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Search Results for: Pakistan

10 results out of 489 results found for 'Pakistan'.

RUSSIAN BILLS OF LADING TRADE FRAUD ON THE INCREASE



BY JAMES FLYNN

RUSSIAN organised crime has left its fingerprints across eastern and western Europe in recent years. But now the gangs have begun to turn their sights on the international shipping industry, manipulating documents that are fundamental to the movement of international cargo for their own – usually money laundering – ends.…

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AL QAEDA FINANCING



BY PAUL COCHRANE

THE SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 attacks on the US resulted in a raft of regulations to curb terrorist financing, but seven years on Al Qaeda is still at large, has adapted to the new regulatory environment to raise funds, and morphed into an international terrorist Hydra.…

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BRAZIL IS MAINSTAY OF LATIN AMERICA KNITTING INDUSTRY



BY PACIFICA GODDARD

CHINA’S entry into the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 2002 and the recent end of quotas in the US and European markets have created gigantic changes in the textile industry worldwide, with developing markets like those in Latin America expected to suffer the most from these shifts.…

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INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATION ROUND UP



BY KEITH NUTHALL

ETHIOPIA COMMODITY EXCHANGE OPENS

ETHIOPIA has opened a commodity exchange, designed to bring order to the country’s often chaotic food markets. Their informality effectively forces farmers to sell locally to traders they know and trust. This prevents commodities moving from regions where there is abundance to those where there are shortages, intensifying the risk of famine and for prices to plummet in districts with a production glut.…

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SOUTH ASIAN KNITWEAR INDUSTRY HAVING MIXED FORTUNES AS GLOBALISATION INTENSIFIES



BY RAGHAVENDRA VERMA, in New Delhi; SAEED AKHTAR BALOCH, in Lahore; and KEITH NOYAHR, in Colombo

THE SOUTH Asian knitwear industry is experienced mixed fortunes at present, with the impact of China’s production boom and the global liberalisation of the textile sector still changing sub-continental fortunes.…

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GLOBAL NUCLEAR FUEL BANK SET FOR LAUNCH



BY KEITH NUTHALL

A GLOBAL initiative is to be launched allowing developing countries to acquire nuclear power, without the concerns associated with proliferation and security that have followed the use of this technology in North Korea, Pakistan, Iran and elsewhere. Kuwait has become the latest country to back a proposed multinational nuclear fuel bank under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) management, with the emirate offering US$10 million.…

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AFGHANISTAN HAS PAPER AML/CFT CONTROLS IN PLACE, BUT WEAKNESS OF GOVERNMENT HAMPERS IMPLEMENTATION



BY PAUL COCHRANE

SINCE the USA-led military intervention in 2001 helped overthrow the Taliban region in Afghanistan, the country has made important steps to curb money laundering and terrorist financing. In 2004, anti-money laundering (AML) and combating terrorist financing (CTF) legislation was enacted, and a Financial Investigation Unit (FIU) established.…

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MIDDLE EAST DENIM MARKET DOMINATED BY LABELS IN RICH GULF AND ISRAEL, AND STYLE IN POORER LEVANT



BY PAUL COCHRANE, in Damascus and Beirut, and HELENA FLUSFELDER, in Jerusalem

INTRODUCTION AND THE GULF

THE DENIM sector in the Middle East is as diverse as it is fragmented, with strong demand in the Gulf and Israel for major brand names and the latest trends, while in the less economically developed parts of the Levant international brands are of less importance than style.…

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CHINA SURGING AHEAD WITH NUCLEAR POWER EXPANSION



By Mark Godfrey in Beijing

No country has added nuclear power like energy-hungry China. Neighbouring North Korea had more nuclear power capacity than China in 2000 (as did Taiwan). But by 2010, according to the US government-affiliated Energy Information Administration, China will have bypassed both countries.…

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PAKISTAN MOVES TO EASE INTERNATIONAL SECURITY FEARS ABOUT ITS NUCLEAR INDUSTRY



BY A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT, in Lahore, Pakistan

REMARKS from the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Mohamed ElBaradei in a recent interview with the pan-Arab Al-Hayat newspaper showing concerns about Pakistan’s civil and military nuclear assets and Islamabad’s capability to protect these from extremists- have unleashed a great debate in and outside the country.…

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