industryterm:bank

  • Le lobby des rentiers : au Liban, 500 familles contrôlent 60 milliards de dollars (la moitié des dépôts bancaires) :
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/lebanon-rentier-lobby-not-fantasy-mohammad-zbeeb

    It is worth noting again that half of the accumulated bank deposits in Lebanon are concentrated in 0.8 percent of all bank accounts. This means that less than 500 families control over $60 billion in the country’s banks. Add to that their assets as well as their deposits abroad, and you can imagine the kind of wealth the lobby posses.

  • Irish debt deal means decades of austerity to cover bank bailout - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/02/13/irel-f13.html

    Irish debt deal means decades of austerity to cover bank bailout
    By Jordan Shilton
    13 February 2013

    Ireland’s Fine Gael-Labour coalition announced an agreement with the European Central Bank (ECB) last week, ostensibly designed to remove the “promissory note” payments to bail out the failed Anglo Irish Bank.

    In reality, the debt reorganisation means that the Irish population will take on responsibility for paying an even greater proportion of bank debt, which will be extracted through decades of austerity.

    #irlande #crise-bancaire
    The debt restructuring agreement exchanged the yearly payment of €3.1 billion (US$4.2 billion) of “promissory notes” for long-term government bonds. The government had been due to make these payments over the next 10 years to the Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (IBRC)—the entity charged with managing the assets of the old Anglo Irish Bank.

  • UPDATE 2-EU court rules for second time against Iran bank sanctions | Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/02/06/eu-iran-sanctions-

    In its ruling on Tuesday, the EU’s General Court said the EU had failed to provide sufficient evidence that Bank Saderat was involved in Iran’s nuclear programme when the bloc targeted it with sanctions in July 2010.

    Les juges mettent en cause les sanctions européennes contre une banque en Irah

    #nucléaire

  • Message des #banques : “si on prend les mesures nécessaires pour s’opposer au désastre climatique, notre valeur boursière risque de s’effondrer”

    Climate action could halve energy firms’ worth - bank — The Daily Climate
    http://wwwp.dailyclimate.org/tdc-newsroom/2013/02/energy-reserve-economics

    Oil and gas multinationals could lose up to 60 percent of their market value if the world cuts its carbon emissions to limit climate change, according to the world’s second-largest bank.
    The study, Oil and Carbon Revisited: Value At Risk From ’Unburnable’ Reserves, is published by HSBC Global Research.

    #finance #climat

    This is the first time the financial sector has been warned by one of its own that shares could plummet if the necessary action is taken to prevent disaster.

  • Danish Bank Uses Occupy Imagery in Advertising Campaign: New Normal | Occupy Washington, DC

    For those who have walked the streets of CPH recently, it was impossible to ignore. Danske Bank started a new campaign to brand itself through posters and banners, associating images of protests by occupy movements, paraplegics runners, women in power in a men’s world and endless lines of enslaved workers to the danske bank logo and to the slogan “the new normal”.

    Apparently, the mounting global wave of challenge against the established powers devoted to the exploitation of humans and environments, can become an advertising for the very same actors who collaborate in this exploitation, banks. This urges questions about the power of the capitalist pseudo-cultural machine to reverse and to recycle anti-systemic movements of ideas into innocuous advertising material. The real “normalization of dissent”, indeed.

    Salvatore Paolo De Rosa
    Ph.D Human Geography Department at Lund University
    Sweden" <salparadiso03@YAHOO.IT>

    Ad Campaign Provokes Angry Response of Bank Hypocrisy

    http://october2011.org/blogs/kevin-zeese/danish-bank-uses-occupy-imagery-advertising-campaign-new-normal
    By Kevin Zeese - Posted on 26 November 2012

    Den Danske Bank has a new campaign out where they can slap their label “The new normal” on practically any controversial staged news image shot by Peter Funch. The campaign is created by the ad agency named Mensch. The entire campaign is so hypocritical it’s making Danes blood boil and people are raging everywhere from forums to newspapers about it.

