Falcao pays €8.2m to Spanish taxman

Photo: Facebook AS Monaco
Photo: Facebook AS Monaco

Monaco’s striker Radamel Falcao has paid €8.2 million to tax authorities in Spain as a caution as an investigation into alleged tax evasion continues, according to several news outlets.

Falcao, 31, has been accused of defrauding the Spanish taxman of €7.4 million by using several shell companies in the British Virgin Islands, Ireland, Colombia and Panama to avoid taxes on income from image rights.

The total sum, which includes interest, relates to Falcao’s time at Atletico Madrid between 2011 and 2013. Falcao has said he was resident in Monaco from May 2013, when he joined AS Monaco.

The Spanish authorities have claimed that Falcao constructed an opaque system “with the sole aim of hiding from the Spanish taxman”.

Falcao’s agent, Jorge Mendes, who has not been accused of any wrongdoing, has dismissed claims that he helped handle Falcao’s tax affairs.

“In the statement made by Jorge Mendes before the judge, he clarified that his activity as sports agent, when representing players, is limited solely to representing them in their negotiations with the clubs to determine the salary terms of their contracts,” according to a statement from Mendes’ agency.

“Neither he nor his employees have ever intervened in the creation of corporate structures for his clients and much less provided any tax advice to them.”

The same judge is also overseeing the case in which Cristiano Ronaldo, another of Mendes’ clients, is accused of hiding €14.7 million from the taxman. The Real Madrid player is due to appear in court over the matter on July 31.

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Young migrants apprehended at Sainte Devote

police34Three young migrants were picked up by police after being spotted by surveillance cameras near Place Sainte-Dévote on Friday afternoon.

The teenage boys told the Monaco Police that they were minors, but had no papers to prove their age. However, instead of being handed over to the French police, which would happen if they were adults, the three were taken to the Princess Charlene Children’s Home, administered by the Health and Social Affairs Directorate.

This is the first time that unaccompanied minors have been apprehended in Monaco as they have made their way from the Italian border to France as illegal immigrants.

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Pauline Ducruet celebrates circus in Washington

L-R: Alicia Adams (Vice President, International Programming and Dance, John F. Kennedy Center), Dr Michael Atwood Mason (Director, Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage), Paula Murphy (Executive Vice-President, UniverSoul Circus), Deborah Walk (Curator Ringling Circus Museum), Suzanne Huey and Dr Rodney Huey (Councilors for the World Circus Federation), Zsuzsanna Mata (Executive Director of the World Circus Federation), Pauline Ducruet (President of the New Generation Festival Jury), HE Maguy Maccario Doyle (Ambassador of Monaco to the United States), Betty Butler and Dan Butler (Artistic Director and Executive Director, Circus Juventas), Jennifer Lemmer Posey (Associate Curator, Ringling Circus Museum) and Sabrina Lynn Motley (Director, Smithsonian Folklife Festival). Photo: ©DR
L-R: Alicia Adams (Vice President, International Programming and Dance, John F. Kennedy Center), Dr Michael Atwood Mason (Director, Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage), Paula Murphy (Executive Vice-President, UniverSoul Circus), Deborah Walk (Curator Ringling Circus Museum), Suzanne Huey and Dr Rodney Huey (Councilors for the World Circus Federation), Zsuzsanna Mata (Executive Director of the World Circus Federation), Pauline Ducruet (President of the New Generation Festival Jury), HE Maguy Maccario Doyle (Ambassador of Monaco to the United States), Betty Butler and Dan Butler (Artistic Director and Executive Director, Circus Juventas), Jennifer Lemmer Posey (Associate Curator, Ringling Circus Museum) and Sabrina Lynn Motley (Director, Smithsonian Folklife Festival). Photo: ©DR

Princess Stephanie’s daughter, Pauline Ducruet, was a recent guest of the Embassy of Monaco in Washington DC, where she took part in an event recognising young circus performers.

As part of a tribute to Prince Rainier III for his involvement in the circus and for the contributions that the Grimaldi Family continues to make to the circus, Ms Ducruet, who is President of the New Generation Young Artists Festival, chaired the closing session of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival devoted to the new generation.

The day before, a reception was held at the Residence of the Ambassador to welcome Ms Ducruet, as well as to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Festival.

The Smithsonian Folklife Festival is organised by the Smithsonian Institute, which promotes cultural exchanges between countries, artists and the public.

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North American success for Monaco Boys Choir

Les Petits Chanteurs de Monaco
San Francisco City Hall concert on the occasion of the French National Day (Bastille Day). Photo: Facebook Les Petits Chanteurs de Monaco
San Francisco City Hall concert on the occasion of the French National Day (Bastille Day). Photo: Facebook Les Petits Chanteurs de Monaco

The Petits Chanteurs de Monaco continue their North American tour with concerts in Lynnwood, Seattle, Tacoma, Salem and Sacramento. On Friday, July 14, they sang in San Francisco.

The tour started on July 3 in Vancouver and will finish in Los Angeles on July 23.

Monaco’s embassy in Washington DC and consulates in Vancouver, San Francisco and Los Angeles, have been very much involved in making the necessary arrangements for the tour, which has been acclaimed as a great success.

Last year the choir toured Asia for three weeks, including China, South Korea and Japan, where many of their concerts were televised.

Created in 1971 by Prince Rainier III, the audition-only troupe is made up of talented boys aged 8 to 16, who perform, currently under the direction by Pierre Debat, a repertoire of sacred works, French and Monégasque folk songs and English-language songs.

In a statement on the choir website, Prince Albert II comments: “The activities of these little ambassadors of Monaco deserve all of my support, and I commend them for their commitment and their career. Their merit is praiseworthy and so is the enthusiasm they show under the guidance of Mr Pierre Debat, himself gifted with the same passion as that of his parents.”

Photo: Facebook Les Petits Chanteurs de Monaco
Photo: Facebook Les Petits Chanteurs de Monaco
Photo: Facebook Les Petits Chanteurs de Monaco
Photo: Facebook Les Petits Chanteurs de Monaco

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Monaco marks milestone in Antarctic conservation

Photo: DC
Photo: DC

A new milestone in the conservation of biodiversity in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean region was reached in Monaco on July 5, highlighting the Principality’s leadership.

The objective of the second edition of the workshop “Antarctica and the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020”, opened by Isabelle Rosabrunetto, Director-General of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation, was to develop a series of concrete measures to improve the protection and conservation of biodiversity in the region.

Experts also sought to identify and define a set of indicators that could assist the countries involved in implementing conservation measures in Antarctica to assess the effectiveness and success of these action plans.

The first edition of the workshop, held in Monaco in 2015, showed that globally the state of biodiversity in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean was similar and not better than that of the rest of the world. However, the experts stressed that “… despite this rather pessimistic assessment, there are many possibilities for positive action to improve the situation in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean”.

In the Global Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020, as defined in the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the actions identified in Monaco during this second “Monaco Assessment” will help to establish conservation and effective implementation of biodiversity on a global scale.

Professor Denis Allemand, Scientific Director of the Scientific Centre of Monaco, closed the event by concluding: “The actions and indicators identified during this second workshop will improve the situation in the region substantially and should be welcomed very favourably by all those with an interest.”

He added: “I can assure you that the Monaco Scientific Centre and the Monaco government will continue to support the conservation of Antarctic biodiversity and to promote basic scientific research to define and support these action plans.”

 

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