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Saturday, June 18, 2016

PFLP condemns Jo Cox assassination

PFLP condemns Jo Cox assassination

PFLP condemns the assassination of British MP Jo Cox and calls to confront racism and fascism Jun17 2016

jo-cox-pal The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine condemned the assassination of the British Labour MP Jo Cox at the hands of a British racist extremist, emphasizing the need to address the racist discourse of colonial powers, and to confront the growing threat of fascism and the extreme right in Europe and around the world.


The PFLP considers that the attack on MP Jo Cox, a supporter of Palestinian rights, and other progressive voices, as well as repeated attacks on refugee centers in Germany and elsewhere in Europe, are not isolated incidents or mere security concerns, but rather reflect an intensified state of extreme right ideology and sharp polarization in the industrialized Western societies. The Front urges Palestinian and Arab communities to build broad alliances to confront these crimes and defend the people against attack.

The Front declared that the world capitalist system, led by the United States as the center of imperialism, is responsible for the rising manifestations of fascism in Europe. Capitalism and imperialism destroy communities, peoples and countries, and create millions of refugees and migrants from among the displaced popular classes, and then these same systems encourage a racist offensive and represses those who defend their human and natural rights.

The PFLP said that there is no difference between the racist criminal who killed MP Jo Cox and the Zionist criminal who ran over and killed the struggling American martyr for Palestine, Rachel Corrie, in Gaza in March 2003.

Jo Cox suspect had ties to pro-apartheid and neo-Nazi groups

 MP Jo Cox
Thomas Mair’s earliest apparent connections to the far right date back to a time when there were still parts of the world ruled by white supremacists.

In the mid-1980s, the man who is now suspected of fatally shooting and stabbing the Labour MP Jo Cox, was subscriber number 1,201 to SA Patriot, a magazine published by supporters of apartheid in South Africa.

Alan Harvey, SA Patriot’s editor now living in “exile” in the UK, wrote recently on an online newsletter that Londoners had “brought shame and humiliation” on Britain by “electing a non-white Muslim”, Sadiq Khan, as mayor.

He told the Financial Times on Friday that SA Patriot was “neo-imperialist” rather than “neo-Nazi”. “We were not rightwing enough for a lot of people,” he said. Mr Mair took only eight or nine issues before letting his subscription lapse.

By 1999, Mr Mair’s leanings appear to have shifted still further to the right. That year, his name appeared on invoices from the National Alliance, a US neo-Nazi group.

Among the texts Mr Mair ordered to be sent to his Yorkshire address were a book on improvised munitions and a copy of a Nazi Party pamphlet with a section written by Joseph Goebbels.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, the US civil rights group that published the invoices on Friday, said its database indicated Mr Mair had sent $620 to the National Alliance in total.

There seems little to indicate whether Mr Mair had any links to the far-right in the years that followed. He lived in a nondescript semi-detached house on the Fieldhead estate in Birstall. He appears to have suffered mental ill-health. According to a 2010 local press report, he was referred from a centre for adults with mental health problems to tend a country park as a volunteer.

Duane St Louis, Mr Mair’s half brother, told reporters he had mental problems, which he believed to be obsessive compulsive disorder. Scott Mair, his brother, said Mr Mair was a peaceful man without strong political views. “My brother is not a violent man,” he was quoted as saying. “We don’t even know who he votes for.”

Two police officers remained on guard outside Mr Mair’s semi-detached house on the Fieldhead estate in Birstall. He lived in the red brick home on his own. The gardens are neatly maintained with topiary bushes and there are net curtains in the windows. There is a drive to the side with a row of garages. It backs on to an industrial estate.

Labour politician who was born and slain in the Yorkshire town she represented
Fieldhead was built after the second world war and is home to several hundred families. There is a row of shops and a primary school. The local housing association still owns many properties but some have been sold privately. An older three bedroom home costs around £90,000.

There are also newer homes. In 2011 a charity secured government funding to demolish 150 flats that were hard to let and had been plagued by antisocial behaviour. Kirklees Community Association replaced them with 77 family homes. Housebuilder Keepmoat built a further 62 homes for private sale.

