I have my EE country passport.
I need to create a Utility Bill (Egypt) and certify passport copy and Utility Bill.
Afterwards,
to form a society where there is no accounting or public register.
Finally connect a
payment processor and an account (I think any
EMI is fine).
Do you have an Estonian passport? Eastern Europe? What is "EE country passport"?
Payment processor is going to be the big problem. The
payment processing you can find for
offshore companies is limited, expensive, and in many cases unreliable. — If you live in Egypt, it's going to be even more difficult as you will be classified as a higher-risk applicant.
If you have EU
citizenship and can show EU proof of address, it's a lot easier, cheaper, and faster to form a local company and bank/
EMI account locally or in EU. If you're domiciled in the EU, you have far more options for accepting payments. It's a little tricky to avoid public disclosure but for example Cyprus hasn't yet introduced a public UBO registry so nominee shareholders/directors keep your name away from the public. More exotic arrangements can also be made to remove yourself as UBO, but they tend to be expensive.
There are no jurisdictions left where accounting isn't required. However, in most tax havens and even many other jurisdictions, enforcement is lax. I would however always recommend doing proper accounting if you plan to run a serious business.
Companies are not required by the Act to prepare or file annual accounts or to appoint an auditor. However, under section 174(1) of the Act a company is required to keep reliable accounting records that: (i) are sufficient to show and explain the company’s transactions; (ii) enable the financial position of the company to be determined with reasonable accuracy at any time; and (iii) allow for accounts of the company to be prepared (notwithstanding that a company is not required under the Act to prepare accounts).
thats a big different prepare vs. keep
It's OK to admit that you're wrong when you're wrong. You mislead PeterZhow when you said
Seychelles "has no accounting". They very clearly do have accounting requirements. They are just more relaxed than many other jurisdictions. So you're either dangerously incompetent for being a reseller/service provider or just plain deceptive. Though I can't rule out the possibility it's both.