We can make it within a weeek. Swiss bankres achieve the same within a year.
We can take your money for one week. We return the money along with percentage,
which is very high (15% for one week). After one week (7 days) the money will
be in your hands again. Online access gives you permanent control on money.
With respect to your person we would like to |et you know that the new
c|ients join us every day. We have over 2,000 people working
with us, and each of them is grateful for what we are doing. Personal
experience is more important than any theoretical advice.
Our business is based on the most reliable asset in the world, which
is a propetry of course. We provide |ega| guarantee for each dea|, but
if you would like to try something more than that, then be infomred that our company is the
only in this world who offer the very special T-option. Many people
are working hard trying to receive 10-12 percent per year. You can get such
money for one week. We do not mean that you should trust your money
for a long period. Instead we take your money for one week,
returning them on your account along with percetnage when the week is
over. Percentage is very high (15% for one week), but the T-option
itse|f exists for the purpose of showing our clients the highest
quality of our services and for getting them used to our business. We
exsit for a long time now and there is no any menace for you in making
such deal. After 7 days we return the money back. You can stay with us
or leave us after that, but the most impotrant thing for us is the
knowlegde that the client keeps good imperssions about our company.
Please do not hesitate to cotnact us if you have any questions.
http:// url deleted by GK 'cos you never know…
PS>Thank you for reading, the rest of the mail is purely technical.
“With the 10th memorial of Srebrenica approaching in July, Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic must be brought to justice,” Commissioner Rehn went on. “That is the only way to achieve reconciliation and move forward towards EU accession.”
Freedom, Justice and Security: time for action!
The European Commission has allocated _500,000 to emergency measures aimed at preventing the spread of the Marburg virus in Angola. The province of Uige in the north of the country has been struck by a serious outbreak of the deadly haemorrhagic disease which has a mortality rate of more than 90 percent. The aid is being provided through ECHO, the Commission’s Humanitarian Aid department, which comes under the responsibility of Commissioner Louis Michel. It involves the use of the fast-track ‘primary emergency’ procedure that enables a speedy humanitarian response in sudden onset crises. The funds are being channelled through Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), Spain and will cover a series of measures such as the provision of protective suits, gloves and goggles (that must be destroyed after exposure to the infected area), chlorine for water purification, water tanks and containers, intravenous fluids and powerful antibiotics. The decision also involves support for epidemiologi!
cal investigation and the quarantining of patients.
The European Commission gave Serbia and Montenegro the green light to start talks on a Stabilisation and Association Agreement (SAA) with the European Union. The agreement would form the first legal step on the road to accession.
Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas was awarded the Mies van der Rohe Prize, one of the most prestigious of all European architecture prizes, on 11 April. The work honoured by the panel of judges was the Dutch Embassy in Berlin. The biannual prize, established in 2001 by the Commission and the Mies van der Rohe Foundation, rewards excellence and innovation in the conceptual, technical and constructional qualities of European works. Created within the framework of the European Culture 2000 programme, and with a prize of _50 000 and a sculpture by the Catalan artist Xavier Corbero, the competition is aimed at both experienced and novice architects. “The projects nominated for this prize illustrate the cultural importance of architecture to the everyday lives of Europeans, as they combine functionality with beauty,” said Jan Figel, Commissioner in charge of education and culture, at the ceremony that took place in Barcelona. An international panel of nine judges chose the winner from !
a list of five finalists that included - besides the Dutch embassy in Berlin - the Swiss Re Headquarters in London, the Selfridges & Co department store in Birmingham, the Forum 2004 esplanade in Barcelona and the Braga municipal stadium in Portugal.
Water is essential for life. Yet many millions of people around the world face water shortages. On the occasion of World Water Day, on 22 March, the United Nations launched the international decade of water - Water is Life (2005-2015). The goal is to meet the internationally agreed targets for water and sanitation by 2015, and to build the foundation for further progress in the years beyond. The EU has long been concerned about water shortage and has launched numerous projects and policies to fight this problem inside and outside its territory. In matters of environment the EU adopted a framework directive in 2000 to protect inland surface waters, transitional waters, coastal waters and groundwater against pollution. The EU also plans to set up a thematic strategy on the protection and the conservation of the marine environment. Outside its borders the EU launched in 2002 the European Water Initiative aiming to improve access to drinking water and sanitation in developing co!
untries, and a EU water facility for ACP (African, Caribbean and Pacific) countries with a budget of _500 million.
In the reviewed strategy, policy cohesion has been reinforced and ownership renewed to better include stakeholders. As a matter of fact, environment policies do not go without social and economic concerns, and the EU needs the participation of the business world to take up environmental challenges.
Sustainable development encompasses almost all policy areas of the European Union; climate change, public health, poverty, social exclusion, ageing, globalisation, trade policies, development, to name only a few, all fall under the Sustainable Development Strategy.