According to unconfirmed witness accounts, Ms Cox’s assailant shouted “Britain first” or “put Britain first” during the attack. The far-right Britain First group said it was “obviously … not involved and would never encourage behaviour of this sort”.

Nothing suggesting Mr Mair was actively involved with a particular group has emerged.

Another Yorkshireman, a British National Party member and former soldier called Terence Gavan, was jailed for six years in 2010 over a homemade arsenal of explosives and firearms, including nail bombs and a booby-trapped cigarette, that could have been used to attack Muslims.

Gavan wrote in one notebook discovered by police: “The patriot must always be ready to defend his country against enemies and their governments.’’

The North Kirklees area, home to both Gavan and Mr Mair, was described as the “jewel in the crown” of BNP support in the mid-2000s by former leader Nick Griffin. It had three councillors there and captured 3,685 votes — 7.1 per cent — in Batley and Spen in the general election 2010.

However, the local BNP branch folded in 2013. David Exley, a former BNP councillor who lives in Birstall, told the FT that many activists quit because of Mr Griffin’s leadership. “He was just in it for himself,” he said. He said the killing of Ms Cox was “terrible”. “She was democratically elected and she should be allowed to do her job.”

Some BNP activists left for the English Democrats, he said, while others supported the UK Independence party. The BNP did not contest Batley and Spen, Ms Cox’s constituency, in 2015.
Source:FT

Suspected killer of British MP Jo Cox had ties to neo-Nazis in US
By Reuters and VICE News
June 17, 2016 | 3:20 pm

The man arrested over the shooting and stabbing murder of British parliamentarian Jo Cox had ties to a neo-Nazi group in the United States, and had bought guides on assembling homemade guns and explosives, according to a US-based civil rights watchdog that tracks hate groups.

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) published records showing that Thomas Mair, 52, who allegedly shot and stabbed Cox multiple times Thursday, was a "longtime supporter of the National Alliance" (NA), once known as the US's premier neo-Nazi organization.

Mair reportedly spent more than $620 on books and literature from NA, including guides titled "Improvised Munitions Handbook," "Chemistry of Powder & Explosives," and "Incendiaries," according to receipts published by SPLC.

The receipts also showed Mair purchased a copy of Ich Kampfe — German for "I do battle" or "I struggle," and an obvious reference to Adolf Hilter's Mein Kampf —a handbook issued to new enrollees in the Nazi party in the early 1940s.

Mair also subscribed to S. A. Patriot, a South African magazine published by pro-apartheid group White Rhino Club, The Daily Telegraph reported.

Cox, a 41-year-old lawmaker for the opposition Labour Party and a vocal advocate of Britain's European Union membership, died of her injuries on Thursday afternoon. She was attacked while preparing to meet constituents in Birstall near Leeds in northern England.

Media reports, citing witnesses, said the attacker had shouted out "Britain first", which is the name of a right-wing nationalist group that describes itself on its website as "a patriotic political party and street defence organisation".

Police said a 77-year-old man was also assaulted in the incident and suffered injuries that were not life-threatening.

Cox's death has caused deep shock across Britain and the suspension of campaigning for next week's referendum on the country's EU membership. The deputy leader of Britain First, Jayda Fransen, distanced the group from the attack, which she described as "absolutely disgusting". Leader Paul Golding also promptly condemned the attack.

One witness said a man pulled an old or makeshift gun from a bag and fired twice. "I saw a lady on the floor like on the beach with her arms straight and her knees up and blood all over the face," Hichem Ben-Abdallah told reporters. "She wasn't making any noise, but clearly she was in agony."


The lawmaker's husband Brendan said: "She would have wanted two things above all else to happen now: one, that our precious children are bathed in love and two, that we all unite to fight against the hatred that killed her."

The rival referendum campaign groups, Remain and Leave, said they were suspending activities on Friday. Prime Minister David Cameron said he would pull out of a planned rally in Gibraltar, the British territory on the southern coast of Spain.

Cameron said the killing of the mother-of-two, who had worked on US President Barack Obama's 2008 election campaign, was a tragedy.

"We have lost a great star," the Conservative prime minister said. "She was a great campaigning MP with huge compassion, with a big heart. It is dreadful, dreadful news."