    In newspaper Politiken the headline reads: Hey bankers, do you think we’ve forgotten that you are the über-bad guys?, Danish Kommunikationsforum even goes so far to dig up images that compare shots from the Occupy movement to Den Danske Bank ad, to a Benetton campaign. Tobias Lau at Børsen dubs the campaign “the worst piece of communication of 2012”, and the Danish arm of Occupy even bothered to reply with a spoof full of typos. “Nice pictures and music in the video of yours, but must you misuse a humanitarian movement?” it asks.

    This is from our group in CPH, crisis mirror:

    “New Normal”? On bankers’ communication attempts to normalize misery | CrisisMirror

    http://www.crisismirror.info/political-analyses/new-normal-assimilating-the-anticapitalist-imagery-by-danske-bank

    “New Normal”? On bankers’ communication attempts to normalize misery

    The latest Danske Bank’s communication strategy is full of images of unrest; the Occupy movement, protestors with stones and Greek flags against the police, images of slave workers in the world’s production lines, pictures of despaired citizens from across the globe. Danske Bank, Denmark’s biggest bank institution surfaces behind these images with the slogan ‘new Normal’. What does it mean? Perhaps the normalization of the times’ ambiguity is the campaign’s target, avoiding references to the causes of global unrest, and bypassing critical explanations of the growing citizens’ discontent, related to systemic injustices caused by financial and industrial strategies to exploit people and the natural environment, or the anti-social policies of austerity that the neoliberal sharks pursue with a fundamentalist zeal in Europe and elsewhere, as ‘essential’ (‘essential for what’, we need to remember to constantly ask ourselves and others).

    And this is some nice counter-guerrilla-marketing:

    http://newnormalnewstandards.tumblr.com

    New Normal New Standards

  • Barclays’ ‘A-MAIZING returns’ — New Internationalist
    http://www.newint.org/blog/2012/11/05/barclays-food-speculation-the-revolution-will-be-televised

    ‘We make money from inflation, stagnation, and even starvation,’ says the brash young banker outside a branch of Barclays bank in the City of London.

    ‘Yes,’ agrees the Barclays branch worker, although she seems unsure about the posters he’s sticking up in the window. ‘Have THEIR cake and eat it,’ reads one. The other depicts a golden sheaf of maize and advertises ‘A-MAIZING returns’.

    The banker stops passers-by, extolling the benefits of brand-new food investment products. The investments could force people to go hungry, but, the banker and his colleagues assure them, ‘those people are in a place you’re never going to go to.’

    The banker is an actor, and the unsuspecting members of the public are suitably outraged by the idea of making money at the expense of starving people. But the World Development Movement’s new video, made with the pranksters from the BBC TV show The Revolution Will Be Televised, parodies the real-life impact Barclays has on food prices and hunger.

    un genre de yes men quoi via @fil

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a7Np3XW6ezs&feature=player_embedded

  • Carlos - Olivier Assayas (2010)
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2010/oct/21/carlos-film-review

    the drama itself, despite its multinational setting, is all intimate, domestic, steamy, almost soapy. It really does rattle along, and Ramírez is a very convincing Carlos: on the run like a bank robber, an ideologue with no ideas, left marooned when the tides of history turn against him.

    je crois que j’ai vu la version 2h45 de ce #film qui existe aussi en mini-série TV et en film long de 5h (?) #terrorisme

  • Jerusalem patriarchate threatens to close Holy Sepulchre
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/jerusalem-patriarchate-threatens-close-holy-sepulchre

    Jerusalem’s Greek Orthodox patriarch Theophilis III has threatened to close the Church of the Holy Sepulchre to protest Israel’s freezing of the patriarchate’s bank accounts.

    The patriarchate has owed the city’s municipality $2.3 million shekels since it sidestepped a centuries’ old payment exemption on places of worship and started billing the church for water.

