Tag: InternationalNews

  • French to Make 1 bn Euro Tax Claim Against Google

    French to Make 1 bn Euro Tax Claim Against Google

    {{French authorities have decided to make a tax claim of 1 billion euros against Google following a probe into the tax strategies by the US Internet giant, Le Point magazine reported Tuesday.}}

    A Google spokesman in France declined to comment on the report, saying the company does not comment on rumours.

    The French finance ministry also declined to comment, citing tax confidentiality.

    France is one of a growing number of cash-strapped nations to pursue more aggressively what they see as abuse of tax and accounting rules that allows some multinational companies to pay less tax.

    French tax inspectors searched Google’s Paris offices in June 2011 as it opened a probe into how the company implements transfer pricing between its different units, a strategy many multinationals use to shift revenue and tax liability between countries.

    Google has reduced the amount of tax it pays in France by funnelling most of its revenue through a Dutch-registered intermediary and then to a Bermuda-registered holding, Google Ireland Limited, before reporting it in low-tax Ireland.

    According to court documents obtained by media, Google France reported 192.9 million euros of revenue in 2012, and paid 6.5 million euros in tax on the 8.3 million euros of net profit it earned.

    Industry analysts estimate that Google generated between 1.25 and 1.4 billion euros in revenue in France in 2011, mainly from Internet advertising.

    Last year the Group of 20 advanced and developing nations endorsed an action plan to clamp down on tax avoidance which its creators say could lead to the biggest change in the global tax system since the 1920s.

    {AFP}

  • Justin Bieber Trial Set for March

    Justin Bieber Trial Set for March

    {{A trial date has been set for Justin Bieber after his recent arrest on charges of driving under the influence.}}

    A Miami-Dade County judge set the date for 3 March. The Canadian singer’s lawyers have already filed a written plea of not guilty.

    He is also charged with resisting arrest and driving with an invalid licence.

    Bieber, 19, was arrested on 23 January after police said he was racing his sports car on a Miami Beach street.

    The singer is currently on bail, set at $2,500 (£1,500).

    Prosecutors will formally file charges at an arraignment on 14 February.

    R&B singer Khalil Sharieff, the driver of the car Bieber was allegedly racing against, was also arrested after being reportedly found to be under the influence of alcohol and drugs.

    A week after the alleged road racing incident, the singer was charged with assaulting a limousine driver in Toronto in December.

    A lawyer for the singer said his client was innocent of that charge.

    The teen star has had several run-ins with police over the past year.

    Earlier in January, police in California searched Bieber’s home after he allegedly threw eggs at his neighbour’s house.

    The outcome of that search remains unclear, though one of the singer’s associates was arrested amid the search and charged with drug possession.

    In a separate incident in November, Brazilian police charged the star with illegally spraying graffiti in Rio de Janeiro.

    {wirestory}

  • Colombia Army Dismissal Over Spying

    Colombia Army Dismissal Over Spying

    {{Colombia’s President Juan Manuel Santos has dismissed the army’s intelligence head over allegations of spying on government officials negotiating with Farc rebels at peace talks in Cuba.}}

    Gen Mauricio Ricardo Zuniga and another officer were relieved of their duties while a full investigation takes place.

    An elite military group was set up to intercept the officials’ mobile phone calls, the magazine Semana reported.

    Mr Santos called the alleged interference “totally unacceptable”.

    The director of the army’s technical intelligence centre, Gen Oscar Zuluaga, was also dismissed.

    The sacking of both army officers was announced on Tuesday by the defence minister, Juan Carlos Pinzon, after a meeting with the Colombian chief prosecutor, Eduardo Montealegre.

    {wirestory}

  • North & South Korea Agree to Family Reunions

    North & South Korea Agree to Family Reunions

    {{North and South Korea have agreed to hold a reunion later this month for families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War.}}

    Officials from both sides meeting in the border truce village of Panmunjom, decided on Wednesday the reunion would be held on February 20-25 at the North’s Mount Kumgang resort, the South’s Unification Ministry said.

    The agreement marks a small sign of progress between the two rivals who, in recent years, have struggled to cooperate on even the most basic trust-building measures.

    But both sides have been here before.

