This morning Labour has written to the
Chancellor George Osborne, following the Government’s failure to act on
allegations of malpractice at HSBC.
A copy of the letter is below.
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Dear Chancellor,
It is essential that you answer urgent questions over this Government’s failure to act on allegations of malpractice at HSBC. There remain a number of outstanding questions following David Gauke’s inadequate answers in the House of Commons yesterday.
Failure to act
Detailed
information was passed to the Government in May 2010 about over a thousand HSBC
clients allegedly guilty of tax evasion or avoidance and yet since then there
has been just one prosecution.
In November 2012 a senior HMRC official told the Times that the Government had
adopted “a selective prosecution policy” towards cases related to HSBC. Later
that month HMRC told the Public Accounts Committee that “another dozen”
criminal prosecutions were to follow. However, there have been none since. It
seems HMRC took a deliberate strategy to minimise rather than pursue
prosecutions, which would explain why just £135m has been recouped.
Can you explain why only a single prosecution has been made given the scale if
the alleged wrongdoing and what role Ministers played in deciding on “a
selective prosecution policy” for those accused of tax evasion or avoidance?
People would expect you to have at least been aware of a decision of this
seriousness.
Lord
Green
Lord Stephen Green was Chairman of HSBC 2006-2010 and was appointed a
Conservative Peer in September 2010 and then as Trade Minister by David Cameron
in January 2011.
Given that, as the Financial Secretary said yesterday, the Government was made
aware of allegations of wrongdoing against HSBC in May 2010, eight months
before Mr Green’s appointment to government, failure to ask probing questions
would have to be seen as wilfully negligent. As Chairman of the Bank, Mr Green
would either have been aware of malpractice or, if not, surely questions would
arise as to why not and his fitness for such a senior government post of Trade
Minister.
Can you provide details of the due diligence carried out by the Government in
advance of Lord Green’s appointment concerning allegations against HSBC and
Lord Green’s role in relation to them?
I hope you agree it is essential that we now hear from Lord Green himself about
what assurances he gave on his appointment to be a member of the government and
what he knew about the activities at his bank, so will you encourage him to do
so urgently?
Communication
between HMRC and Ministers
When the French authorities passed the HSBC caseload to HMRC in May 2010 we
would expect the Government to have taken swift action. At what point were
Ministers made aware of its existence, when did you and the Prime Minister
personally find out, and what action was then taken?
Without clarity over these matters, people can only conclude that the
Government has failed to act over the deeply serious matter of tackling tax
avoidance and evasion.
Yours,
Shabana Mahmood MP, Shadow Exchequer Secretary