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Four Italian Journalists Abducted By Syrian Rebels

By , April 7, 2013 2:39 am

ROME (AFP) — Four Italian journalists have been abducted in northern Syria, the Italian foreign ministry said, the ANSA news agency reported late Friday.

The Italian authorities said they had been monitoring the case from the start but called for “maximum discretion”, insisting that “the physical safety of the hostages remains the absolute priority”, the ANSA report said.

The La Repubblica website said the abducted were three freelance journalists and one reporter working for the Italian public broadcaster RAI.

The newspaper said the journalists were kidnapped “by a rebel group” while out filming.

The website of the La Stampa daily added that the four were taken overnight Thursday to Friday.

Their families have already been informed, the foreign ministry said.

In February, an Italian citizen and two Russians kidnapped on December 12 in the west of Syria were freed as part of an exchange for militants.

Abductions for religious, political or purely financial reasons are becoming increasingly frequent in war-torn Syria.

Syria’s government on Tuesday offered kidnappers an amnesty deal, giving them 15 days to hand over victims or face sentences ranging from life with hard labour to execution, if their victims were murdered or sexually abused.

Assyrian International News Agency

AUD & NZD Weak amid Risk Aversion Caused by Italian Election

By , February 26, 2013 10:03 pm

Various Australian dollar notesThe Australian dollar extended the decline against its US peer as the indecisive outcome of the Italian election fueled the risk aversion sentiment among Forex traders. The New Zealand dollar paused its drop, but remained weak as the nation’s trade balance posted an unexpected deficit.

No party had clear victory in the Italian election, which ended on February 25. This essentially created a hung parliament. Traders perceived it as one of the worst possible outcomes, resulting in a weak government that will be unable to deal with the country’s problems.

The New Zealand trade balance showed the deficit of NZ$ 305 million in January after demonstrating the surplus of NZ$ 534 million in the preceding month. Analysts have expected a surplus of NZ$ 113 million.

AUD/USD fell from 1.0226 to 1.0217 and AUD/JPY dropped from 94.05 to 93.78 as of 2:46 GMT today. NZD/USD traded at 0.8246 on today’s trading session after tumbling from 0.8334 to 0.8249 on yesterday’s session. AUD/NZD went down from 1.2391 to 1.2381.

If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the New Zealand Dollar, feel free to post them using the commentary form below.

Forex News

Dollar Flat After Italian Election, Bernanke’s Testimony

By , February 26, 2013 10:02 pm

Benjamin Franklin's portrait on a hundred-dollar billThe US dollar traded sideways today as risk aversion caused by the Italian election was trimmed by positive US macroeconomic data and comments of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, who defended the monetary stimulus.

Forex market participants were worrying after the last week’s Fed’s minutes that the central bank will drop the stimulus program. Bernanke eased such worries yesterday, saying:

We do not see the potential costs of the increased risk- taking in some financial markets as outweighing the benefits of promoting a stronger economic recovery. Inflation is currently subdued, and inflation expectations appear well anchored.

The indecisive outcome of the Italian election resulted in the risk aversion sentiment on the FX market. At the same time, all yesterday’s US macroeconomic reports were good, reducing fear among traders.

EUR/USD traded at 1.3067 as of 4:24 GMT today after falling from 1.3060 to 1.3040 earlier. GBP/USD went down from 1.5121 to 1.5109. USD/JPY was little changed at 91.92.

If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the US Dollar, feel free to post them using the commentary form below.

Forex News

Monti and Draghi under fire in Italian bank scandal

By , January 27, 2013 6:07 pm

Monti and Draghi under fire in Italian bank scandal
By: Valentina Pop on: 27.01.2013 [20:14 ] (65 reads)

Monti and Draghi under fire in Italian bank scandal

25.01.13 @ 11:23

By Valentina Pop

.

BERLIN – A bank scandal has flared up in Italy one month ahead of elections, with questions raised about European Central Bamk (ECB) chief Mario Draghi’s role in overlooking the case and PM Mario Monti using taxpayer money to bail out the bank.

Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, the world’s oldest bank and Italy’s third largest lender, is facing over €700 million in losses after its new management found hidden financial transactions gone bad dating back to 2006-2009, which had been kept secret from regulators.

Monti, who is seeking a second mandate as Prime Minister next month, is now being accused by his rival Silvio Berlusconi of having levied extra taxes only to save a rotten institution.

Monte dei Paschi got a first bailout during Berlusconi’s term as Prime Minister but filed for more government aid of €500 milllion last year, bringing the total cost of the rescue to €3.9 billion.