    The patriarchate is now unable to pay priests’ wages, Archbishop Atallah Hanna told Al-Mayadeen, who enumerated several Israeli violations of the patriarchate’s rights, including building the Knesset on church property. He said the church’s struggle against Jerusalem municipality was part and parcel of the Palestinian struggle against Israeli dispossession.

    The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is the most revered site in Christianity because it is said to be the site of Christ’s crucifixion.

  • CONTRA COSTA COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT JUDGE JUDY JOHNSON ACCUSED OF EMBEZZLEMENT

    A former employee of the State Bar of California — who California Governor Jerry Brown appointed to the Contra Costa County Superior Court bench under questionable circumstances involving his cousin, former California Public Utility Commissioner Geoffrey Brown — is accused in federal court of committing myriad financial crimes and acts of fraud.

    Documents filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia reveal that Judy Johnson of Rodeo allegedly engaged in predicate acts of racketeering through and by means of money laundering, mail and bank fraud, as well as conversion of funds.

    Johnson, female, black, is no stranger to financial schemes. For the past 8 years, she has been quietly serving as the president of an entity with a misleading name (California Consumer Protection Foundation AKA “CCPF”). This entity absorbed close to $30 million in class action cy pres awards, as well as fines and settlements imposed by the California Public Utilities Commission on utility companies. CCPF forwarded those funds to mostly questionable ACORN-like entities in South Los Angeles or to an entity headed by Michael Shames known as UCAN — presently under federal grand jury investigation in San Diego.

    It appears that Johnson misused her position with the State Bar of California as “clout” to obtain cy pres awards from the settlement of class actions prosecuted and defended by various law firms in courts and before the CPUC. In addition, while never prosecuted for the scheme, some have speculated that Johnson and cohorts Robert Hawley (whom Johnson labeled the “Wizard of OZ”) and Starr Babcock were “in” on a financial scheme perpetrated by former State Bar employee Sharon Pearl, who was lightly prosecuted by then-attorney general Jerry Brown, cousin of Geoffrey Brown.

    The lawsuit, filed as a civil-racketeering action by Marina Del Rey-based community activist Daniel Dydzak, also names as a defendants Starr Babcock and Robert Hawley.

    According to confidential sources familiar with the situation, Dydzak filed the suit in Washington DC, because he is extremely concerned that given the caliber of the defendants and the fact that they are in control of the justice system in California, they will seek to injure him in various ways, including in seeking to somehow derail the suit.

    According to these sources, Tom Layton, investigator from the State Bar of California who is well connected with Los Angeles Sheriff Lee Baca, in the past paid a visit to Dydzak’s neighborhood, and sought to convince his neighbors to falsely accuse Dydzak of various acts of misconduct, including providing improper and unlawful legal counsel.

  • Greece arrests journalist over ’Lagarde List’ banks leak
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-20116548

    A Greek journalist has been arrested after publishing a list of about 2,000 Greeks who hold accounts with the HSBC bank in Switzerland.

    Kostas Vaxevanis has been charged with breach of privacy.

    Mr Vaxevanis says the list he published is the same one that was given by the then French finance minister Christine Lagarde to her Greek counterpart.

    Some of those named, said to include many prominent Greeks, are suspected of using the accounts for tax evasion.

    The list was originally leaked by an HSBC employee and then handed over by Ms Lagarde to Greek authorities two years ago, according the the AFP news agency.

    Since then, successive Greek governments have been accused of trying to cover it up.

    “Instead of arresting the tax evaders and the ministers who had the list in their hands, they’re trying to arrest the truth and freedom of the press,” Mr Vaxevanis said.

