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Massive database reveals offshore banking entities that could be used for tax evasion

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The Ugland House, the registered office for thousands of global companies, stands in George Town on Grand Cayman Island. Photo: AP

A massive database of private offshore banking entities that could be used for tax evasion was posted online for public use on Friday by the muckraking group that first reported the files.

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The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists said anyone can now search the records of some 100,000 companies, trusts and funds located in leading tax havens to see who could be making use of them to skirt home-country taxes.

The group said it was doing so in the name of public interest and also hoped that crowd-sourcing the files would lead to more revelations about public figures who hide their money.

“Secrecy creates an environment where fraud, tax evasion, money laundering and other forms of corruption thrive. The Offshore Leaks Database helps remove this secrecy,” said ICIJ director Gerard Ryle.

“Opening up the records serves the public interest by bringing accountability to an industry that has long operated in the shadows.”

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The ICIJ, which first revealed that it had the huge cache of computerised files last year, has already prompted investigations into tax dodging in a number of countries, including Greece, India, the Philippines and South Korea.

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