Was the outcome of the 2020 Presidential and Parliamentary elections purchased in advance?
JAN 9, 2021
Was the outcome of the 2020 presidential, and parliamentary elections, purchased in advance - as some conspiracy-theorists claim? To get to the bottom of this matter, the more responsible sections of the Ghanaian media, owe a responsibility to the good people of Ghana, to stop pitching camp, with either side, of the debased-coin-of-infamy, which the constituent parts of the dominant NPP/NDC duopoly, represent.
Henceforth, all Mother Ghana s truly patriotic media professionals, ought to work diligently, and assiduously, as watchdogs (and the fourth arm of government), which keeps an eagle-eye on the executive, legislature and judiciary, of our country, and hold all of them accountable to the ordinary people, in whom sovereignty, in our system, ultimately resides. Full stop.
The Streetjournal Magazine is an online investigating media house that specializes on systematic, serious crimes, political corruption or corporate wrongdoing.
WASHINGTON, Jan 3 A major avenue for global money laundering and tax evasion has been closed off by a new law requiring disclosure of owners of US shell companies used to hide billions of dollars. The Corporate Transparency Act was included in the US defence appropriations bill passed into law.
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A major avenue for global money laundering and tax evasion has been closed off by a new law requiring disclosure of owners of US shell companies used to hide billions of dollars.
The Corporate Transparency Act was included in the US defense appropriations bill passed into law by Congress late Friday, overriding President Donald Trump s veto.
The law forces beneficial owners behind shell companies to report their identities to the US Treasury s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN.
While the law still grants them protection from public knowledge only the Treasury and law enforcement will be able to access the FinCEN database transparency advocates say it is a huge step against kleptocrats, organized crime and rich tax evaders who have been able to anonymously wash their suspect wealth through the world s largest economy.
Print this page WASHINGTON - A major avenue for global money laundering and tax evasion has been closed off by a new law requiring disclosure of owners of U.S. shell companies used to hide billions of dollars.
The Corporate Transparency Act was included in the U.S. defense appropriations bill that Congress passed into law late Friday, overriding President Donald Trump s veto.
The law forces beneficial owners behind shell companies to report their identities to the U.S. Treasury s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN.
While the law still grants them protection from public knowledge only the Treasury and law enforcement will be able to access the FinCEN database transparency advocates say it is a huge step against kleptocrats, organized crime and rich tax evaders who have been able to anonymously wash their suspect wealth through the world s largest economy.