 

 

Related stories:

Charter Draft Second Look: Full Education No Longer Guaranteed (Analysis)

Democrat Slams 3 Years of Education Written Out of Constitution

 

 

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