Search Results for: International business⊂mit=Search
10 results out of 9557 results found for 'International business⊂mit=Search'.
RULES OF ORIGIN
BY KEITH NUTHALL
PROPOSED international regulations that would have ruled a new product is legally created when tobaccos are blended will probably be rejected, with the chairman of a special World Trade Organisation rules of origin committee recommending that they be deleted.…
AVIATION SECURITY FEATURE
BY KEITH NUTHALL AND PHILIP FINE
IN the aftermath of the September 11 tragedy, the shocking images of two planes slamming into two of the most famous buildings in the world fuelled a strong desire tighten up security systems around the world, especially in civil aviation.…
HEALTH AND SAFETY
BY KEITH NUTHALL
IN unkind moments, critics of the insurance industry might say that the sector revels in misfortune, making money out of pessimism and encouraging its clients to prepare for the worst. Of course, like most unconditional statements about business, the truth is far off and is a lot more murky.…
SEABED EXTINCTIONS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A SPECIALIST United Nations agency has admitted that unless careful precautions are taken, the future exploitation of mineral deposits on the bed of deep oceans could lead to the extinction of species, many of which have yet to be discovered.…
ILLICIT TRADING CONFERENCE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
TOBACCO companies should be made subject to tougher auditing controls, to enable customs and other regulators to better detect any diversion of products onto the black market, an International Conference on Illicit Tobacco Trade has concluded.
Staged in New York by the United States Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, with the assistance of the United Nations and World Health Organisation, a conference working party decided that “all persons engaged” in the tobacco sector could “be licensed at a national or sub-national level.”…
CITES REFORM
KEITH NUTHALL
APPLICATIONS made by Nicaragua and Germany for the trade in two hardwoods to be controlled under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) have been supported by the CITES secretariat. The species are big-leaf mahogany (Brazilian mahogany) and tree-of-life (pockwood or sonora guaiacum).…
KOSOVO
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union is channeling Euro 2 million into a legal aid and reform programme in Kosovo, to build an effective judicial system in this war-torn and UN administered Balkan province. Money will be directed to the Kosovo Chamber of Advocates, which received aid last year to establish a legal aid system for the poor.…
KAZAKHSTAN
Keith Nuthall
THE EUROPEAN Bank for Reconstruction and Development will soon be inviting bids for contracts to improve Kazakhstan’s Atyrau International Airport. It is lending the airport company US$24.5 million, which will pay for the widening and strengthening of the runway, taxiways and apron areas, plus the replacement of airfield lighting, including floodlighting.…
ITALIAN LEATHER - ECJ
BY KEITH NUTHALL
AN ITALIAN leather manufacturer appears to have lost an international legal struggle to prevent a former German company from using a trade name similar to its own to market furniture upholstered with leather bought from alternative suppliers. In a test case at the European Court of Justice, Italian Leather, of Bironto, Italy, has failed to establish that a ruling that it secured at Bari District Court should overrule a decision made earlier at the Regional Court, Koblenz, Germany.…
VANCOUVER AIRPORT
BY MONICA DOBIE, in Montreal
THE VANCOUVER Airport Authority has won an appeal in the British Columbia Court of Appeal in a case involving local residents seeking compensation for effects of aircraft on a new runway, opened in 1996
Larry Berg, CEO of the Vancouver International Airport Authority, said: “The court has recognised the principle in law that all aspects of vital public works for the community at large are deemed authorised by the government that orders them.”…