Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Calls For Global Co-operation To Crack Down On Offshore Tax Evasion

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Apr, 2016 12:13 PM
    MONTREAL — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Wednesday the international community has to work together to make global finance more transparent to prevent the sort of inequality highlighted by the so-called Panama Papers scandal.
     
    Otherwise, rich investors will simply "hop" around to favourable jurisdictions where they can avoid paying tax, Trudeau said.
     
    "The level of awareness that citizens of the world are beginning to take in regards to tax avoidance and evasion is good thing," Trudeau said in his first public comments on the controversy. "But it's certainly something that we will be working on together as a community of nations."
     
    The federal government knew tax avoidance was a problem long before the scandal put offshore havens in the headlines, he added.
     
    Trudeau was asked about the matter in Montreal, where the annual general meeting of the Royal Bank of Canada — the only Canadian banked linked to the data leak — was also taking place Wednesday.
     
     
    RBC CEO Dave McKay said he couldn't comment on the specific information leaked. But he said the bank is reviewing its files in an effort to verify to determine whether any wrongdoing took place.
     
    "This information ... goes back 40 years," McKay told shareholders. "So you can imagine how difficult it is to go back in your file 40 years."
     
    He defended the bank's processes to detect and prevent tax evasion, adding that it operates within the legal and regulatory framework of every country in which it operates.
     
    Media reports say the bank and its subsidiaries used Mossack Fonseca, a Panamanian law firm at the centre of the data leak, to set up more than 370 shell companies.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Identify Alberta Man Charged In Slayings Of Two Missing Aboriginal Women

    RCMP Identify Alberta Man Charged In Slayings Of Two Missing Aboriginal Women
    Gordon Alfred Rogers of Red Deer has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder.

    RCMP Identify Alberta Man Charged In Slayings Of Two Missing Aboriginal Women

    Hello, Buenos Aires: Watch The Obamas Do The Tango In Argentina

    Hello, Buenos Aires: Watch The Obamas Do The Tango In Argentina
    BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Less than 24 hours in Buenos Aires, and Barack Obama is already doing the tango.

    Hello, Buenos Aires: Watch The Obamas Do The Tango In Argentina

    Man Who Killed Halifax Gay Rights Activist Sentenced To Nearly Eight Years In Custody

    Man Who Killed Halifax Gay Rights Activist Sentenced To Nearly Eight Years In Custody
    Andre Noel Denny pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the death of Raymond Taavel.

    Man Who Killed Halifax Gay Rights Activist Sentenced To Nearly Eight Years In Custody

    Supreme Court Says Calgary Mom Who Left Babies In Trash Not Guilty Of Murder

    Supreme Court Says Calgary Mom Who Left Babies In Trash Not Guilty Of Murder
    The court ruled by a 7-0 margin Thursday that an Alberta woman who tossed two of her newborns into the garbage is not guilty of second-degree murder.

    Supreme Court Says Calgary Mom Who Left Babies In Trash Not Guilty Of Murder

    Popular Victoria Shop Makes List Of Top 10 Bookstores On The Planet

    Popular Victoria Shop Makes List Of Top 10 Bookstores On The Planet
    Munro's Books, in Victoria's Old Town, ranks third on a list of the globe's most interesting book stores.

    Popular Victoria Shop Makes List Of Top 10 Bookstores On The Planet

    Children Treated For Skin Conditions On Troubled Ontario Reserve

    Children Treated For Skin Conditions On Troubled Ontario Reserve
    Three children in Kashechewan First Nation were taken from the community for medical treatment after they developed painful sores on their bodies.

    Children Treated For Skin Conditions On Troubled Ontario Reserve