Mugabe não deve falhar cimeira"
HÉLDER ROBALO
O histórico político moçambicano Marcelino dos Santos entende que "não deve haver qualquer impedimento à presença de nenhum chefe de Estado africano na cimeira entre a União Europeia e África, a realizar em Dezembro, tal como não deve suceder com nenhum líder europeu".
Numa altura em que o primeiro-ministro britânico, Gordon Brown, afirma que não irá à cimeira se o Presidente do Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe, estiver presente, o fundador da Frelimo disse ontem, numa conferência na Universidade Lusófona do Porto, que a Europa deve "aceitar aquilo que são as regras da União Africana".
Friday, July 27, 2007
Thursday, July 26, 2007
ESTES AGORA É QUE SÃO BONS...
Helena Loureiro, adjunta de Manuel Pinho, tem andado a distribuir cartões pessoais do Ministério da Economia com a menção expressa de que é “vice-presidente da Comissão Permanente de Contrapartidas (CPC)”, um cargo inexistente no estatuto da CPC e para cujo organismo o ministro da Economia nunca nomeou a sua adjunta, apesar de esta responsável exercer funções na CPC desde Junho de 2005. Confrontado pelo CM com a existência de tais cartões, Manuel Pinho, garantindo desconhecer esta realidade, decidiu demitir Helena Loureiro na noite de terça-feira passada.
Em resposta às questões do CM, o ministro da Economia foi peremptório: “Dados os factos relatados, a dra. Helena Loureiro cessou funções no MEI.” Manuel Pinho reconhece que a sua antiga adjunta “acompanhava as actividades da CPC a nível do Ministério, chefiando uma equipa técnica”.
O ministro frisa que “Helena Loureiro nunca assinou qualquer contrato vinculativo em nome da CPC” e garante que não tinha conhecimento dos cartões.
Várias fontes asseguram que Helena Loureiro se apresentava como “vice-presidente da CPC” desde pelo menos 2006. E garante-se que “quem a apresentou como vice-presidente da CPC foi Manuel Pinho”. Ainda esta semana fonte do Ministério da Economia dizia que “ela [Helena Loureiro] era vice-presidente, mas agora não é e continua a desempenhar as mesmas funções [na CPC]”.
A ex-adjunta de Pinho representava o Ministério da Economia na CPC desde Junho de 2005, mas nunca foi nomeada. O ministro reconhece que “até ao presente apenas está nomeado o presidente da CPC, embaixador Pedro Catarino, e um vogal não executivo em representação do Ministério das Finanças”. E “pretende-se que os restantes dois dirigentes executivos da CPC sejam nomeados simultaneamente pelos respectivos membros do Governo”.
O ex-presidente da CPC, Rui Neves, diz que “ela [Helena Loureiro] nunca foi nomeada porque esteve sempre à espera da reestruturação [da CPC]”, na expectativa de ser nomeada presidente. Ontem, o presidente da CPC lamentou a cessação de funções de Helena Loureiro, dada a sua “inexcedível dedicação ao trabalho na CPC, a sua elevada competência técnica e a sua integridade e impecáveis qualidades morais”.
"NÃO TINHA CONHECIMENTO" (Manuel Pinho, ministro da Economia)
Correio da Manhã – Sabia que Helena Loureiro distribuía cartões do Ministério da Economia como sendo vice-presidente da CPC?
Manuel Pinho – O ministro da Economia delegou a competência da CPC no secretário de Estado Adjunto e da Indústria, Castro Guerra. Nem o secretário de Estado nem o ministro tinham conhecimento do uso de cartões na referida qualidade.
– É verdade que o ministro da Economia apresentou Helena Loureiro aos jornalistas, na tomada de posse do presidente da CPC, como vice-presidente da CPC.
– Não há memória de tal apresentação, porque na nova legislação não está previsto um lugar de vice-presidente, mas apenas um presidente e quatro vogais, sendo dois deles executivos.
COMISSÃO DEFRAUDA EXPECTATIVAS
A Comissão Permanente de Contrapartidas (CPC) funciona, desde o início de Janeiro, apenas com um responsável executivo: o presidente, embaixador Pedro Catarino. Os vogais dos ministérios da Economia e da Defesa, que são permanentes, e da Ciência e Tecnologia não foram nomeados.