It was not immediately clear what the impact would be on the June 23 referendum, which has polarized the nation into pro- and anti-EU camps.


But some analysts speculated it could boost the pro-EU "Remain" campaign, which in recent days has fallen behind the "Leave" camp in opinion polls.

Gun ownership is highly restricted in Britain, and attacks of any nature on public figures are rare. The last British lawmaker to have been killed in an attack was Ian Gow, who died after a bomb planted by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded under his car at his home in southern England in 1990.

தமிழ் அகதிப் படகு நோக்கி துப்பாக்கிச் சூடு!




இலங்கை அகதிகளை அச்சுறுத்த இந்தோனேசியா  துப்பாக்கிச்  சூடு! 

மன்னிப்புசபை கண்டனம்

துப்பாக்கி சூட்டை நடத்தி, இலங்கை அகதிகளின் உயிர்களுக்கு ஆபத்தை உணர்த்தி அவர்களை படகுகளுக்குள் தள்ளிய இந்தோனேசிய அதிகாரிகளின் நடவடிக்கையானது, சர்வதேச நீதியை மீறும் செயல் என சர்வதேச மன்னிப்பு சபை குற்றம் சுமத்தியுள்ளது.

பெண்கள் சிறுவர்களுக்கு எதிராக இவ்வாறான அச்சுறுத்தல் தந்திரோபாயங்களை நிறுத்தி, அகதிகளை படகில் இருந்து இறக்கி, ஐக்கிய நாடுகள் அகதிகளுக்கான அதிகாரிகளை சந்திக்கசெய்யவேண்டும்.

சர்வதேச மன்னிப்புசபையின் தென்னாசிய மற்றும் பசுபிக் பிராந்திய பணிப்பாளர் ஜோசெப் பெனேடிக்ட் இதனை கூறியுள்ளார்.

அகதிகளை சந்திப்பதற்கு ஐக்கிய நாடுகளின் அதிகாரிகள் தயாராக இருப்பதாகவும் பெனேடிக்ட் தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.

படகில் இருக்கும் ஐந்து பெண்கள், படகில் இருந்து குதித்து கரைக்கு செல்ல முயன்றபோதே அச்சுறுத்தும் வகையில் துப்பாக்கி பிரயோகம் ஆகாயம் நோக்கி மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்டது.

On June 16, 2016 Tamil women refugees from Sri Lanka jump out from their stranded boat onto the beach in Lhoknga, Aceh province (AFP Photo/Prossa)
LHOKNGA, Indonesia (AP) — Authorities in the Indonesian province of Aceh are preparing to tow a boat with more than 40 Tamil men, women and children out to sea Friday after rescuing it last weekend.

It would be the second attempt in the past week to remove the vessel from Indonesian waters after it suffered engine trouble and was discovered stranded last Saturday.



The migrants have been at sea for about a month and were trying to reach the Australian territory of Christmas Island.

The province is refusing to let the migrants, which include nine children and a pregnant woman, land despite Indonesian Vice President Jusuf Kalla asking Aceh officials to provide shelter. On Thursday, six women tried to leave the boat as it sat in shallow waters but police fired warning shots.

"We did not allow them to land because Indonesia is not their destination and they are fit," said Frans Delian, a spokesman for the Aceh government. "We advised them to not continue their journey to Australia but back to their country."


Immigration officials said the people were from Sri Lanka. Amnesty International said in a statement that the group left from India in an Indian-flagged boat and may have fled Sri Lanka, where members of the Tamil minority have suffered persecution.

Delian said their situation is different from stateless Muslim Rohingya boat people who were helped by Indonesian authorities last year after fleeing persecution in Myanmar. Southeast Asian nations including predominantly Muslim Indonesia were reluctant to help until facing international pressure over the plight of Rohingya adrift at sea with minimal supplies of food or water.

Rights groups urged the Indonesia government to let the migrants disembark.



"Indonesia won praise when it helped Rohingya refugees in Aceh," said Andreas Harsono, Indonesia researcher at Human Rights Watch. "It is a shame that the Indonesian and Aceh local government refuse to assist these Tamil boat people."

The International Organization for Migration has had a team at the site since last weekend including a translator and medical personnel and is prepared to provide temporary accommodation. However they have been denied access to the migrants.

