Greek magazine editor in court for naming alleged tax evaders
Kostas
Vaxevanis at centre of political storm after publishing names of
wealthy Greeks alleged to have Swiss bank accounts
28
October, 2012
A
magazine editor in Greece will appear in court after publishing the
names of more than 2,000 wealthy Greeks alleged to have Swiss bank
accounts, triggering a row over tax evasion that threatens the
stability of the government.
Kostas
Vaxevanis was arrested on Sunday, after his weekly journal, Hot Doc,
printed the list of names, which including prominent members of
Greece's political and business elite.
The
editor was giving a live radio interview when police arrived, and
broke off saying he had to go "to be arrested". At the same
he tweeted about the arrest, comparing the police to German
stormtroopers in the second world war. In another tweet he wrote:
"They're entering my house with the prosecutor right now. They
are arresting me. Spread the word."
Police
officials said that Vaxevanis had illegally published personal
details without proof that the people involved had broken the law.
But he and other critics of the government have portrayed his arrest
as part of a cover-up intended to obscure claims that the finance
ministry had had the list for more than two years without taking
action against those named.
"If
anyone is accountable before the law then it is those ministers who
hid the list, lost it and said it didn't exist. I only did my job. I
am a journalist and I did my job," Vaxevanis said in the video
sent to Reuters news agency.
The
case has triggered a parliamentary inquiry and could provide the
basis for prosecutions at a time of rising radicalism on both left
and right and a sense of injustice over the widespread destitution
and despair created by Greece's economic crisis set against the
relative impunity of the country's rich, who have a long history of
tax evasion.
George
Papaconstantinou, a former finance minister, said the Greek tax
authorities had failed to act on the list because they were afraid of
confronting the country's elite tax evaders. He also claimed that the
affair brought to light only a small part of a massive tax evasion
problem that was part of what he described as a "broken and
corrupt system".
The
scandal has its origins in a raid in January 2009 on the French home
of a former computer technician for HSBC bank's Geneva branch, Herve
Falciani, accused by the Swiss of selling stolen data on the bank's
clients. The French police found computer files on 130,000 potential
tax evaders and, to the fury of the Swiss authorities, held on to
them and began investigating them.
In
mid-2010, the French intelligence service, the DGSE, informed Athens
that many of those named in the Falciani dossier were Greek.
Papaconstantinou,
then finance minister, asked his French counterpart at the time,
Christine Lagarde, to pass it on. It arrived through diplomatic
channels in the form of an unlabelled CD containing spreadsheets for
the roughly 2,000 accounts now known in Greece as the "Lagarde
list". What happened to it next is at the heart of the current
political storm in Athens.
"I
handed the head of the tax police the 20 people with the biggest
balances, and who accounted for about half of the total amount on the
files we got from the French authorities, and asked him to see what
we could learn by looking at their profiles," Papaconstantinou
told the Guardian. "He came back and told me that their profiles
did not justify these kind of bank accounts in Switzerland. On the
basis of this information, I asked him to go ahead and do a full
investigation. I was not happy with the lack of follow-up."
As
Greece faced economic meltdown, Papaconstantinou enacted a series of
measures aimed at cracking down on tax evasion, but was forced out as
his austerity programme became politically toxic. "Before I left
the ministry in mid-2011, I handed all the files to the new head of
the tax police and asked him to proceed with a full investigation,"
he said.
Papaconstantinou
told a parliamentary inquiry last week that the French CD stayed at
the ministry when he left and he did not know what had happened to it
since. He has been lambasted in some parts of the Greek press for
having lost it.
"I
am being accused of having lost the original. I did not; I gave all
the information to the tax police with instructions to investigate,
so it is there on the record in electronic form," the former
minister said. "The CD of course I left at the office when I
left finance. I don't know where it is now, but even that is not the
original. It is a copy of a CD which the French authorities have."
Papaconstantinou
also rejected the argument presented to parliament by a former tax
chief that the data could not have been used for an investigation as
it had been illegally obtained, saying: "This information is
equivalent to getting an anonymous tip. It is not permissible in
court but the tax police are obliged by law to follow it up and use
it in their investigations. And they did not."
Papaconstantinou
argued that the tax authorities deliberately chose not to pursue
information on the list. "My interpretation is they probably got
scared. They looked at the names on the list and saw it was full of
important people from business and publishing and decided not to go
ahead without clear political instructions and cover," he said,
adding that the Lagarde list was only the tip of a Greek tax evasion
iceberg.
"It
is not insignificant [about €1.5bn in total] but the truth is that
compared with other lists it's not the treasure trove everyone is
looking for," Papaconstantinou said. "There is a list from
the Bank of Greece of 54,000 people who took €22bn out of the
country. That is official and can be used in court. The first check
found 6 billion that can't be justified and letters are going to
15,000 people on that list who will be taxed at the 45% rate."
The
former finance minister said measures he took to tighten tax
collection still face resistance and delay in the bureaucracy and
judiciary, adding: "What we have is a corrupt and broken
system."
Petros
Markaris, an author and social commentator, who recently published a
bestselling detective novel about a serial killer targeting tax
evaders, said: "This really is a mess, and it has become a mess
because the politicians have handled it so badly. This was not
incompetence but because they did not want to make public what could
harm them."
Comments from Yanis Varoufakis...
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