Face a isto, Henrique Neto, ex-deputado do PS e presidente de uma empresa com ligações às contrapartidas, diz que, “na prática, continua a não haver CPC porque só o presidente está nomeado”. E diz que “o problema das contrapartidas continua a ser um escândalo inacreditável”.
Outro responsável ligado a este meio vai mais longe: “O caso dos cartões [de Helena Loureiro] é desleixo político, porque o mais grave é que a CPC não existe.”
António Sérgio Azenha
Em resposta às questões do CM, o ministro da Economia foi peremptório: “Dados os factos relatados, a dra. Helena Loureiro cessou funções no MEI.” Manuel Pinho reconhece que a sua antiga adjunta “acompanhava as actividades da CPC a nível do Ministério, chefiando uma equipa técnica”.
O ministro frisa que “Helena Loureiro nunca assinou qualquer contrato vinculativo em nome da CPC” e garante que não tinha conhecimento dos cartões.
Várias fontes asseguram que Helena Loureiro se apresentava como “vice-presidente da CPC” desde pelo menos 2006. E garante-se que “quem a apresentou como vice-presidente da CPC foi Manuel Pinho”. Ainda esta semana fonte do Ministério da Economia dizia que “ela [Helena Loureiro] era vice-presidente, mas agora não é e continua a desempenhar as mesmas funções [na CPC]”.
A ex-adjunta de Pinho representava o Ministério da Economia na CPC desde Junho de 2005, mas nunca foi nomeada. O ministro reconhece que “até ao presente apenas está nomeado o presidente da CPC, embaixador Pedro Catarino, e um vogal não executivo em representação do Ministério das Finanças”. E “pretende-se que os restantes dois dirigentes executivos da CPC sejam nomeados simultaneamente pelos respectivos membros do Governo”.
O ex-presidente da CPC, Rui Neves, diz que “ela [Helena Loureiro] nunca foi nomeada porque esteve sempre à espera da reestruturação [da CPC]”, na expectativa de ser nomeada presidente. Ontem, o presidente da CPC lamentou a cessação de funções de Helena Loureiro, dada a sua “inexcedível dedicação ao trabalho na CPC, a sua elevada competência técnica e a sua integridade e impecáveis qualidades morais”.
"NÃO TINHA CONHECIMENTO" (Manuel Pinho, ministro da Economia)
Correio da Manhã – Sabia que Helena Loureiro distribuía cartões do Ministério da Economia como sendo vice-presidente da CPC?
Manuel Pinho – O ministro da Economia delegou a competência da CPC no secretário de Estado Adjunto e da Indústria, Castro Guerra. Nem o secretário de Estado nem o ministro tinham conhecimento do uso de cartões na referida qualidade.
– É verdade que o ministro da Economia apresentou Helena Loureiro aos jornalistas, na tomada de posse do presidente da CPC, como vice-presidente da CPC.
– Não há memória de tal apresentação, porque na nova legislação não está previsto um lugar de vice-presidente, mas apenas um presidente e quatro vogais, sendo dois deles executivos.
COMISSÃO DEFRAUDA EXPECTATIVAS
A Comissão Permanente de Contrapartidas (CPC) funciona, desde o início de Janeiro, apenas com um responsável executivo: o presidente, embaixador Pedro Catarino. Os vogais dos ministérios da Economia e da Defesa, que são permanentes, e da Ciência e Tecnologia não foram nomeados.
Face a isto, Henrique Neto, ex-deputado do PS e presidente de uma empresa com ligações às contrapartidas, diz que, “na prática, continua a não haver CPC porque só o presidente está nomeado”. E diz que “o problema das contrapartidas continua a ser um escândalo inacreditável”.
Outro responsável ligado a este meio vai mais longe: “O caso dos cartões [de Helena Loureiro] é desleixo político, porque o mais grave é que a CPC não existe.”