Aceh police chief Maj. Gen. Husein Hamidi said the Tamil migrants have been given food, water and fuel. They could be towed out to sea at high tide later Friday, he said.

The boat was beached and heavy machinery was used to try and refloat it while all the migrants were still on board.

The vessel was first towed back into international waters on Sunday after repairs were made to its engine. It returned on Monday and the migrants asked for additional fuel, according to Indonesian authorities.

The office of Australia's Immigration and Border Protection Minister Peter Dutton declined to comment on the situation.

Australia has riled Indonesia, and been criticized by human rights groups and the United Nations, for its tough refugee deterrent policy of turning back asylum seeker boats that attempt to reach Christmas Island from Indonesian ports. Indonesia considers Australian warships towing foreigners in boats into Indonesian waters an affront to Indonesian sovereignty.
___
AP writers Niniek Karmini, Stephen Wright and Margie Mason in Jakarta and Rod McGuirk in Canberra, Australia contributed.
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Thursday, June 16, 2016

வெற்றிச் செல்வியின் ஏழாம் நூல்

ஆறிப்போன காயங்களின் வலி!




ஈழப் போரின் இறுதி நாட்கள், காணாமல் போனவனின் மனைவி, போராளியின் காதலி,உட்பட வெற்றிச் செல்வியின் ஆறு நூல்கள் ஏற்கெனவே வெளியாகியுள்ளன.ஆறிப்போன காயங்களின் வலி! அவரது ஏழாவது நூலாகும். அல்லது வலியாகும்!


வெற்றிச் செல்வி குறித்த ஒரு சுருக்கமான அறிமுகத்தை அவர்கள் பி.பி.சி.தமிழோசைக்கு அளித்த பேட்டியில் காணமுடியும்.



https://audioboom.com/boos/3280531-

 `மன்னார் இணையம்` கண்ட நேர்காணலில் மேலும் விரிவாக காண முடியும்.

`ஆறிப்போன காயங்களின் வலி` நூல் வெளியீட்டு அழைப்பிதழ்.


நூல் வெளியீடு குறித்து வெற்றிச் செல்வியின் தகவல்கள்;

16 June at 21 hrs 
அன்பிற்கினிய முகநூல் உறவுகளே! வரவிரும்புபவர்கள் அனைவரும் வருக. பாதுகாப்பு கருதியோ நேரமின்மை காரணமாகவோ தூரம் என்றோ வர இயலாது போய், புத்தகம் வேண்டுமே என்பவர்கள் உள் பெட்டியில் முகவரி தாருங்கள். வெளியீடு முடிந்த அடுத்த நாளே அஞ்சலில் அனுப்புகிறேன். எனினும் நேரில் உங்கள் வருகையை ஆவலுடன் எதிர்பார்க்கிறேன்.

14 June at 06:45
விரைவில் எனது 7ஆவது நூலாகிய ஆறிப்போன காயங்களின் வலி வெளிவர இருக்கிறது என்பதை மகிழ்ச்சியுடன் அறியத்தருகிறேன்.
அன்பிற்கினிய முகநூல் உறவுகளே! வரவிரும்புபவர்கள் அனைவரும் வருக. பாதுகாப்பு கருதியோ நேரமின்மை காரணமாகவோ தூரம் என்றோ வர இயலாது போய், புத்தகம் வேண்டுமே என்பவர்கள் உள் பெட்டியில் முகவரி தாருங்கள். வெளியீடு முடிந்த அடுத்த நாளே அஞ்சலில் அனுப்புகிறேன். எனினும் நேரில் உங்கள் வருகையை ஆவலுடன் எதிர்பார்க்கிறேன்.

14 June at 06:50 
போராளி என்பதால் தூக்கிவைத்துக் கொண்டாடுபவர்களும் தூக்கிப்போடவும் முடியாமல் தூக்கி வைத்துக்கொண்டாடவும் முடியாமல் திண்டாடுபவர்களும் தூரவே வைத்துக்கொண்டு மனசுக்குள் மாடிகட்டி வைத்திருப்பவர்களும் ஏசணும்போல இருந்தாலும் ஏசவேண்டாமே என்று விட்டுவைத்திருப்பவர்களும் நான் எங்கே போகிறேன் வருகிறேன் என்று எல்லா நாட்களையும் கணக்கெடுத்துக் கொண்டிருப்பவர்களும் என்னைச் சுற்றி வாழும் அழகும் அழகற்றதுமான உலகத்தில் நான் கவலையுடனும் மகிழ்ச்சியுடனும் வாழ்ந்து கொண்டிருக்கிறேன்.

