Prime Minister David Cameron (left), along with Britain's ambassador to Indonesia Moazzam Malik (2nd right), attend an interfaith dialogue at Sunda Kelapa Mosque in Jakarta on Tuesday.
Singapore - The promise was part of anti-corruption efforts to ensure that Britain did not become a "safe haven for corrupt money from around the world".
Published: Tue 28 Jul 2015, 6:28 PM
Updated: Tue 28 Jul 2015, 11:44 PM
Britain on Tuesday said it would clamp down on the use of "dirty money" to buy up expensive properties, promising to expose the owners of anonymous foreign shell companies hiding cash in London's buoyant housing market.
Prime Minister David Cameron, speaking in Singapore on a regional trade visit, said the promise was part of anti-corruption efforts to ensure that Britain did not become a "safe haven for corrupt money from around the world".
"We know that some high-value properties - particularly in London - are being bought by people overseas through anonymous shell companies, some of them with plundered or laundered cash," Cameron said. "There is no place for dirty money in Britain."
Property in parts of London is among the most expensive in the world which, combined with strong property law and looser restrictions on foreign buyers than some international peers, makes it an attractive place to bury cash in assets that will hold their value.
In 2012 a British court ruled that an eight-bedroom London mansion, worth £10 million, had been bough using stolen Libyan state funds by Saadi Gaddafi, son of former dictator Muammar Gaddafi.
Around £122 billion of property in England and Wales is owned via offshore companies, Cameron said, announcing that a central registry of land and properties owned by foreign firms would be set up in the coming months, giving details of who owns around 100,000 property titles.
"We need to stop corrupt officials or organised criminals using anonymous shell companies to invest their ill-gotten gains in London property, without being tracked down," he said.
Anti-corruption campaign group Global Witness welcomed the measures, saying improved transparency would have a strong persuasive effect in deterring criminals looking to hide stolen money.
"The challenge will be to make sure than any information kept on a register is up to date and accurate," said Robert Palmer leader of Global Witness' campaigns involving banks and anonymous companies.
He also urged the government to press for similar levels of transparency from Britain's overseas territories, many of which are used in the complex company structures often used to avoid or evade tax.
A television screen grab taken from the Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) shows Lord John Sewel speaking in the House of Lords on March 24, 2015. Sewel, in charge of parliamentary ethics quit the House of Lords on July 28, 2015 after allegedly snorting cocaine off a prostitute's breasts, fuelling calls for reform of the unelected upper chamber. Lord John Sewel, 69, apologised for the "pain and embarrassment" caused after the Rupert Murdoch-owned Sun newspaper published pictures of him apparently taking drugs and wearing an orange bra and studded leather jacket as he chatted to two sex workers.AFP PHOTO / PRU?RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT " AFP PHOTO / PRU " - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - NO DISTRIBUTION TO THIRD PARTIES - 24 HOUR USE - NO ARCHIVES?