    #évasion_fiscale #répression #Grèce #crise #journalisme

  • LOS ANGELES COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT JUDGE HOLLY FUJIE ACCUSED OF MISAPPROPRIATION OF FUNDS, MONEY LAUNDERING

    A former partner of Los Angeles-based Buchalter Nemer — who California Governor Jerry Brown appointed to the Los Angeles County Superior Court bench under questionable circumstances involving his cousin, former California Public Utility Commissioner Geoff Brown — is accused in federal court of committing myriad financial crimes and acts of fraud.

    Documents filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia reveal that Holly Fujie of Los Angeles allegedly engaged in predicate acts of racketeering through and by means of money laundering, mail and bank fraud, as well as conversion of funds.

    The lawsuit, filed as a civil-racketeering action by Marina Del Rey-based community activist Daniel Dydzak, also names as a defendant Bet Tzedek Legal Services of Los Angeles and Eric George — the son of the controversial former chief justice of California, Ronald George.

    Both Holly Fujie and Eric George were directors of Bet Tzedek, an entity which obtained millions of dollars from the various trusts funds maintained and operated by the State Bar of California, as well as funds from the California Bar Foundation, where Holly Fujie presently serves as the vice-president.

    Both the State Bar of California and the California Bar Foundation are under the direct control of the California Supreme Court.

    The various legal trust funds maintained by the State Bar of California are overseen by the Legal Services Trust Fund Commission where, coincidently, Holly Fujie also served as director.

    Heading the commission is David Lash of O’Melveny & Myers, another lawyer who is a director of Bet Tzedek, and Bonnie Rubin of 1st Century Bank — a bank owned by former president of the State Bar of California Alan Rothenberg. Coincidently, Eric George is part owner of 1st Century Bank.

    Dydzak alleges in his lawsuits that part of the millions originated from the State Bar of California and its foundation headed to Bet Tzedek were embezzled by the various actors and were siphoned to off shore bank accounts.

    Bet Tzedek is headed by CEO Sandor “Sandy” Samuels — former Chief Trial Counsel at embattled Countywide Financial Services — who according to Dydzak was appointed President and CEO of Bet Tzedek largely due to his working knowledge of how to operate an enterprise which engages in myriad financial crimes.

    According to confidential sources familiar with the situation, Dydzak filed the suit in Washington DC, because he is extremely concerned that given the caliber of the defendants and the fact that they are in control of the justice system in California, they will seek to injure him in various ways, including in seeking to somehow derail the suit.

    According to these sources, Tom Layton, investigator from the State Bar of California who is well connected with Los Angeles Sheriff Lee Baca, in the past paid a visit to Dydzak’s neighborhood, and sought to convince his neighbors to falsely accuse Dydzak of various acts of misconduct, including providing improper and unlawful legal counsel.

    Key words:
    California Governor Jerry Brown, Holly Fujie, Buchalter Nemer, California Public Utility Commission, Geoff Brown, Los Angeles County Superior Court, Bet Tzedek Legal Services, Eric George, Ronald George, State Bar of California, California Bar Foundation, California Supreme Court, Legal Services Trust Fund Commission, David Lash, O’Melveny & Myers, 1st Century Bank , Alan Rothenberg, Tom Layton

  • World economy slides deeper into slump
    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/oct2012/econ-o02.shtml

    By Andre Damon
    2 October 2012

    A string of negative reports coinciding with the start of the fourth quarter has revealed a significant deterioration in the global economy, with world trade slowing, manufacturing contracting, and the number of unemployed workers in the euro zone hitting a record high.

    Despite these disastrous figures, stock prices in Europe and the United States rose on Monday, fueled by new central bank injections of cash into the global financial system, an intensification of austerity measures against the working class and expectations of new bank bailouts.

    #economie #mondialisation #globalisation #crise

  • Dans les banques libanaises : 0,8% des comptes détiennent 50% du montant total des dépôts ; et 70% des comptes représentent moins de 2,6% du montant total des dépôts (l’article est par ailleurs consacré au projet de budget du gouvernement) :
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/lebanon-budgeting-free-falling-economy

    But the budget does not make the necessary distinction between large and small depositors. Fifty percent of deposits are currently held in 0.8 percent of bank accounts, while 70 percent of accounts hold less than 2.6 percent of deposits.

