Pama says it won't be 'scapegoat' for papers scandal

Pama city, April 6: The Pamanian government said that it would not accept the country being used as a “scapegoat” for the apparent fincial misdeeds detailed in the Pama Papers.

“We are not going to allow Pama to be used as a scapegoat by third parties. Each country (implicated) is responsible,” presidential chief of staff Alvaro Aleman said on Tuesday.

Pama “rejects and regrets” that anyone should want to “trample” its good me, “conveniently forgetting the participation in offshore operations of institutions and individuals of other tions”, Efe news agency quoted Aleman as saying.

Aleman demanded that media take the time to “understand the situation in depth and avoid repeating commonplaces and old prejudices about our country.

Pama has changed and we are promoting dramatic reforms that can in no way be ignored,” Aleman said. The minister also criticised that the me of Pama Papers has been used for the roughly 11.5 million confidential documents from the law firm Mossack Fonseca, which specialises in wealth magement.

Pama, Aleman said, is not the only country involved but that “21 different jurisdictions have been mentioned” as offshore tax havens where companies have been created.

As a result of the leak, French Fince Minister Michel Sapin announced on Tuesday that Pama would again be included on its blacklist of tax havens, from which it was elimited in late 2011.

Aleman recalled that “in Pama, there is a law that sets out retaliation measures against countries that include Pama in ‘gray lists’.”

Deputy Foreign Minister Luis Miguel Hincapie regretted the “irresponsible statement” by the head of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Angel Gurria, who urged on Monday that Pama “immediately” apply the intertiol standards of fiscal transparency, criticising the central American country for having long resisted appeals to take that step. (IANS)

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