One of the hidden deals was with Deutsche Bank and was called “Project Santorini.” It provided Monte Paschi with a €1.5 billion loan designed to cover losses from an older trade with the German bank. Bloomberg news agency saw documents indicating Deutsche Bank made €60 million in profit out of the situation.

The German bank was itslef convicted of fraud last month in a separate case on selling bad financial products to the city of Milan.

Speaking in Davos on Thursday (24 January), Monti said the bailout will be delayed pending a further review of the Monte Paschi’s accounts.

“The subscriptions of those financial tools hasn’t happened yet, among other reasons because the needed conditions for the operation to be completed haven’t been met yet,” he told a press conference.

He dismissed the accusations of him levying taxes to save the bank as “complete fantasy.”

The bank has also complained that politicians are “exploiting” the situation.

Draghi in the firing line

Mario Draghi has also come under fire because he was at the time chairing Italy’s central bank which was in charge of supervising trades, such as the Monte Paschi transactions.

Former economy minister Giulio Tremonti tweeted on Wednesday that it is “stupefying” that Draghi failed to discover or prevent the dodgy dealings.

Italy’s acting economy minister Vittorio Grilli also told press on Thursday the responsibility lies with the Draghu-era Bank of Italy, not with the current government.

“It wasn’t us that did the controlling. On the checks, all I will say is that it is the responsibility of the Bank of Italy,” he said.

Meanwhile, Berlusconi’s centre-right party is trying to drag the centre-left opposition – the pollsters’ favourite to win the upcoming elections – into the mud.

The bank, founded in 1472, has its headquarters in the Tuscany region controlled by the center-left PD party.

“Monte Paschi is close to collapse. This is an example of how the left would govern the country,” said Angelino Alfano, one of Berlusconi’s deputies.

For his part, Beppe Grillo, a comedian who runs the populist Five Star Movement – polled to become the third biggest party in parliament – is also trying to capitalise on the affair.

“I don’t see why we should give almost €4 billion in public money to cover up a bunch of thieves,” he told Reuters on Wednesday.

Grillo, who owns shares in Monte Paschi, said he will participate in a shareholders’ meeting on Friday and ask for the bank to be nationalised.

http://euobserver.com/economic/118845

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Italian court rules MMR vaccine did trigger autism…here you have it. Root cause of recent autism epidemic is forced vaccination program.

By , January 14, 2013 10:38 pm

Italian court rules MMR vaccine did trigger autism…here you have it. Root cause of recent autism epidemic is forced vaccination program.
By: Bulov on: 15.01.2013 [01:48 ] (45 reads)

Italian court rules MMR vaccine did trigger autism…here you have it. Root cause of recent autism epidemic is forced vaccination program.
http://www.nyrnaturalnews.com/chemicals-2/2012/05/italian-court-rules-mmr-vaccine-did-trigger-autism/

8 May, 2012

By Staff Writer
NYR Natural News
Natural Health News — An Italian court has ruled there is a link between the MMR vaccine and autism.

In what may be a ground-breaking decision, the Italian Court of Rimini has ruled that causation between an MMR vaccine and the resulting autism in a young child “has been established.”
The unnamed child received the vaccine in March of 2004 and on returning home immediately developed adverse symptoms. During the next year the child regressed, receiving the autism diagnosis one year later and is now 100% disabled by the disease.

The Italian court ruled that the child “has been damaged by irreversible complications due to vaccination (prophylaxis trivalent MMR)” and ordered the Ministry of Health to compensate the child with a 15 year annuity and to reimburse the parents of their court cost.

The judgement can be found in full here and the original news report in Italian appears here. A rough Google translation appears here.
The case is expected to go to appeal as authorities are concerned it may set a legal precedent.
Not the first judgement against the vaccine

This, however, is the second recent judgement to come to this conclusion. Earlier this year a US court also ruled that the MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine can cause autism.
In a ruling that kept very quiet in the press, the US Court of Federal Claims has conceded that the mercury-based preservative thimerosal, which was in vaccines until 2002, caused autism in the case of one child.

The ruling was just one of 4,900 cases currently being considered for compensation payments. Health officials are concerned that it could open the floodgates for even more claims.
The ruling, made by US Assistant Attorney General Peter Keisler, was made last November, and was one of three test cases into the MMR-autism link that was being considered by a three-member panel, which Keisler chaired.

The case involved a child who received nine vaccinations in July 2000, when she was 18 months old. Two of these contained thimerosal. Within days, the girl, who had previously been healthy, began to exhibit loss of language skills, no eye contact, loss of response to verbal direction, insomnia, incessant screaming, and arching.
A diagnosis of autism was confirmed seven months later.

In its defence, the US government claimed the girl had a pre-existing mitochondrial disorder that was aggravated by the vaccine. However in his conclusion, Keisler said that “compensation is appropriate”.