    • Sinon, pour la gestion politicienne du budget :

      Passing the 2012 and 2013 budget bills are inextricably linked to finalizing the accounts for the period between 2005 and 2011. Clearly, there is no way to resolve this before the 2013 elections. And so, the budget becomes just another political tool in the power struggle over control of the state, rather than a means for collecting and distributing revenue to the Lebanese people.

  • UK bank’s actions under scrutiny in US
    http://www.aljazeera.com//news/americas/2012/08/201286175518978631.html

    A banking regulator in New York state has said that a rogue Standard Chartered Plc banking unit violated US anti-money laundering laws by scheming with Iran to hide more than $250bn of transactions, and may lose its licence to operate in the US state.

    […]

    Lawsky’s order quotes a senior Standard Chartered official in London who, upon being advised by a North American colleague that its Iran dealings could cause “catastrophic reputational damage”, reportedly replied: "You f---ing Americans. Who are you to tell us, the rest of the world, that we’re not going to deal with Iranians."

  • German Left Party Proposes New Way to Save the Euro - SPIEGEL ONLINE
    http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/german-left-party-proposes-new-way-to-save-the-euro-a-846788.html

    Out of Left Field A New Idea to Save the Common Currency

    By Christian Rickens
    Is there a way out of the euro crisis?Zoom
    dapd

    Is there a way out of the euro crisis?

    Germany’s Left Party is not often associated with neo-liberalism. But a new proposal from a senior party member could provide a way out of the cycle of bailouts and bank aid. Why not just reboot the market economy and then cushion the fall?
    Info

    If there is one thing that has seemed to characterize the euro crisis, it is the lack of alternatives. The common currency bailout fund, for example, had to be vastly enlarged to prevent financial markets from plunging the common currency zone into chaos. Spain had to be given billions in aid to prevent its banks from collapsing and making the situation even worse. The list of instances in which European leaders have made moves they’ve called mandatory is long.

    Such tunnel vision, however, hasn’t exactly led to a swift end to the economic woes sweeping across the Continent. Increasing numbers of economists and politicians are predicting that Greece will soon collapse into uncontrolled bankruptcy — exactly the scenario that Europe has been struggling to avoid for the last two years. The €100 billion Europe has pledged to Spanish banks has failed to stop rising interest rates on the country’s sovereign bonds. And both Madrid and Rome may ultimately have to apply for a full bailout, which would stretch the euro backstop funds to their limits. It seems time to start seriously considering whether there might be another way.

    Two concepts are already out there, of course. There is the arch-liberal idea that, simply put, calls for allowing them all — both the troubled banks and the deeply indebted countries — to go broke. The resulting recession, of course, would be painful. But it is the necessary catharsis, proponents of this idea say, following past spending excesses.

    Then there is the left-wing strategy, which calls for the immediate introduction of communitized European debt in the form of euro bonds in addition to a Continent-wide banking union. German taxpayers would become the primary backers of European debt, and a euro-zone-wide deposit guarantee would help ensure the stability of banks in the bloc. Other ideas tend to be a mixture of these two approaches.

    Surprisingly Neo-Liberal

    Astoundingly, however, there really is a novel approach out there — on the far left of the German political spectrum, no less. Its author, Sahra Wagenknecht, is the deputy floor leader for the Left Party in the Bundestag, Germany’s parliament. Wagenknecht, now 43, joined the East German communist party SED in 1989 just a few months before the fall of the Berlin Wall. Until 2010, she was the most prominent member of the Communist Platform, the Marxist wing of the Left Party.

    It is perhaps because of this somewhat spotty biography that her concept for solving the euro crisis has received so little attention. And, yet, it is an approach that can’t be dismissed out of hand. Even more surprising, at its core, it is a surprisingly neo-liberal proposal.