எனது புதிய நூலின் வருகை என்னையும் என்சார்ந்தவர்களையும் மகிழ்ச்சிப்படுத்துவதை உணர்கிறேன். அரசியல் காரணங்களுக்காக தங்களால் வர முடியாது என்று தயவோடு கூறி ஒதுங்கும் அன்பர்களே, உங்களில் எனக்கொரு ஆதங்கமும் இல்லை.
இன்னமும் நம் சூழல் மாறவில்லை என்பதையே உங்கள் வார்த்தைகள் நிரூபிக்கின்றன.


எனினும் தவிர்க்க முடியாத காலத்தின் குரலாய் என் குரலும் ஒலித்துக்கொண்டிருக்கும்.

வெற்றிச் செல்வி படைப்பும் பகிர்வும்


வெற்றிச் செல்வி ஒரு போராளிப் படைப்பாளி!

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``அணைய விடாதீர்கள்,ஊதிக் கொண்டே இருங்கள்``
ஒலித்துக் கொண்டே இருங்கள்!
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நன்றி: தகவல் ஊடகங்கள், வெற்றிச் செல்வி Face Book Page, ENB TENN

Thursday, June 09, 2016

LORD BAMFORD'S LETTER TO JCB STAFF TEXT




WE'RE A GLOBAL COMPANY AND I'LL BE VOTING TO LEAVE: LORD BAMFORD'S LETTER TO JCB STAFF 

The EU referendum takes place on June 23 and no one can be certain of the outcome. One thing I'm certain of is this: JCB will continue to trade with Europe, irrespective of whether we remain in or leave the EU. JCB was selling into Europe long before the UK joined the Common Market in 1973 and it will remain an important market for JCB.

JCB is a global company selling to over 150 countries. Today, EU countries account for 22 per cent of our turnover; the other 78 per cent comes from the UK, India, the Americas, Russia, the Middle East, Africa, Asia Pacific and the Far East.


In fact, as a nation, over 53 per cent of all UK exports go to non-EU countries.


This referendum is very important. The outcome will determine the future of our country. It will have a lasting impact on the lives of our children and grandchildren.


It is a big decision, much more important than a vote in a general election, so please allow me to share some personal views.


The UK is a trading nation and the fifth largest economy in the world. I am very confident that we can stand on our own two feet.


I believe that JCB and the UK can prosper just as much outside the EU, so there is very little to fear if we do choose to leave. I voted to stay in the Common Market in 1975. I did not vote for a political union.


I did not expect us to hand over sovereignty to the EU. I certainly did not expect unaccountable leaders in Brussels to govern over us.


In 1973, when we joined as its eighth member, the EU accounted for 31 per cent of world economic output. Today with 28 member countries the figure is just 17 per cent, which underlines the shrinking role of the EU in the world economy.

So do I wish to remain in an EU of diminishing economic importance as it moves towards ever closer union? Or do I want us to pull out of the EU, reclaim our sovereignty and regain control of how we trade with Europe and the world? After more than 40 years in the EU, I will be voting to leave. How you vote is entirely a decision for you. I respectfully urge you to consider all of the arguments ahead of this important referendum. Above all, do please cast a vote, one way or the other your opinion counts and your vote counts.

Finally, if the democratic decision after June 23 is to remain, it will be interesting to see how the UK fits into the EU of the future, given that political and fiscal union remains its ultimate goal.


Yours faithfully, The Lord Bamford, Chairman

Wednesday, June 08, 2016

சிங்களக் கொலை சாவாகும் கதை





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Sri Lanka to recognise around 65,000 people missing since civil war as dead
AFP, Colombo |  Updated: Jun 07, 2016 19:52 IST
News The Hindustan Times

Sri Lanka on Tuesday announced a landmark law to recognise as dead an estimated 65,000 people still missing seven years after the end of a bitter civil war, allowing relatives to claim inheritances.Ministers approved a draft bill to issue “certificates of absence” to the families of those who went missing during a 37-year war with Tamil separatists and a Marxist uprising.

