The bursting of the Irish property
bubble has claimed perhaps its most famous victim: the Westlife singer
Shane Filan, who has been declared bankrupt by a British court.
The
32-year-old, whose boyband career gave him a share in the group's
estimated £31m fortune, said he was devastated by the move, which
happened just days before Westlife play their farewell show in Dublin.
Filan
was forced into bankruptcy after the collapse of the property business
he owned with his brother Finnbarr. Between them they owed more than
€5.5m (£4.45m) to Ulster Bank and Bank of Ireland.
The
Westlife singer has followed dozens of other Irish debtors who have
sought to use Britain's more liberal bankruptcy laws to wipe out their
debts. One financial expert managing the debts of Irish people caught up
in the country's property crash told the Guardian he will have helped
wipe out €1bn of Irish debt in bankruptcy courts by the end of this
summer.
Property prices have slumped dramatically across Ireland –
in December 2011 they were 50% lower in Dublin than in the boom year of
2006. The latest figures from the Irish central statistics office
revealed that 10% of Irish mortgage holders were unable to repay their
loans.
It emerged on Thursday that Filan was declared bankrupt
this week at Kingston county court in Surrey, a month after his
Irish-based property development company went into receivership.
Filan
said in a statement he was forced to make the move after exhausting all
other options. "Together with a team of financial and legal experts I
have spent months exploring all possible alternatives to bankruptcy but
to no avail.
"I have worked long and hard to try to reduce my
debts, and I am devastated that it came to this conclusion. I now intend
to focus on the remaining dates of the Westlife tour and my commitments
to the band before looking to rebuild a future for my wife, my three
children and myself."
Westlife, currently on their farewell tour,
have had 14 No 1 singles in Britain, including Flying Without Wings and
Fool Again, and more than two-dozen top 10 hits. In 2010, the group were
estimated to have amassed a £31m fortune after selling more than 44m
records.
The group will wind up their 14-year career with a show
at Croke Park in Dublin on 23 June. Other celebrities have lost millions
after investing in Irish property, included actor Colin Farrell, who
lost £3m over the past year, according to the Sunday Times rich list.
Irish
people with large debts, such as Filan, are turning to British courts
to declare bankruptcy because individuals face only one year in
financial purdah. In Ireland the penalties last for 12 years.
The
ruling in London means Filan's assets are transferred to an official
appointed by the court and used to settle his debts, while he is allowed
an income to support himself and any dependants. His name has also been
published on Britain's insolvency register which gives details of all
individual bankruptcy rulings.
The register describes Filan as a
singer and gives his address as Cobham, Surrey. He, with his wife
Gillian Walsh and their three children, moved to Britain some time ago.
Filan
will be discharged on 11 June 2013. At that point, all debts due to his
creditors, including his Irish creditors, will be considered cleared.
He will not be able to borrow money or act as a company director until
he is discharged.
Just weeks ago, Filan agreed a solo record deal
with entertainment company Universal. Their farewell concerts at
Dublin's Croke Park stadium on Friday and Saturday are already sold out
while the cost of hotel accommodation in the city has soared for next
weekend as thousands flock to the Irish capital.
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