António Sérgio Azenha
SALAZAR
Nostalgia for António de Oliveira Salazar divides the Portuguese
By Dan Bilefsky
Monday, July 23, 2007
SANTA COMBA DÃO, Portugal: When the Portuguese recently voted the former dictator António de Oliveira Salazar "the greatest Portuguese who ever lived" in a television show - passing over the most celebrated kings, poets and explorers in the nation's thousand-year history - the broadcaster RTP braced itself for a strong reaction. But what ensued resembled a national identity crisis.
First the left howled in protest, demanding to know how a man who sent his enemies to concentration camps in Africa could be revered by a modern European nation. Then the ruling Socialist government spun into denial, saying the vote was unrepresentative because viewers could vote multiple times from different phone lines - as many did.
One irate viewer wrote to the channel's Web site saying: "Only masochists, imbeciles or the insane could have voted for this executioner." Others said the result was a fitting rebuke from a country lagging behind the rest of the continent.
The show "Great Portuguese," in which Salazar received 41 percent of the 159,245 votes cast, was based on the BBC show "Great Britons," which has spawned imitators across the world. Winston Churchill won on the British version of the show, while in the United States Ronald Reagan controversially edged out Abraham Lincoln.
But no country experienced the frenzy of recrimination that engulfed Portugal, where Salazar beat nine other finalists, including the explorer Vasco da Gama, who discovered the sea route to India, and Aristides de Sousa Mendes, a diplomat who saved thousands of Jews during World War II.
Salazar's prospects may have been helped by RTP initially omitting his name from the contest, a move that provoked a massive pro-Salazar campaign in the blogosphere, where many protested that politically correct forces were trying to gloss over the country's past.
Whatever the intrigue behind the voting, Fernando Dacosta, a biographer of Salazar, calls his victory the "Portuguese revenge" for disillusionment with the revolution of April 25, 1974, which overthrew the dictatorship but failed to deliver on its own promises. Today, Portugal is the poorest country in Western Europe, and its recent history is marred by corruption scandals.
"The Portuguese don't want to have Salazar back from the dead," says Dacosta, who was jailed several times as a student during the Salazar regime. "But they miss the dream they had in the past about a future that never came."
He said nostalgia for Salazar also reflected the "saudade," or longing, of the Portuguese soul, a melancholy, he noted, that is present in most things Portuguese like the existential angst of fado music.
Salazar's ghost is everywhere in Santa Comba Dão, the dictator's birthplace, a dusty agricultural town about 200 kilometers, or 125 miles, north of Lisbon.
Such is the taboo associated with the former dictatorship that there are few visible signs of the town's most famous son. The modest house where Salazar lived sits crumbling and empty, the only signpost a tiny plaque on the façade saying: "a gentle man who governed and never robbed."
"It is shame that such a great man is treated like this," Idalina Da Conceicão, 75, a neighbor, shouted down from her window next to Salazar's home. "If Salazar was bad, the people who run the country today are even worse."
Miguel Arriaga, a 17-year old engineering student, said he voted twice for Salazar because today's Portugal was "godless" and bereft of values and purpose.
The television contest may help Santa Comba Dão to resurrect Salazar from the shadows of history - in addition to providing a commercial opportunity.
For 30 years, a bust of Salazar's head has been hidden away in the city hall's attic after the rest of the statue was blown up during the revolution. Now the mayor wants to resurrect the statue, next to a planned Salazar museum. Plans also are in the works for a Salazar gift shop, T-shirts and commemorative figurines.
"Whatever you think of Salazar, he ran the country for nearly 40 years, during which we were treated like children," said the mayor, João Lourenço, a conservative politician. "Now, we Portuguese have finally grown up and we need to confront our past."
In a potent sign that a historical reckoning is finally taking place, a new satirical play - "Salazar, the Musical" - is now drawing large crowds on a Lisbon stage.
On a recent night, the audience howled with laughter as the pious Salazar, who never married and was staunchly Catholic, was depicted as an ineffectual and lecherous womanizer who kills his mother, gropes dancing nuns and leaves the running of the country to his famously powerful secretary and housekeeper, Doña María.
José Pedro Vasconcelos, 29, and Miguel Melo, 40, the two actors who play Salazar and who co-wrote the play, say they felt compelled to stage the musical because Salazar was the last sacred cow in Portugal.
