Jersey, Guernsey and Isle of Man to set up public registers of firms' owners

Campaigners welcome plan as victory for transparency but call for shorter timetable

Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man have announced they will voluntarily adopt public registers of the true owners of offshore companies incorporated in their jurisdictions.

In a joint statement, the three islands said they would introduce fully public registers by 2023. Campaigners welcomed the announcement as a victory for transparency and an “important first step” in the fight against tax evasion and money laundering, though they said key details needed clarifying.

The announcement follows years of scandals about the use of offshore companies. Public registers identifying the owners of anonymous shell companies are widely regarded by anti-corruption campaigners as essential to tackling economic crime.

The UK’s network of crown dependencies and overseas territories have been exposed as havens for dark money in recent years through the release of the Panama Papers and subsequent offshore scandals. Britain has come under pressure to impose reforms on its territories and former colonies.

Until now the crown dependencies had resisted public registers, saying they would introduce them only once such measures were considered a global norm.

This year the leaders of the three islands travelled to London to head off an attempt by the Labour MP Margaret Hodge and the Conservative MP Andrew Mitchell to amend Brexit legislation to force the dependencies to introduce registers. At the time they said the proposed amendment was inoperable and would compromise the islands’ relationships with the British crown.

Hodge and Mitchell said the new announcement was a first step towards ensuring greater transparency, but they threatened to continue their campaign for legislation unless aspects of the proposal were clarified.

In particular, they said the timetable for implementing the new registers by 2023 was “unacceptably long”, the proposals would grant banks and accountants access to the information before the public and the media, and it was unclear whether the data would be available free of charge.

“Until we receive the assurances we need and that we have set out, we will pursue our plans to introduce legislation enforcing open registers of beneficial ownership in these jurisdictions,” they said.

Naomi Hirst, a senior anti-corruption campaigner at Global Witness, said: “This positive move shows that we are finally seeing years of campaigning by civil society and parliamentarians take effect. Transparency is the new norm.

“The era of secrecy is a thing of the past and other tax havens must now make their own moves to bring the real people behind anonymously owned companies out of the shadows. Any state failing to do so will be left behind.”

Hirst echoed the MPs’ concerns about the delay in implementing the registers. “The proof will, of course, be in the pudding. We have some concerns over the timeframe and that the details could leave plenty of room to manoeuvre,” she said.

Last year Hodge and Mitchell ran a successful backbench campaign to force the UK’s overseas territories, including the Cayman Islands and the British Virgin Islands, to introduce public registers by 2020.

However, this year it emerged that the British government planned to interpret the amendment to require the introduction of the registers by 2023 if the territories failed to do so themselves by 2020.

Contributors

David Pegg and Juliette Garside

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Money laundering concerns justify Jersey intervention, say MPs
Backbenchers tackling Jersey, Guernsey and Isle of Man on grounds of national security

Dan Sabbagh

11, Mar, 2019 @5:09 PM

Article image
Ministers postpone bill debate to avoid likely defeat over tax havens
MPs’ amendment would force crown dependencies to take action over money laundering

Dan Sabbagh

04, Mar, 2019 @4:58 PM

Article image
EU blacklist names 17 tax havens and puts Caymans and Jersey on notice
Brussels identifies 17 states including South Korea, Barbados, Panama and UAE with 47 others such as the Isle of Man and Bermuda warned

Daniel Boffey in Brussels

05, Dec, 2017 @2:16 PM

Article image
Treasury proposal may fine tax evaders up to 200% of amount owed
Tougher stance follows Theresa May’s leadership campaign promise to be more punitive of tax evasion and avoidance

Juliette Garside

24, Aug, 2016 @6:49 PM

Article image
Is the EU tax haven blacklist a whitewash?
At first glance Brussels seems to have let off the worst offshore offenders but look at the accompanying greylist and it seems the EU means business

Juliette Garside

05, Dec, 2017 @6:47 PM

Article image
Tax havens are a stain on Britain – the cleanup starts now
We need answers about crown dependencies and overseas territories that help the wealthy dodge tax owed to society, says Treasury subcommittee chair, John Mann

John Mann

27, Mar, 2018 @5:00 AM

Article image
The Guardian view on UK tax havens: MPs are right to get tough | Editorial
Editorial: It is five years since the government promised to force Britain’s overseas tax havens to open up. This week MPs have used their power to make rules that are long overdue

Editorial

01, May, 2018 @5:32 PM

Article image
Tory donors own UK properties via more than 150 offshore firms
People including property developers and peers who have collectively donated £21m named on new register

Henry Dyer, Rowena Mason, Ben Quinn and Carmen Aguilar García

27, Jan, 2023 @2:45 PM

Article image
MPs attack ministers over delay to tax havens' public registers
British overseas territories win reprieve after threatening legal action or secession

Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

11, Jan, 2019 @4:03 PM

Article image
Jersey threatens to break with UK over tax backlash
Island should be ready to become independent, says senior minister after political attacks on finance industry

Simon Bowers in St Helier

26, Jun, 2012 @7:00 PM