Pay Up Bono - U2 to be targetted at Glastonbury for tax avoidance

Bluebirds

Well-Known Member
Hope this is true, although Morrissey won't be happy as he's on beforehand:

(from the Guardian)

First it was Vodafone stores, then Philip Green's Topshop, Boots and grocers to the Queen Fortnum & Mason. Now direct action tax protesters are turning their sights on the Glastonbury festival, promising to use U2's headline performance to throw a spotlight on the group's convoluted tax affairs.

Campaigners have promised to stop short of disrupting the set, but are determined to make their protest highly visible. Plans are afoot for a giant inflatable banner with the slogan "Bono Pay Up", spelled out in lights.

"Bono claims to care about the developing world, but U2 greedily indulges in the very kind of tax avoidance which is crippling the poor nations of this world," said a spokesman for Art Uncut, a group with strong links to UK Uncut.

Campaigners also want to draw attention the impact of tax avoidance on Ireland's parlous public finances. "We will be showing the very real impact of U2's tax avoidance on hospitals and schools in Ireland. Anyone watching will be very much aware that Bono needs to pay up."

The band sparked a wave of criticism in 2006 by shifting parts of its business affairs from Ireland to the Netherlands in response to a cap on generous tax breaks for artists in the republic.

Previously, worldwide royalties earned from works of art – including rock CDs – could be declared tax free as part of a popular initiative to help struggling artists and reflect Ireland's reputation as a cultural hub. However the biggest beneficiaries were the likes of U2 rather than artists on the breadline.

Dr Sheila Killian, of the University of Limerick, said the introduction of a cap – initially set at €250,000 (£222,500) a year – was still generous and left the tax affairs of most working artists unaffected. She said: "Bono's attitude to what tax is all about is ill thought out. Tax is about citizenship."

Another campaigner, Richard Murphy, said: "If Bono thinks he is just like any other Irishman, he should pay his taxes like everyone else. That is the only way for Ireland to break out of the mess it is in."

Protesters at Glastonbury are planning to float an over-sized bundle of fake cash from one part of the crowd, under an Irish tricolour, to another section of the audience under a Dutch flag.

A spokesperson for U2, who are in Vancouver, was unavailable for comment. Their manager, Paul McGuinness, has previously insisted: "U2 is a global business and pays taxes globally … At least 95% of U2's business … takes place outside of Ireland and as a result the band pays many different kinds of taxes all over the world."

Sources close to the band said Bono and others live in Ireland, are employers there, and are involved in philanthropic activities.

A spokesperson for One, the anti-poverty campaign group co-founded by Bono, said: "U2's business arrangements have nothing to do with illegal tax evasion and transfer mispricing in developing countries, critical issues which Bono and One campaign on.

"One is currently lobbying for radical changes in the law that would require extractive industry corporations to report payments to governments, to ensure these substantial resources contribute to the domestic tax base instead of being stashed or siphoned off."

The organisers of Glastonbury festival declined to comment.
 
So you consider this worse than fleeing the country to avoid a court ordered payment owed to your former band mates?
 
Yes I do as it goes. To be honest I couldn't give the proverbial about Morrissey vs Joyce, Rourke and Gannon. Or which ever drummer has been sacked in the spirit of Spinal Tap. Morrissey has never gone round asking me to save starving kids in Africa
Here is an article on Bono Vox recently featured the Before its News website


"This guy has pimped millions from people around the globe (esp. liberal celebrities looking for a "cause" to attach their name to) and now word has it that he's nothing but a scam artist:

There was a humdinger of a story about Bono in the New York Post earlier this week that the Mail has picked up on this morning. According to the Post, Bono's anti-poverty ONE foundation received $14,993,873 in donations from philanthropists in 2008, of which just $184,732 was distributed to three charities. (ONE is an "advocacy organisation" whose main purpose is to change policies, not support charities, it says.) So what happened to the rest? More than $8 million was spent on executive and employee salaries.

This isn't gossip. The Post's figures are taken directly from the organisation's 2008 tax return, the latest year for which records are available. This story follows hot on the heels of the revelation that Edun, Bono's fashion label, has shifted some of its production base from Africa to China. A perfectly acceptable business decision, were it not for the fact that Edun is an "ethical" fashion house that was set up to aleviate poverty in ... Africa.

This isn't common-or-garden, run-of-the-mill hypocrisy, this is hypocrisy on an epic scale stadium-filling hypocrisy. Bono browbeats Western governments for not spending more money on aid taxpayers' money while doing his best to avoid paying tax himself. He chastises the private sector for not investing in African businesses, then moves his own business out of Africa. He persuades kind-hearted souls to donate money to charity, then stands by while his own foundation pays its employes 43 times as much as it gives to good causes."

http://beforeitsnews.com/story/190/740/Bono,_Self_Righteous_ Advocate_For_The_Poor,_Involved_In_Charity_Scandal.html
 
Bono does a lot more good with his fame/position than any other musician. God forbid someone actually cares and attempts to improve this world rather than sitting at home counting royalty checks. This garbage is so old.
 
Bono does a lot more good with his fame/position than any other musician. God forbid someone actually cares and attempts to improve this world rather than sitting at home counting royalty checks. This garbage is so old.

It being old doesn't make it irrelevant. Bono is not a saint. The only reason why you might see him that way is because that's how he promotes himself. Would anyone who generally cares about the charitable causes in this world publicize their efforts and not only publicize it, but form a business on which they are able to profit from charity? Other people do more good than Bono and don't get recognition for it.
 
bono is a horrible egotist who has a messanic personality,he belives himself to be godlike and as such beyond reproach by mere human beings,i remember seeing him sitting amongst democraticly elected poloticians and he thought that he was superior to everyone
 
Bono and U2 should 'pay up' after tax revenues go abroad, says protest group

Oh yesh. :D

By RONALD QUINLAN

Sunday June 05 2011

"BONO, pay up." That's the message the U2 frontman is set to be greeted with when he takes to the stage at the Glastonbury music festival at the end of this month.

The call will come from Art Uncut, a direct action tax protest group intent on highlighting the iconic Dublin band's convoluted -- and it should be said entirely legal -- tax arrangements.

"Bono claims to care about the developing world, but U2 greedily indulges in the very kind of tax avoidance which is crippling the poor nations of this world," a spokesman for Art Uncut told the UK's Guardian newspaper.

But it isn't just the plight of the Third World that is motivating the protesters. Art Uncut says it also wants to draw attention to the impact it believes U2's tax arrangements are having on Ireland's public finances.

"We will be showing the very real impact of U2's tax avoidance on hospitals and schools in Ireland. Anyone watching will be very much aware that Bono needs to pay up," the same spokesman said.

U2 came in for heavy criticism in 2006 after shifting parts of their business affairs from Ireland to The Netherlands. Protesters at Glastonbury are planning to float an over-sized bundle of fake cash from one part of the crowd, under an Irish tricolour, to another section of the audience under a Dutch flag.

U2 manager Paul McGuinness, has in the past insisted: "U2 is a global business and pays taxes globally ... At least 95 per cent of U2's business ... takes place outside of Ireland and as a result the band pays many different kinds of taxes all over the world."

- RONALD QUINLAN
 
Back
Top Bottom