Cameron's spokeswoman, Helen Bower, said "potential prime ministers" and "those who are in charge of the nation's finances" should be transparent about their tax affairs. She said Cameron did not believe all lawmakers should go public.
Cameron spent several days explaining his relationship to his late father's legal but offshore fund and resisting opposition calls to publish his tax details before issuing a summary of his recent returns on Sunday.
Cameron will try to restore his government's shaken reputation for competence with a statement in the House of Commons later today, after days of damaging headlines.
Opposition leaders plan to challenge Cameron over past investment in an offshore account set up by his late father.
Cameron's father, Ian Cameron, has been identified as a client of a Panamanian law firm that specializes in helping the wealthy reduce their tax burdens. Over 11 million documents from the firm Mossack Fonseca have been leaked to international media, in one of the biggest data breaches in history.
David Cameron, a former PR man with a reputation for sharp political intuition, appears to have been caught off-guard by the issue. His office initially insisted that the prime minister's financial arrangements were private, before acknowledging that Cameron and his wife had sold some 30,000 pounds (USD 44,000) in shares in the offshore fund shortly before he became prime minister in 2010.
Finally, yesterday Cameron published a summary of his tax returns since 2009, becoming the first British leader to do so. The records appear to show that Cameron paid his full share of tax 75,898 pounds on taxable income of 200,307 pounds in the most recent tax year.
Several other politicians, including Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, followed Cameron's lead and published their tax returns, and more are likely to follow.
There is no suggestion that Cameron or his father, who died in 2010, did anything illegal. But the headlines have served to remind the public of Cameron's wealth and privilege.
(Reopens FES82)
Reacting to Cameron's comment, Buhari said he does not want an apology but a return of the assets that were taken out of Nigeria and sent to the UK.
Asked at the event if Nigeria was a "fantastically corrupt" country, he thought for a moment and said: "Yes".
He refused, however, to say whether he regarded Cameron's remarks as rude, saying that Britain had led in trying to track down former Nigerian government members who had acted disgracefully.
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