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When David Cameron finally admitted to ITV that he had owned a stake in his father's dodgy offshore fund – after avoiding the question for several days – it only emphasised that he can't be trusted when it comes to setting tax law. Other senior Conservatives are no better. Boris Johnson has previously defended tax avoidance, claiming everyone has the right to "minimise" their bill. George Osborne has been dodging questions about his own family's tax affairs.The problem doesn't lie with one particular individual, it's systemic. The politicians in charge of our country seem to believe that there's one rule for ordinary people, who pay their fair share of tax, and one rule for the wealthy who can employ clever accountants to come up with all sorts of get-out tricks. The only solution is to make those avoidance techniques impossible.On Saturday at 11am, as many of us as possible need to gather outside 10 Downing Street and demand change. No ifs, no buts. If we don't make our anger known now, there's no chance that things will ever improve. The UK will continue to be the tax avoidance hub of the world. Companies based in British Crown Dependencies will continue to be implicated in money laundering by human trafficking gangs, weapons dealing and the large-scale theft of essential revenues from poorer countries. Currently, more money is stolen from Africa via fraud and tax avoidance then is given in aid.READ: Here's Why You Should Give a Shit About the Panama Papers
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