Shipping on the Yangtze River will be disrupted for more than three weeks starting Friday [Feb. 20], as the upstream section of the Three Gorges shiplock is closed for inspection, China News Service (Zhongguo xinwen she) reports.
Shipping on the Yangtze River will be disrupted for more than three weeks starting Friday [Feb. 20], as the upstream section of the Three Gorges shiplock is closed for inspection, China News Service (Zhongguo xinwen she) reports.
(February 17, 2004) Describing the Liberals as "corrupt" has caused several days of hand-wringing and backroom debate among senators in the Upper Chamber, but the term will be front and centre for a full day of debate today in the House of Commons.
(February 17, 2004) Canadian officials at international summits are fond of lecturing their counterparts from poorer countries on the debilitating effects of corruption. Now opposition politicians say Canada has produced a corruption scandal to call its own.
(February 16, 2004) What do The Washington Times and the AfricaFocus Bulletin have in common? In editorial policy, they are miles apart. Yet, both published articles during this Black History Month likely to kindle heated discussion about a controversial but curious link between reparations for American descendants of African slaves and cancellation of African debt.
(February 16, 2004) The Iraqi daily newspaper "Al-Mada" published a sensational expose on 25 January of companies, organizations, and individuals whom it alleges were bribed with hundreds of millions of barrels of oil by former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein in return for their political support and as payment for items prohibited under the interwar (1991-2003) embargo on Iraq. Headlined "Presidents, Journalists, and Political Parties Received Millions of Oil Barrels From Saddam," the article listed the names of 270 alleged recipients.
(February 13, 2004) The Swiss government has spoken out against an American court deciding a class action lawsuit seeking reparations for apartheid from dozens of international companies.
(February 13, 2004) The new Baghdad office will be part of a grander strategy to increase Ernst & Young’s Middle East presence in a big way.
(February 12, 2004) If the stale Liberal party can emerge from this mess with a fresh majority mandate this spring, Canada is indeed a nation with too many cheques and not enough balances.
(February 12, 2004) The descendants of African American slaves are pressing on with what is being called an historic class-action lawsuit claiming 19 corporations profited from the forced labour of their ancestors.
(February 12, 2004) The Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) in Iraq has established a Commission on Public Integrity, which will enforce anticorruption laws and set public-service standards.
(February 12, 2004) The problems that beset the Sanmenxia dam ‘will undoubtedly afflict the Three Gorges,’ a writer concludes in this excerpt from Dai Qing’s 1998 book, The River Dragon Has Come!
(February 11, 2004) Algeria is investigating alleged corruption linked to Iraq’s oil-for-food programme, state radio said, adding weight to Iraqi efforts to get to the bottom of crude dealing during Saddam Hussein’s rule.
(February 10, 2004) Mr. Baker said one of his main challenges in the upcoming negotiations will be "in reconciling the numbers and in dealing with differences of opinion between Iraq and some creditor countries as to whether some loans were really grants.
(February 10, 2004) An American court should not decide a class action law suit seeking reparations for apartheid from international companies, the Swiss government said on Tuesday.
(February 9, 2004) Iraq’s largest bank, state-owned Al-Rafideen, plans to lay off a third of its staff and overhaul a debt-laden balance sheet to prepare for privatisation, possibly next year, the bank’s chairman said.