    First and foremost, Wagenknecht calls for a radical debt haircut. “The EU member states should resolve that all sovereign debt above a certain level will not be paid back,” she writes. Wagenknecht proposes using 60 percent of a country’s annual gross domestic product as the cutoff — meaning that even Germany, with its debt load worth some 80 percent of GDP, would have to partially default.

    Such a euro-zone-wide partial default, of course, would result in the bankruptcies of several European banks and insurance companies due to the amount of European sovereign bonds they carry on their balance sheets. “The financial industry has seriously underestimated the risks associated with sovereign bonds,” Wagenknecht writes. Banks and insurance companies, she notes, provided euro-zone member states with fresh capital to the extent that their debt loads have now become unmanageable. Her plan, she adds, merely reflects that “risk and liability are linked in a market economy.”

    It is a sentence that could just as well have come from the party platform of the business-friendly Free Democrats on the center-right of the political spectrum. Indeed, the same could be said for large parts of Wagenknecht’s approach to the euro crisis. But the Left Party politician has also included measures that would reduce the economic effects of a banking crash.

    A Way Around the Problem

    Following a “technical moment of insolvency,” her plan calls for the state to inject fresh capital into the banks so that they can continue serving those sectors that are required for the economy to function. In other words, they would manage customer accounts and extend loans to companies in the real economy, thereby fending off a recession. Much of the investment banking sector, on the other hand, would be liquidated as part of the insolvency proceedings.

    The state would also guarantee up to €1 million ($1.2 million) per person in savings and life insurance value. “Anything beyond that would be defaulted as part of the insolvency,” Wagenknecht writes.

    Under her plan, of course, it would not only be banks that became insolvent, but also countries. And when that happens, those countries are generally shut out from international financial markets for many years. Wagenknecht, however, believes she has found a way around that problem. Euro-zone states would be able to receive a certain amount of financing directly from the European Central Bank (ECB), but only up to a certain maximum — Wagenknecht suggests capping it at 4 percent of GDP annually.

    Under her plan, the ECB would remain independent and continue to focus on controlling inflation and maintaining full control over the money supply in the euro-zone. However, most of the fresh money the bank pumped into the euro zone would no longer flow into the banks but, rather, it would directly benefit national budgets. “At the moment, the ECB is pouring money into the banks in the hope that they will invest a small percentage of it in sovereign bonds,” she writes. “It would be much more efficient to give this small percentage directly to the states.”

    Finally, she envisions having banks extend loans almost exclusively on the strength of the deposits of their customers.

    A Number of Positives

    To be sure, Wagenknecht’s model contains myriad inconsistencies and uncertainties. Her 60-percent cutoff for defaulting on sovereign debt is certainly much too low since it would be difficult to argue that those currently purchasing German sovereign bonds are acting foolishly. Furthermore, you don’t have to be a pessimist to point out that governments have hardly proven themselves adequate bank managers in the past, and nationalizing what is left over after European banks go bust would likely end in a fiasco.

    The list goes on. For example, no one can say how long the ECB would remain independent if it was providing liquidity to euro-zone member states. The assumption that the “good” parts of the banking business could be cleanly separated from the investment banking sector is also questionable.

    Still, there are a number of positives to Wagenknecht’s approach. Her model would finally let the air out of Europe’s gigantic debt bubble — one that has hung over the global economy for almost a decade now. Furthermore, the application of strict market economy principles to the banking crisis could cure them of their addiction to high-stakes gambling. After all, the supposedly “mandatory” steps that have characterized the euro zone’s response to the crisis thus far have done nothing but reward banks for their incredibly risky business models.

  • Grisbi, Gnucash, Homebank... I tried all three and found that none can automate transaction categorization at bank statement import. Am I the only one who expected it, using at least substring matching ? Spending analysis is too tedious when I have to manually assign a category for each transaction.

