Search Results for: Spanish
10 results out of 733 results found for 'Spanish'.
EU ROUND UP - RUSSIA ENERGY TALKS UNDERWAY AT LAST
BY KEITH NUTHALL
FORMAL negotiations between the European Union (EU) and Russia over renewing the 1997 partnership and cooperation agreement between them are under way at last: formal talks started in Brussels on July 4, following a successful EU-Russia summit at the Siberian oil town of Khanty-Mansiysk..…
INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATION ROUND-UP - CALL FOR EU FISH AGENCY TO RECEIVE MORE POWERS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) has now formally opened its agency coordinating the policing of fishing rules in its member states’ fishing fleets, amidst a call for it to receive more powers. At a formal launch ceremony for the Community Fisheries Control Agency (CFCA) it its base in Vigo, Spain, a senior Spanish socialist MEP Rosa Miguélez Ramos said she hoped that "unlike previous [EU] agencies, it will extend its remit and its tasks".…
EUROPEAN COMMISSION ANNOUNCED LEGAL PROTECTION FOR SIX MORE FOOD PRODUCTS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Commission has granted 18 traditionally made European Union (EU) food products protection by adding them to EU geographical indication lists, preventing them from being copied by food manufacturers outside these products’ home regions. These include Spanish marzipan ‘Mazapán de Toledo’; Portuguese smoked sausage ‘Alheira de Vinhais’; and Slovenská parenica, a smoked Slovak sheep milk cheese.…
SPAIN BEEFING UP ITS LAW ENFORCEMENT CAPACITY TO FIGHT TERRORIST FINANCING
BY LIZ HALL, in Alicante
SPAIN is no stranger to the threat of terrorism. For decades its soil has been the scene of terrorism at the hands of Basque independence group ETA. Increasingly, however, the threat from ETA appears to being outweighed by that of terrorist activity from Islamic extremists.…
GERMANY'S BIGGEST VINEYARD TOLD TO REPAY EURO 500,000 IN ILLEGAL SUBSIDIES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
GERMANY’S largest vineyard has been ordered by the European Commission to repay Euro 541,859 in illegal subsidies paid by its owner – the regional government of Hesse. Meanwhile, major Spain wine producer J. Garcia Carrion La Mancha may have to repay Euro 14.5 million in subsidies from the Spanish state for improving plant – Brussels is investigating the handout.…
GERMANY'S BIGGEST VINEYARD TOLD TO REPAY EURO 500,000 IN ILLEGAL SUBSIDIES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
GERMANY’S largest vineyard has been ordered by the European Commission to repay Euro 541,859 in illegal subsidies paid by its owner – the regional government of Hesse. Following a detailed investigation, Brussels has concluded that the writing off of losses made by Hessische Staatsweingüter until December 2002 broke European Union (EU) state aid rules and so must be repaid, with interest.…
INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATION ROUND-UP: RESCUE PACKAGE FOR EU FISHERMEN DEBATED IN BRUSSELS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
EUROPEAN Union (EU) ministers are debating an urgent rescue package for a European fishing sector that is being buffeted by high fuel prices. European Commission officials are drafting formal proposals, which would suspend certain European Fisheries Fund subsidy controls for two years.…
SPANISH TOBACCO INDUSTRY SEEKS TO ADJUST TO ALTADIS TAKEOVER AND CHAOTIC IMPLEMENTATION OF ANTI-TOBACCO LAW
BY PAUL RIGG, in Madrid
THE DOMINANT event in the Spanish Tobacco Market in 2008 has been Imperial Tobacco’s takeover of the Franco-Spanish company Altadis. Following a series of rebuffed bids in 2007, the widely predicted buyout was finalised on January 30, 2008.…
ADVANCEMENTS IN FRAUD AND FRAUD PREVENTION IN LATIN AMERICA
BY PACIFICA GODDARD, in Caracas
LATIN AMERICA has long been notorious for its high levels of corruption, especially through money laundering, bribery and the illicit drug trade. And although the recent years of relative stability and democratisation in the region have brought economic progress, this has also widened the opportunities for fraudulent activities and fuelled an increasing sophistication by which they are performed.…
DESIGN TALENT IN DEVELOPED WORLD FALLING SHORT IN COPING WITH THE DEMANDS OF INTERNATIONAL OUTSOURCING
BY LEE ADENDORFF, in Lucca, Italy
OF the 3,000 students who will graduate from fashion school this year in the UK, only 500 will find jobs in the clothing and textile sector. They may be highly creative and excellent designers, but this is not always what the industry wants: many fashion producers say British graduates are ill-prepared to compete and adapt to a workplace characterised by overseas manufacturing bases, highly computerised environments and complex logistical production scenarios.…