Will it be that we really existed? Won't
we be the product of a dream? Is there something or what does anybody control
us the mind? Besides we waste time that more knows how to do? Are we the most
useless thing than it exists in the Universe? Not even who know are? What does
just something imagine that he thinks?
Image: bdgatorfan.blogspot.com
In Angola they feel prisoners political accused of any crime. They say that it is a democratic regime that it is in the middle of the joy of their functions. The democratic potencies close the eyes and they point that it is like this that it is good, that it is like this that it is made the stability in Africa. Here is the income of the terrorism of which Europe is not gotten to loosen. Who supports the corruption and their dictatorships, in the bottom it is also terrorist without the knowledge.
segunda-feira, 23 de julho de 2012
quinta-feira, 12 de julho de 2012
Spotlight By Maka Angola
The latest
press coverage on corruption, human rights abuses, violations of freedom of the
press and socio-economic exclusion in Angola, every Wednesday on Maka
Angola:
HRW: IMF Should
Insist on Audit to Angola
July 11, 2012: Human Rights Watch, Open Society Initiative of Southern Africa (OSISA)-Angola and the Revenue Watch Institute said in a letter to the IMF that it should insist that the government explain how it spend more than $41 billion in oil revenues.
July 11, 2012: Human Rights Watch, Open Society Initiative of Southern Africa (OSISA)-Angola and the Revenue Watch Institute said in a letter to the IMF that it should insist that the government explain how it spend more than $41 billion in oil revenues.
AFP: War vets
threaten Angola vote over unpaid pensions
July 10, 2012: A decade after the end of Angola’s brutal civil war, veterans are threatening to block general elections in seven weeks if authorities fail to pay them their promised pensions. It is a threat Luanda cannot afford to ignore, given the strength of former combatants scattered across the vast African nation.
July 10, 2012: A decade after the end of Angola’s brutal civil war, veterans are threatening to block general elections in seven weeks if authorities fail to pay them their promised pensions. It is a threat Luanda cannot afford to ignore, given the strength of former combatants scattered across the vast African nation.
Global
Voices: Angola, China:
Netizens Discuss New Development Ghost Town
July 10, 2012: Like many African countries, most people in Angola hardly earn $2 a day. The government of Angola took a step in trying to develop the country such that it could match other countries in the world. This time it selected developing apartments in Kalimba, about 30km outside Luanda, the capital.
July 10, 2012: Like many African countries, most people in Angola hardly earn $2 a day. The government of Angola took a step in trying to develop the country such that it could match other countries in the world. This time it selected developing apartments in Kalimba, about 30km outside Luanda, the capital.
terça-feira, 10 de julho de 2012
Maka Angola Sponsors Petition Against the Angolan Investment Bank (BAI)
By Maka Angola
Maka Angola has just
launched an online
campaign petitioning European financial institutions to
stop doing business with the Angolan Investment Bank (Banco Angolano de
Investimentos, BAI), a private bank that functions as a money-laundering scheme
for the regime’s elite.
The European Bank of Investments, the Norwegian Fund for Developing
Countries (Norfund) and the Danish Fund for International Investment (IFU) are
partners of BAI, lending their international credibility to an institution that
serves mainly to launder money resulting from the plunder of Angolan’s
resources and to illicitly enrich the ruling elite.
Altogether, public officials and their associates hold a total of 47.75
percent of BAI’s shares. Meanwhile, 42.25 percent is distributed among private
Angolan companies associated with public officials, foreign and national
managers of the bank, as well as foreign companies. The remaining 10 percent
are held by the Angolan National Oil Company Sonangol (8.5%) and the National
Diamond Company Endiama (1.5%). Read here the complete story previously published in Maka Angola.
BAI has so far enjoyed the complicity of the European Union and Nordic
countries, which have until now refrained from addressing publicly the
situation of generalized corruption, democratic deficit and human rights abuses
in Angola.
Maka Angola is
therefore calling on its readers to sign a letter addressed to the leaders of
these financial institutions, urging them to stop all business activities with
BAI.
This is the letter the leaders of the financial institutions will
receive:
Alfonso Querejeta, European Bank of Investments
Secretary General and General Counsel
György Matolcsy, European Bank of Investments Board of Governors Chairman
Kristin Clemet, Norwegian Fund for Developing Countries (Norfund) Chair of the Board
Finn Jønck, Danish Fund for International Investment (IFU) Executive Board Managing Director
György Matolcsy, European Bank of Investments Board of Governors Chairman
Kristin Clemet, Norwegian Fund for Developing Countries (Norfund) Chair of the Board
Finn Jønck, Danish Fund for International Investment (IFU) Executive Board Managing Director
Dear Sir/Madam,
I write to urge your financial institution to cease
its dealings with Banco Angolano de Investimentos (BAI), a private Angolan bank
that functions as a money-laundering scheme for the regime’s elite.
Since its inception, in 1996, BAI has
institutionalized the transfer of public assets to Angolan public officials,
for their illicit enrichment.
Altogether, public officials and their associates
hold a total of 47.75 percent of BAI’s shares. Meanwhile, 42.25 percent is
distributed among private Angolan companies associated with public officials,
foreign and national managers of the bank, as well as foreign companies.
The National Oil Company Sonangol, which was BAI’s
initial main investor, with 18.5 percent of its shares, has over the years
quietly transferred 10 percent of its interests in the bank to the private
ownership of high-ranking government officials. It now retains 8.50 percent of
the bank’s shares, while the state-owned diamond company Endiama keeps 1.50
percent of BAI’s shares.
In 2010, the United States Senate investigated
BAI’s operations in that country, on suspicion that the bank was operating as a
money-laundering vehicle at the service of senior Angolan officials. The
investigation publicly revealed the transfer of BAI’s shares to high-ranking
political figures.
BAI introduces into the national and international
banking systems assets diverted from the Angolan public coffers for the private
benefit of the leaders of the ruling MPLA party and government officials, who
are liable for crimes of corruption because of the plunder of the country’s
resources. The Angolan Law against Money Laundering and Terrorism Financing
establishes that both the participation and the facilitation of acts of traffic
of influence are crimes of money laundering (Art. 51, 1). The law is also
specific on the conversion and transfer of ill-gotten gains obtained directly
or indirectly (Art. 51, 2), as is the case of share percentages transferred
from Sonangol to Angolan officials. Despite the existence of this legislation,
the lack of independence in the Angolan judiciary has so far ensured that not
one official has been charged.
Nevertheless, BAI has so far enjoyed the complicity
of the European Union and Nordic countries, which have until now refrained from
addressing publicly the situation of generalized corruption, democratic deficit
and human rights’ abuses in Angola.
Therefore, I urge your financial institution to
stop partnering with BAI and stop lending your credibility to a bank that
serves primarily as a money-laudering mechanism for the illicit enrichment of
the corrupt Angolan elite. I trust that you will do everything in your power to
uphold the zero-tolerance policy on money laundering of your institution and
denounce the partnership with BAI as contrary to the high standards of your
institution.
Sincerely,
[your name]
__ __ __
__ __ __
Thank you!
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