Too much heat, not enough light

Both findings would appear to support the controversial findings of Dr Andrew Wakefield who, in 1998 published an article in the Lancet suggesting a link between the vaccine and autism. Official reaction to the paper was of such force and such outrage that the Lancet withdrew the paper on the grounds that it was scientifically unsound.

Wakefield has been in a battle for his professional reputation ever since and the question of the proposed link between the MMR vaccine and autism has been largely sidelined (though not solved) by bitter and very public professional rows that have done little to bring clarity to concerned parents.
Read more here.
See also: Survey shows unvaccinated children get sick less often

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Euro Heads Higher on Italian Yields, US Fiscal Cliff

By , November 29, 2012 8:22 am

Mixed euro billsOnce again, optimism is creeping back into the markets, and Forex traders are feeling a little better about what might be coming. Euro is heading higher as risk appetite returns on better news and improved expectations.

In the eurozone, even though there is a recession happening, there are hopes for recovery. The recent Greek debt deal is providing hope that other heavily indebted countries in the region will have a way out. The news has lowered Italian bond yields, providing hope that eurozone countries will maintain their ability to stay afloat.

Also helping the euro right now is the news that a deal might be reached in the US fiscal cliff drama. Once again, there is optimism that negotiations will work, and that the situation will be resolved without sending the United States into another major recession.

The euro is higher on these expectations, but there are still plenty of barriers to the success of the 17-nation currency region. Recession is still a factor, and the sovereign debt crisis is far from solved for the long term. For now, though, there is just enough optimism to give the euro a boost.

At 13:53 GMT EUR/USD is up to 1.2988 from the open at 1.2953. EUR/GBP is up to 0.8098 from the open at 0.8088. EUR/JPY is up to 106.5605 from the open at 106.3150.

If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the Euro, feel free to post them using the commentary form below.

Forex News

Italian PM: Europe’s security tied up with Israel’s

By , October 27, 2012 1:51 pm

Italian PM: Europe’s security tied up with Israel’s
By: HERB KEINON on: 27.10.2012 [08:07 ] (162 reads)


Italian PM: Europe’s security tied up with Israel’s

By HERB KEINON

10/25/2012 21:17

Mario Monti on diplomatic visit to Israel says “any threat to Israel is unacceptable,” in reference to Iran’s nuclear program.
Photo: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post
Italy views “Europe’s security in Israel’s security,” Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti said Thursday at a joint press conference in Jerusalem with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.

“We absolutely reject threats to regional stability and denial of the Holocaust,” Monti said in reference to Iran. “Any threat to Israel is unacceptable.”

Monti said that the sanctions against Iran were effective and undoubtedly had an influence in disrupting the Iranian economy, and were likely to bring about a change in Tehran’s nuclear program.

Monti also expressed his concern over the rocket fire on the South from Gaza, and expressed his solidarity with the residents there.

Netanyahu reiterated “the importance of our position that Iran be prevented from achieving nuclear weapons and that sanctions and international pressure must be applied to this end.”

Monti arrived in the country at the head of a six-minister delegation to take part in the third annual meeting between the local and Italian governments. Both premiers signed a joint statement noting progress in bilateral relations and pledging their determination to enhance and expand cooperation in the fields of security, economics, social issues and culture.

“Italy is one of Israel’s European trading partners, and today, thanks to the joint statement and the agreements that we signed, we have provided additional infrastructure for our bilateral relations,” Netanyahu said.

The two countries signed five bilateral agreements dealing with hi-tech, aid to developing countries, cooperation in the fields of culture, education and science, youth and students, and mutual recognition of driver’s license.

Israel also holds joint annual government-to-government meetings with Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic and Bulgaria.

http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=289341

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Italian, Ukrainian, French Firms Consider Investment in Babil

By , June 30, 2012 2:08 pm

Italian, Ukrainian, French Firms Consider Investment in Babil

Babil Investment Commission [Babylon Investment Commission] has announced that a group of Italian, Ukrainian and French companies are interested in investing in the province.

The deputy chairman of the Investment Commission, Abbas al-Tai, told Alsumaria News that the companies are considering construction and industrial projects, and that “the Commission has provided all the necessary facilities to companies in order to reach a memorandum of understanding“.

He also gave a presentation of the main investment opportunities in the province, including an industrial area at Hittin (50 km north of Babylon), the “island of Babylon” (16 km northwest of Hilla), and opportunities in the city of Hilla.

The Commission has so far  granted 45 investment licences.

