The Panama legal firm at the heart
of a massive data leak kept clients who were subject to international
sanctions, documents show.
Mossack Fonseca worked with 33
individuals or companies who have been placed under sanctions by the US
Treasury, including companies based in Iran, Zimbabwe and North Korea.
One had links to North Korea's nuclear weapons programme.
The information comes from the leak of 11m of the company's internal files.
Mossack
Fonseca registers companies as offshore entities operated under its own
name. This meant the identities of the real owners were hard to trace
because they were kept out of public documents.
Some
of the businesses were registered before international sanctions were
imposed. But in several cases Mossack Fonseca continued to act as a
proxy for them after they were blacklisted.
DCB
Finance was established in 2006, with its owners and directors based in
North Korea's capital Pyongyang. It was later put under sanctions by
the US Treasury for raising funds for the North Korean regime and being
linked to a bank helping to fund the regime's nuclear weapons programme.
In 2013 the BVI authorities contacted Mossack Fonseca again, asking
what checks they had carried out before opening DCB Finance in 2006.
An
email from Mossack Fonseca's compliance department on 9 August 2013
says: "We have not yet addressed the reason we maintained a relationship
with DCB Finance when we knew or ought to have known from incorporation
in 2006, that the country, North Korea was on the black list."
It adds: "We should have identified from the onset that this was a high risk company."
Mr
Cowie was not placed under sanctions. He has said that DCB Finance was
established for legitimate business purposes and that he was "unaware,
whether directly or indirectly, of any transactions being made with any
sanctioned organisation or for any sanctioned purpose, during my entire
tenure".
Assad's cousin
Another case involves Rami Makhlouf, who is the cousin of Syria's President Bashar al-Assad and has reported wealth of $5bn.
In
2008 the US Treasury imposed sanctions on him because it deemed him to
be a "regime insider" and someone who "manipulated the Syrian judicial
system and used Syrian intelligence officials to intimidate his business
rivals".
Mossack Fonseca continued to front six businesses -
including one company called Drex Technologies - for Mr Makhlouf after
the restrictions were put in place.
The files also show the Swiss branch of HSBC provided financial services for the firm.
In
2010, two years after the sanctions were imposed, HSBC wrote to Mossack
Fonseca saying it believed Drex Technologies was a company of "good
standing".
An internal email from Mossack Fonseca's compliance
department also suggests HSBC staff dealing with Drex Technologies knew
who Rami Makhlouf was.
The email, dated 17 February 2011, says:
"We have contacted HSBC who stated that they are very aware of the fact
that Mr Makhlouf is the cousin of the President of Syria.
"The
HSBC compliance department of the bank not only in Geneva but also in
their headquarters in London know about Mr Makhlouf and confirm that
they are comfortable with him."
HSBC said: "We work closely with the authorities to
fight financial crime and implement sanctions. Our policy is clear that
offshore accounts can only remain open either where clients have been
thoroughly vetted where authorities ask us to maintain an account for
the purposes of monitoring activity, or where an account has been frozen
based on sanctions obligations."
War fuel
Mossack Fonseca cut all its links with Rami Makhlouf in September 2011, nine months after it was first recommended.
But
the leaked documents reveal the firm also provided business services to
another company that was registered on a US sanctions list in 2014.
The
company is called Pangates International Corporation Limited. The US
Treasury Department believes it supplied aviation fuel to the Syrian
government to fly military aircraft during the current civil war. The
files show Mossack Fonseca first incorporated the petroleum firm in
1999.
Nine months after the sanctions came into effect, it
was still handling the paperwork for Pangates International Corporation
and certified it was a company in the Seychelles of good standing.
It
was not until August 2015 that Mossack Fonseca acknowledged the company
was on a blacklist and reported it to financial regulators in the
Seychelles.
Mossack Fonseca said: "We have never knowingly allowed
the use of our companies by individuals having any relationship with
North Korea or Syria. We have our own procedures in place to identify
such individuals, to the extent it is reasonably possible."
Panama's
President Juan Carlos Varela told the BBC his country was willing to
contribute to any investigation in any country relating to the
documents.
"We are an open country," he said.
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