  • Central bank has been selling daily more than 5 billions dollars to the currency exchange companies to be distributed to the merchants, since wednesday.

    الابن السوري ‏@syrian_son

    يقوم البنك المركزي ببيع اكثر من 5 مليون دولار يوميا لشركات الصرافة لتوزيعها على التجار منذ يوم الاربعاء ..... سوريا ‎‪#syria‬‏ ‎@syria_omar‏

  • Facebook IPO engulfed by insider trading scandal
    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/may2012/face-m24.shtml

    Facebook IPO engulfed by insider trading scandal
    By Barry Grey
    24 May 2012

    Multiple investigations and lawsuits have been announced following reports of deceptive practices and insider trading in connection with last Friday’s $16 billion initial public offering of Facebook stock.

    On Tuesday, Reuters reported that the social networking company and its bank underwriters downgraded their forecasts for the company’s earnings shortly before they increased the number of shares and raised the offering price in advance of the IPO. Neither Facebook nor the banks publicly announced their downgrades. The major banks involved are Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Bank of America.

  • Stephen King: Tax Me, for F@%&’s Sake! (The Daily Beast)
    http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/04/30/stephen-king-tax-me-for-f-s-sake.html

    And hey, why don’t we get real about this? Most rich folks paying 28 percent taxes do not give out another 28 percent of their income to charity. Most rich folks like to keep their dough. They don’t strip their bank accounts and investment portfolios. They keep them and then pass them on to their children, their children’s children. And what they do give away is—like the monies my wife and I donate—totally at their own discretion. That’s the rich-guy philosophy in a nutshell: don’t tell us how to use our money; we’ll tell you. (...) Source: The Daily Beast

  • http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7058/6958505509_4c1af41b39_b.jpg

    Back in 1994 I was a student in the campus east of the city. One saturday morning I set off to the city center to go to the bank and make a bit of shopping. I took the bus which left me somewhere on the quai Chateaubriand and started walking towards the old center of town where my bank had its outlet. As I walked down rue Saint Georges, I had a feeling something wasn’t right, people had strange faces. At the end of the street, where it meets the place du Palais, I saw people massed together, looking up to the north, with terribly disturbed expressions. I couldn’t see what they were looking at, so I didn’t understand, but the emotion was real, almost palpable. Then I saw what they were so sad. It was a shock. The old parliament house had burned down. All was lef were the white walls, the magnificent roof had been devastated overnight by the flames. It was there, like an open wound, still smoking. I felt terribly sad. This building did not relate to me particularly before, I had not even visited it. But now that it had gone, I felt so sorry, almost betrayed. Like everyone else around, I could not stop watching the last fumes flow up from the remains of our parliament. The firemen were busy around, clearing up the area, packing their gear. They looked as if they were hangover, I could feel how sorry they were too. For the remaining of my time in the city, the building became an iron-cladded construction site, all square, white and cold. Then one day, as I turned round the corner of rue Saint Georges, there it was again, in its glory, the parliament, our parliament. It looked very new and shiny, for sure, but it was back. I’ve not stopped photographing it since. You never know.

  • Mitt Romney has millions of dollars saved in offshore Cayman Islands tax shelters | Mail Online

    Holds a reported $33 million in the Caribbean British territory’s accounts
    Offshore banking could be one reason Romney is withholding his tax returns
    Newt Gingrich reported 31 percent tax on his income — in line with the top tax bracket

    Mitt Romney, who recently revealed he pays close to 15 percent tax on his income, has untold millions of dollars of his massive fortune saved in offshore tax shelters in the Cayman Islands, according to reports.

    The Republican presidential front runner has been taking fire from tax groups and his opponents after he admitted he pays a much lower federal tax rate than most Americans.

    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2088608/Mitt-Romney-millions-dollars-saved-offshore-Cayman-Islands-tax-shelters