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France later agreed to return the files to Switzerland, who in turn handed "copies of a significant portion of the data" back to the bank on March 3, HSBC said. "Based on the facts it would appear that the French authorities have copies and the Swiss authorities have copies," HSBC spokesman Jezz Farr said. The bank said French authorities had informed their Swiss counterparts that the data they still hold would "not be used inappropriately." It remained unclear whether that means France will not use the data to prosecute tax evaders. Farr said the theft affected customers worldwide. "The accounts were held in Switzerland but the client base is international," he said. HSBC PLC said offering private banking services for rich customers remains "a core business" of the group, which has about 100,000 private banking clients. Shares in HSBC were down 0.05 percent at 7.01 pounds ($10.54) on the London exchange.
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