“This measure will help tens of thousands of Sri Lankans whose family members and loved ones are missing and who are unable to address practical issues relating to their disappearance,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Under the current law, families cannot access the property, bank accounts or inheritances left by missing relatives unless they can conclusively prove they are dead -- an often impossible task.
Huge numbers of minority Tamils went missing during almost four decades of war after being arrested by security services, while thousands more died in military bombardments.
Several mass graves containing skeletal remains have been found in the past two decades, but only a handful have ever been identified.

Thousands of people also went missing during a crackdown by security forces and pro-government vigilante groups on Marxist rebels between 1987 and 1990.

At that time Sri Lanka was notorious for burning dozens of unidentified corpses on piles of tyres by the roadside -- so-called “tyre-pyre” burnings designed to drive fear into the rebels.

“Sri Lanka has one of the largest caseloads of missing persons in the world,” the foreign ministry statement said.

“In fact, since 1994 alone the government commissions have received over 65,000 complaints of missing persons.”

Official sources said a “certificate of absence” could be used to make claims in place of a death certificate under the new law, which is likely to pass through parliament in a few months.

The government last month announced it was setting up an office to try to trace the war missing in a move to bring closure for families.

The cffice of missing persons has been tasked with recommending compensation and clearing the way for next of kin to take legal action against anyone responsible for the disappearance of loved ones.

Troops crushed separatist Tamil Tiger rebels in a no-holds-barred offensive in 2009, killing up to 40,000 Tamil civilians.

President Maithripala Sirisena, who came to power in January last year, has agreed to a domestic investigation into violations of international humanitarian law.

Sunday, June 05, 2016

EU Turkey Refuge Deal



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NATO-EU Relationship

Understanding the NATO/EU Relationship

Lieutenant Colonel Emmanuel Antoine, French Army, Strategic Plans and Policy
Published on 06 April 2014

NATO and the European Union share 22 members, the same fundamental values, and the same challenges. Nations use a single set of forces to achieve EU and/or NATO ambitions. Each decision taken by a Nation to commit under one banner has an impact on its ability to commit under the other banner. NATO and EU member States support each other (Turkey is the third contributor of the EU Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP). NATO and EU operate in similar or complementary fields of expertise. Take Afghanistan, for instance, where the EU has been involved in the institutional reform of the Ministry of Interior, alongside NATO. Finally, NATO and EU address their specific capabilities shortfalls through cooperation.

Since 2003, NATO and the EU are unified by a “Strategic Partnership”. The initial intent was to facilitate exchanges and increase cooperation in several domains of common interest. This cooperation was hampered however, by persistent political issues. As a result, NATO and EU kept working side by side rather than hand in hand.

In December 2013, the European Council held a Summit focused on defence and security matters. EU Heads of States and Government called for a greater international cooperation, especially with NATO. As a guest of honour, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen replied to these expectations in a very positive way, saying that “we must develop real capabilities, those capabilities that our nations need (…) This requires greater cooperation, coordination and cohesion”.

The Conceptual Domain Offers Opportunities To Meet Emerging Challenges In A More Coherent And Efficient Way.

The maritime domain draws more and more attention. The complexity of cyber threats and defence requires exploiting all opportunities and expertise, such as Centres of Excellence. Defence and Related Security Capacity Building is an efficient way for Nations to project stability beyond their borders and act to prevent crisis.

There is room for greater cooperation between organisations, especially with the EU.

Increasing the focus on specific key capabilities could revitalise industrial cooperation and contribute to defining defence industrial standards, common procedures and certification that reduce costs. Harmonizing defence planning processes and the identification of common capability requirements could better facilitate potential industrial collaboration in the long-term and in a more systematic way. Replicating and expanding the already successful multinational cooperation models could finally help better manage the existing shortfalls in the short and mid-term.

http://www.act.nato.int/article-2014-1-10

The Real Fase of EU

The Real Fase of EU

Euro caused the Greek crisis

How the euro caused the Greek crisis

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