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  • Thomas Zehnle will join the firm as a partner in the tax and white collar practices. He specialises in tax fraud, money laundering, and Bank Secrecy Act violations.
  • Chapman Tripp, the New Zealand law firm, has a new partner and joint head of its tax litigation practice. Graeme Olding advises on a wide range of New Zealand tax matters including merger M&A and tax disputes. He also advises on cross-border structuring issues as well as debt and equity issuances. He was with Bell Gully for more than 10 years before joining Chapman Tripp in April 2010.
  • Alexander Hemmelrath joins the WTS executive board and his team are also becoming part of the WTS Group. Hemmelrath and his team will be working in the group's Munich office.
  • Redlink have announced the addition of Isabelle Vendeville to the firm as a partner in the tax department in Paris.
  • Jaime González-Béndiksen and Alejandro Enríquez-Mariscal have started a new firm in Mexico, Béndiksen, Enríquez, Salazar, Santoyo & Yanar.
  • The Italian Supreme Court has confirmed that merger leveraged buyouts are not abusive.
  • The National Tax Service (NTS) in Korea will create a permanent division responsible for investigating offshore tax non-compliance.
  • A source has revealed that pre-filing talks have taken place, suggesting that China and the UK might be working on their first bilateral advanced pricing agreement (APA).
  • Taxpayers are too secretive about transactions they are involved in. Deals are time consuming, and expensive if you use external advisers to structure and implement them. However, that is not why companies are reluctant to explain the tax details of transactions in public.
  • With Middle Eastern countries increasingly adopting international standards, Nauman Ahmed, John Belsey and Alex Law of Deloitte uncover the tax changes that have dominated the Middle East for the past 12 months with particular attention to Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.