    Similar talks between the North and South Korean Red Cross in August last year concluded with an agreement to hold a reunion the following month for several hundred divided family members.

    With the selection process completed and the chosen relatives preparing to gather at the North’s Mount Kumgang resort, Pyongyang cancelled the event just four days before its scheduled start, citing “hostility” from the South.

    There are widespread concerns that the families could end up being disappointed again this time around.

    {aljazeera}

  • China Destroys 6.1 tons of Ivory

    China Destroys 6.1 tons of Ivory

    {{In a surprise move the Government of China on Monday destroyed 6.1 tons of ivory and other wildlife products confiscated from illegal trade at a public ceremony witnessed by Kenyan officials.}}

    Delegations from nine other countries also attended the event in the city of Dongguan, near Guangzhou. They include those from the U.S., UK, India, Gabon and Tanzania. China’s action follows a similar ivory crush in the U.S. on November 15, 2013.

    A statement from the anti-poaching and anti-trafficking organisation, Elephant Action League (EAL) termed the action: “An important symbolic gesture that acknowledges the fact that the illegal ivory, being the product of illicit and criminal activities, sometimes even linked to terrorist groups, must be destroyed, as we do for other illicit goods like narcotics. It’s a moral obligation to destroy the seized ivory, all over the world, not just in China.”

    EAL however, said China’s ivory destruction is less relevant owing to the fact that there is a domestic legal ivory market that is fuelling both elephant poaching and the illegal ivory trade. “Tens of tons of illegal ivory keep entering China every year and are laundered into the legal market.

    This is the single most important factor behind the current elephant poaching crisis.” Said the statement. The most crucial and urgent thing to do is to crack down on the illegal traffic inside China for good.

    “Chinese authorities must admit that the current monitoring system is not working and it even facilitates the laundering of the illegal ivory. The current system is a heaven for criminals, the mafia and illegal traders”, Elephant Action League’s Executive Director Mr Andrea Crosta said. Mr Crosta also said the quantity of ivory destroyed is just a tiny fraction of China’s stockpile of illegal ivory.

    “We think that this ceremony is just a public relation exercise to ease the pressure from the international community”, he said. Over 35,000 elephants are killed every year in Africa for their ivory. In many African countries elephants are now extinct or much endangered.

    {standard}

  • Corruption Costs EU Economy £99bn Annualy

    Corruption Costs EU Economy £99bn Annualy

    {EU Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom}

    {{The European Commission reports that the extent of corruption in Europe is “breathtaking” and it costs the EU economy at least 120bn euros (£99bn) annually.}}

    EU Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmstroem has presented a full report on the problem.

    She said the true cost of corruption was “probably much higher” than 120bn.

    Three-quarters of Europeans surveyed for the Commission study said that corruption was widespread, and more than half said the level had increased.

    “The extent of the problem in Europe is breathtaking, although Sweden is among the countries with the least problems,” Ms Malmstroem wrote in Sweden’s Goeteborgs-Posten daily.

    The cost to the EU economy is equivalent to the bloc’s annual budget.

    For the report the Commission studied corruption in all 28 EU member states. The Commission says it is the first time it has done such a survey.

    {{Bribes}}

    In the UK only five people out of 1,115 – less than 1% – said they had been expected to pay a bribe. It was “the best result in all Europe”, the report said.

    In Croatia, the Czech Republic, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Romania and Greece, between 6% and 29% of respondents said they had been asked for a bribe, or had been expected to pay one, in the past 12 months.

    The EU has an anti-fraud agency, Olaf, which focuses on fraud and corruption affecting the EU budget, but it has limited resources. In 2011 its budget was just 23.5m euros.

    {agencies}

  • Kinnear Quits Newcastle

    Kinnear Quits Newcastle

    {{Newcastle’s director of football Joe Kinnear has resigned after less than eight months in the role. }}

    The 67-year-old was above boss Alan Pardew in the club’s management structure, reporting to owner Mike Ashley on all footballing matters.

    The Magpies failed to sign a player on a permanent deal during Kinnear’s spell at the club.

    And Pardew refused the chance to back him after Saturday’s 3-0 derby defeat by Sunderland.

