Don't miss

Replay


LATEST SHOWS

MIDDLE EAST MATTERS

An eye on war-torn Yemen through the lens of Thana Faroq

Read more

IN THE PAPERS

Amnesty condemns 'impunity' after France 24's Pakistan correspondent is beaten

Read more

IN THE PAPERS

What does 2018 have in store for French superstar astronaut Thomas Pesquet?

Read more

BUSINESS DAILY

Batteries anyone? Power cut hits Las Vegas tech show

Read more

FOCUS

Video: First Afghan all-female orchestra braves Taliban

Read more

IN THE PAPERS

Backlash after French female celebrities criticise #MeToo

Read more

EYE ON AFRICA

Zambia closes passport offices to curb cholera spread

Read more

MEDIAWATCH

Op-ed denouncing #MeToo 'puritanism' slammed by feminists

Read more

THE DEBATE

Conspiracy theories: How to sort truth from fiction?

Read more

Europe

Luxembourg court overturns verdict against 'Luxleaks' whistleblower

© Aurore Belot, AFP | Antoine Deltour leaves the Court of Appeals in Luxembourg on March 15, 2017.

Text by NEWS WIRES

Latest update : 2018-01-11

A Luxembourg court on Thursday overturned the verdict against a "Luxleaks" whistleblower who was convicted of leaking thousands of documents that revealed tax breaks for multinational firms.

Luxembourg's highest court rejected the conviction against former PricewaterhouseCoopers employee Antoine Deltour who in March had received a reduced six-month suspended jail sentence with a 1,500-euro fine.

The sentence against his colleague Raphael Halet, who received a 1,000-euro fine after an appeal, was upheld.

An appeal court will now hold a fresh trial with new judges, Luxembourg's highest court said in a statement.

>> Luxleaks: Will Europe crack down on tax evasion?

The LuxLeaks scandal erupted in 2014 and sparked a major global push against generous deals handed to multinationals, which grew even stronger with new revelations such as the Panama Papers and Paradise Papers Leaks.

The blockbuster leak revealed the huge tax breaks that tiny EU nation Luxembourg offered international firms including Apple, IKEA and Pepsi, at a time when Jean-Claude Juncker, now head of the European Commission, was prime minister.

(AFP)

Date created : 2018-01-11

  • TAX EVASION

    LuxLeaks whistleblowers get reduced sentences on appeal

    Read more

  • TAX EVASION

    Luxembourg court charges French reporter over ‘LuxLeaks’ role

    Read more

  • LUXEMBOURG-FRANCE

    Suspected ‘LuxLeaks’ whistleblower hit with theft charges

    Read more

COMMENT(S)