(Source: Alsumaria News)

Iraq Business News

Italian PM: We Have a Week to Save the Eurozone

By , June 22, 2012 12:28 pm
Posted GMT 6-22-2012 18:36:35

Rome — Italy’s prime minister, Mario Monti, has warned of the apocalyptic consequences of failure at next week’s summit of EU leaders, outlining a potential death spiral that could threaten the political and economic future of Europe.

The Italian leader is to hold talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, the French president, François Hollande, and Spain’s prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, in the hope that the single currency’s big four countries can pave the way for a breakthrough at next week’s meeting.

Speaking to the Guardian and a group of leading European newspapers, Monti said that, without a successful outcome at the summit, “there would be progressively greater speculative attacks on individual countries, with harassment of the weaker countries”. The attacks would be focused not only on those who had failed to respect EU guidelines, but also on those like Italy, which he said had abided by the rules “but which carry with them from the past a high debt”.

Monti warned: “A large part of Europe would find itself having to continue to put up with very high interest rates that would then impact on the states and also indirectly on firms. This is the direct opposite of what is needed for economic growth.”

Outlining the result of a failure at the talks, Monti said that, faced with creeping economic paralysis, “the frustration of the public towards Europe would grow”, creating a vicious circle. “To emerge in good shape from this crisis of the eurozone and the European economy, ever more integration is needed,” said Monti. Yet, if the summit failed to resolve the problems quickly, “public opinion, but also that of the governments and parliament… will turn against that greater integration”.

Monti said he could see the beginnings of the process “even in the Italian parliament, which has traditionally been pro-European and no longer is”.

He made his remarks hours after his predecessor, Silvio Berlusconi, acknowledged that his party had bled support because of its backing for the Monti government’s unpopular budgetary measures and spoke openly for the first time of the electoral advantage it could derive from torpedoing Monti’s non-party cabinet of technocrats.

Monti signalled that the key eurozone leaders were working on a plan designed to halt the spread of debt contagion while satisfying Germany’s refusal to sanction financial irresponsibility. The plan, he said, was one of the “absolutely necessary” outcomes of next week’s summit.

The first outcome, he said, would be a clear sign of the eurozone’s willingness to integrate further “in such a way that Europeans know where they’re going… [and] the markets are convinced that, having given birth to the euro, the will [of the member states] to make it indissoluble and irrevocable is there and will be strengthened by other steps towards integration”.

He warned: “There may not be — indeed, there will not be — a fully-fledged, detailed blueprint, but there will some strong elements and a short road — I hope short, a few months — to get from there to the overall project.”

Other minimum requirements were “a fuller banking union, with advances in terms of integrated, and if possible unified, supervision”; “a European deposit guarantee” system; and the plan that will be on the table on Friday for “new market-friendly policy mechanisms” to help out countries under attack — provided they had complied with EU demands for fiscal discipline.

On Thursday figures indicating that the eurozone is slipping into recession heightened fears that Italy will follow Spain in asking Brussels for rescue funds. Only a strong performance from Germany stopped the currency union from contracting in the first quarter. But separate data showed the German private sector suffered a severe downturn in May, made worse by a slump in manufacturing.

The German services sector continued to expand, but this solitary piece of good news is unlikely to keep the eurozone from recession in the second quarter, especially after both manufacturing and services contracted in France.

Elsewhere, the US suffered a slowdown in growth across the manufacturing sector and China registered its eighth consecutive contraction in production.

Without recourse to strongly growing export markets, Italy can expect to see its growth hit for another year, analysts said.

Monti said the proposed new mechanism would kick in “when there is a recognition by the European authorities of respect for the rules on public finance and structural reforms”. Making intervention conditional on good behaviour could offer a way of providing relief for countries like Italy and Spain, while meeting German demands for fiscal discipline.

Monti avoided giving details but said he was “very favourable” to the purchase of the bonds of countries under attack. The present system, of assistance to the banking sector by way of the state, led to an increase in public debt that raised the yields — and cut the value — of government bonds, which in turn weakened the finances of the banks, creating “a disagreeable spiral… That is why measures to de-couple this are being studied”, he said.

By John Hooper
www.guardian.co.uk

Assyrian International News Agency

16 Italian Effers for Iraq

By , June 18, 2012 10:48 pm

16 Italian Effers for Iraq

Italian loader crane manufacturer Effer has won an order to supply 16 Effer model 440 4S cranes to Iraq’s Ministry of Transport.

The presentation of the first units took place at Effer’s plant in Minerbio, Italy.

The units were installed on Iveco trucks ordered by the Machine Technology Trading Company (MTT), headquartered in Baghdad.

MTT is one of the main suppliers of trucks, special vehicles and construction equipment.

(Source: Effer)

passed the inspection by engineers of the

Iraq Business News