    “If I was in charge, solely, of transfers things might be different but I’m not,” said Pardew.

    “I think I’ve made my opinions very clear this week and all the rest of it is confidential.”

    After selling midfielder Yohan Cabaye to Paris St-Germain for £19m on 29 January, Newcastle did not recruit a replacement in the remaining two days of the transfer window.

    The arrival of strikers Luuk de Jong and Loic Remy, on loan from Borussia Monchengladbach and QPR respectively, were the only additions to the first-team squad while Kinnear was director of football.

    BBC Sport

  • Suicide bomb outside Beirut leaves Hezbollah, Lebanese forces looking helpless

    Suicide bomb outside Beirut leaves Hezbollah, Lebanese forces looking helpless

    A suicide bomber blew himself up Monday afternoon in a van headed toward a Shiite-populated area of Beirut, killing himself and wounding the driver and one other passenger. The attack is the latest in a surge of suicide bombings that have stretched the capabilities of Lebanon’s security agencies and the powerful Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah, which seem unable to stem the flow of attacks.

    The attack is the second suicide bombing since Saturday and the fifth this year to target Shiite areas of Lebanon in apparent retaliation by Al Qaeda groups against the Iran-backed Hezbollah, which has dispatched thousands of troops into Syria to defend the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

    The white Hyundai passenger van was passing through the town of Shweifat just outside Beirut during the late afternoon rush hour when it stopped to pick up the suicide bomber. Once on board, the bomber detonated his explosive belt, estimated at between 6.6 and 11 pounds, obliterating the van.

    It was unclear whether the bomber had another target in mind. A Hezbollah-run school reportedly was located nearby. One report quoted a policeman as saying that Hassan Msheik, the driver of the van, questioned the bomber’s swollen stomach moments before the bomb exploded. Lebanese television channels showed pictures of the destroyed van scattered across a fire-scorched road.

    Lebanese news outlets said that Mr. Msheik routinely transported people in his van between Shweifat and southern Beirut. He was said to be seriously wounded while the other passenger, a woman, had minor injuries. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

    On Saturday night, a suicide bomber exploded his vehicle at a petrol station in Hermel, a Shiite town in the northern Bekaa Valley, killing four people and wounding 23. The bombing was claimed by the Jabhat al-Nusra, an extremist Syrian rebel faction affiliated with Al Qaeda. The group said that the bombing was revenge for Hezbollah’s continuing “massacres” of Syrians.

    Jabhat al-Nusra also claimed responsibility for two earlier suicide bomb attacks in southern Beirut on Jan. 2 and in Hermel on Jan. 21, as well as two barrages of rockets launched from inside Syria to Shiite areas of the northern Bekaa.

    Lebanese security agencies and powerful Hezbollah have struggled to staunch the surge of bomb attacks in Shiite areas, which have accelerated since mid-November, when two suicide bombers targeted the Iranian embassy in Beirut and killed 23 people.

    The Shiite community in general still supports Hezbollah and accepts the party’s narrative that it has no choice but to fight in Syria against radical Sunni militants that it dubs “Takfiris.” However, the bomb attacks in southern Beirut, of which there have been five since July last year, are having a paralyzing effect. Businesses are being hit as the number of people willing to venture into the area to take advantage of the cheaper prices of food and goods falls. Traffic is minimal in a normally teeming neighborhood. Residents are looking to sell their properties or rent elsewhere in Beirut.

    Hezbollah recently set up imposing barricades of concrete and steel with heavy metal crash barriers around the Rasoul al-Azzam hospital in southern Beirut, where many fighters wounded in Syria are being treated, making the facility a tempting target for Al Qaeda-linked extremists.

    Especially unnerving to many Lebanese is that at least two of the eight people who have blown themselves up were Lebanese Sunnis, unprecedented acts for a community that is traditionally moderate in Lebanon. The identities of five of the bombers remain unknown. A third Lebanese, from the northern city of Tripoli, slipped across the border into Syria and blew himself up in Homs on Jan. 25.

