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NEW DELHI (AFP) -
Bollywood's
Amitabh Bachchan and martial arts movie star Jackie Chan are among
celebrities who feature Monday in a massive leak of documents, some of
which reveal hidden offshore assets.
Bollywood legend Bachchan,
simply known as the "Big B" in India, was appointed director of at least
four shipping companies registered in offshore tax havens and set up 23
years ago.
The authorised capital of these companies ranged from
just $5,000 to $50,000 but they traded in ships worth millions of
dollars, according to the Indian Express newspaper.
The Express is
among more than 100 media groups which have investigated a massive leak
of 11.5 million documents from Mossack Fonseca, a Panama-based law firm
with offices in 35 countries.
Bachchan, who has long since
resigned from the companies and has not commented on the documents, is
not the only member of his famous family named in the leaks.
His
daughter-in-law, actress Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, was also director and
shareholder of an offshore company, along with members of her family,
before it was thought to have been wound up in 2008, according to the
newspaper.
The media adviser of the former Miss World winner has rejected the documents as "totally untrue and false".
As
with many of Fonseca's clients, there is no evidence that the Bollywood
A-listers used their companies for improper purposes and having an
offshore entity is not illegal.
But the documents, naming more
than 500 Indians including real estate tycoons in Fonseca's list of
offshore companies, foundations and trusts, come at a sensitive time in
India.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has vowed to
crack down on the "menace" of so-called black money -- vast sums stashed
abroad to keep them secret from Indian tax authorities.
Hong Kong
film star Jackie Chan has also been revealed to have at least six
companies represented by Fonseca's firm, though he too may have used the
companies legitimately for business purposes rather than for tax
avoidance.
The stash of records was obtained from an anonymous
source by German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung and shared with media
worldwide. The documents, from around 214,000 offshore entities, cover
almost 40 years.
© 2016 AFP
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