Former Swiss banker admits that he provided the Wikileaks details on the accounts of prominent figures

recognized the Swiss bank said Monday that it provided the Julian Osanj founder of Wikileaks information containing details of bank accounts of more than 2000 prominent figures from many countries, including Britain and the United States.

Rudolf Elmer acknowledged at a press conference in London that the information, which are not yet available on the website Wikileaks, was loaded on two CDs handed them to Osanj who promised to reveal what Itdmanh of information after checking them.

Quoted the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) to Elmer saying 'I am against the banking system and I know how it works, and there is an advanced network working on transfer of illicit funds to secret accounts abroad'.

He said Ulmer, who served as official financial operations in the Bank Julius Baer in the Cayman Islands' I was there and did my job, and I felt it important to reveal my identity as a source of leaked confidential information on bank accounts, after he and his family to pressure similar to the fire emanating from the dragon several headers after resolution disclosure'.

The Ulmer provided the Wikileaks site and information before, and dismissed from his job at the Swiss Bank Julius Baer in 2002.

The former banker said that the information includes details of offshore accounts for about 40 political, and secret accounts in three banks, including the expense of his former employer.

Murr said that 'jailed in Switzerland for 30 days for violating the rules of Swiss banking, and offered him money and withdrew the charges against him in order to buy his silence, and sent his wife a letter to the German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck offered the provision of bank statements for free, but did not receive any response from him'.

It is scheduled to appear Elmer before a court in Switzerland next Wednesday on charges of breach of bank secrecy laws, against the backdrop of passing on information about secret bank data include multinational companies and financial companies and the wealthy of many countries, including Britain and the United States and Germany, covering the period from 1990 to 2009.
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