    {{The Christian Monitor}}

  • Why Al-Qaeda Kicked Out Its Deadly Syria Franchise

    Why Al-Qaeda Kicked Out Its Deadly Syria Franchise

    {Early Monday morning the leadership of al-Qaeda disowned Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS), the most effective of its two franchises fighting in Syria, in a maneuver that could alter the trajectory of the fight against President Bashar Assad. }

    In a message posted on jihadi websites, the al-Qaeda general command stated that its former affiliate “is not a branch of the al-Qaeda group [and al-Qaeda] does not have an organizational relationship with it and is not the group responsible for their actions.”

    The move had been a long time in the making. Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri has grown increasingly frustrated with ISIS, ever since Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, head of al-Qaeda in Iraq, expanded into the Syrian conflict in April and attempted to bring the local al-Qaeda franchise, the Nusra Front, under his control. Al-Zawahiri intervened in May, admonishing al-Baghdadi to go back to Iraq, but al-Baghdadi refused, snapping back in a terse audio recording. “I have to choose between the rule of God and the rule of al-Zawahiri, and I choose the rule of God.” It was a rare demonstration of defiance in an organization that demands absolute loyalty. Nonetheless, al-Zawahiri seemed prepared to let the matter lie, apparently in recognition of al-Baghdadi’s growing strength; by that time, ISIS, recently strengthened by an influx of foreign fighters, had taken control of the Syrian city of Raqqa. That brought al-Qaeda the closest it had ever been to achieving a long-term goal — establishing an Islamic state.

    But ISIS’s savagery and draconian interpretations of Islamic law alienated many Syrians and drove a wedge between rebel groups. On Jan. 3, fighting broke out between ISIS and a new alliance that included the Nusra Front. ISIS has managed to stand its ground, but this most recent al-Qaeda announcement could lead to a greater conflagration. Al-Qaeda central may not have been able to stop al-Baghdadi outright, but the threat of excommunication seemed to have reined in his worst tendencies — his deadly campaign of suicide-bomb attacks in Iraq has not yet been replicated in Syria to the same degree.

    ISIS is now likely to lash out with increased attacks as it tries to prove its efficacy in spite of losing its valuable al-Qaeda designation.

    The Time

  • Iran warns: ‘No boundary to response’ if US strikes

    Iran warns: ‘No boundary to response’ if US strikes

    {Iran ramped up its rhetoric against the United States over the weekend even as Western powers began easing sanctions on the Islamic Republic, saying that the country would “recognize no boundary for its response” if America exercised its military option.}

    “The US military option is of no care to us,” said Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps deputy commander Hossein Salami in a televised interview Saturday night, according to the semi-official Iranian Fars news agency. “They can use this option but should take the responsibility for its destructive consequences too.”

    “The US can have different scenarios against Iran, including air, missile and limited ground incursion,” Salami added. “All these scenarios have been identified, all possibilities have been studied and we have complete intelligence superiority in all these cases and operational strategies.”

    Salami was apparently responding to a January 23rd Al Arabiya interview, in which US Secretary of State John Kerry said that if Iran continues enrichment of uranium beyond permitted levels or breaks out toward a nuclear weapons capability, “then the military option that is available to the United States is ready and prepared to do what it would have to do.”

    Shortly after Salami’s interview, Defense Minister Hossein Dehgan adopted a similar tone during a ceremony marking the return from exile of Islamic Republic founder Ruhollah Khomeini, Fars reported.

    “The world’s arrogant powers are today scared of Iran’s high defensive capabilities and for the same reason their style of sanctions and threats are changed everyday,” said Dehgan.

    This is not the first time senior Iranian defense officials derided the US military threat. Last week, IRGC Navy Commander Ali Fadavi joined the criticism, saying, “The military option is a laughable subject. Even John Kerry’s children snicker at it.”

    Despite the rhetoric coming from Tehran’s defense establishment, Iran and the P5+1 are scheduled to hold a new round of talks in Vienna on February 18 in a bid to discuss a comprehensive solution to Tehran’s contested nuclear program.

    Iran signed the interim deal in November with the P5+1 group — Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States and Germany — and began implementing the agreement on January 20.

    Under the agreement, which is to last six months, Iran committed to limit its uranium enrichment to five percent, halting production of 20 percent-enriched uranium.

    In return, the European Union and the United States have eased crippling economic sanctions on Iran.

    The Times of Israel