"Abortion is no longer a taboo. Homosexuality is no longer a taboo. Dope is not a taboo. Yet Salazar still gives us goose bumps," Vasconcelos said.
Some say the vote for Salazar was a backlash against the government of Prime Minister José Sócrates, 52, a Socialist, who has recently pushed through painful economic reforms. But in an interview with Sócrates at his modest official residence where Salazar once lived, Sócrates blamed the vote on the mobilization of a small fringe group of rightists.
"We are a modern European country," he said. "We voted 59 percent in favor of liberalizing abortion."
Salazar, Europe's longest-serving dictator, became the strongman of the regime that overthrew an elected government in 1926. His New State initially brought economic stability and social order to Portugal. Many Portuguese still revere him for keeping the country out of World War II.
But his dark record includes the creation of a secret police force that tortured opponents, and widespread censorship that stifled cultural expression. He also is criticized for clinging to a crumbling empire.
Sociologists here say Salazar's popularity may also be part of a global trend in which economic insecurity and fears of international terrorism have created nostalgia for the authoritarianism of the past.
In Russia, where the standard of living collapsed after the breakup of the Soviet Union, one out of four Russians recently said they would vote for Stalin if he were running for office today.
When the Spanish government proposed ending all political tributes to Franco at his grave last year, it drew a strong and hostile response.
Adriano Moreira, 86, a former minister for overseas affairs under Salazar, argues that if today's Portuguese idealize Salazar, it is because he was not a fascist dictator, but rather a "soft authoritarian" and father figure who gave the country a strong sense of national identity. Independent historians say only 60 people died in jails for political reasons during Salazar's nearly 40-year regime.
Whatever the explanations for the late dictator's grip on the Portuguese psyche, Dacosta, his biographer, argues that both the young and older generations need to confront his ghost.
"Salazar is not an extraterrestrial who just landed here. He is part of the Portuguese soul," he said. "Until we come to terms with Salazar, we Portuguese will never be who we really are
A ESQUERDA JÁ FAZ "TEATRO" BOTA-ABAIXO...
By Dan Bilefsky
Monday, July 23, 2007
SANTA COMBA DÃO, Portugal: When the Portuguese recently voted the former dictator António de Oliveira Salazar "the greatest Portuguese who ever lived" in a television show - passing over the most celebrated kings, poets and explorers in the nation's thousand-year history - the broadcaster RTP braced itself for a strong reaction. But what ensued resembled a national identity crisis.
First the left howled in protest, demanding to know how a man who sent his enemies to concentration camps in Africa could be revered by a modern European nation. Then the ruling Socialist government spun into denial, saying the vote was unrepresentative because viewers could vote multiple times from different phone lines - as many did.
One irate viewer wrote to the channel's Web site saying: "Only masochists, imbeciles or the insane could have voted for this executioner." Others said the result was a fitting rebuke from a country lagging behind the rest of the continent.
The show "Great Portuguese," in which Salazar received 41 percent of the 159,245 votes cast, was based on the BBC show "Great Britons," which has spawned imitators across the world. Winston Churchill won on the British version of the show, while in the United States Ronald Reagan controversially edged out Abraham Lincoln.
But no country experienced the frenzy of recrimination that engulfed Portugal, where Salazar beat nine other finalists, including the explorer Vasco da Gama, who discovered the sea route to India, and Aristides de Sousa Mendes, a diplomat who saved thousands of Jews during World War II.
Salazar's prospects may have been helped by RTP initially omitting his name from the contest, a move that provoked a massive pro-Salazar campaign in the blogosphere, where many protested that politically correct forces were trying to gloss over the country's past.
Whatever the intrigue behind the voting, Fernando Dacosta, a biographer of Salazar, calls his victory the "Portuguese revenge" for disillusionment with the revolution of April 25, 1974, which overthrew the dictatorship but failed to deliver on its own promises. Today, Portugal is the poorest country in Western Europe, and its recent history is marred by corruption scandals.
"The Portuguese don't want to have Salazar back from the dead," says Dacosta, who was jailed several times as a student during the Salazar regime. "But they miss the dream they had in the past about a future that never came."
He said nostalgia for Salazar also reflected the "saudade," or longing, of the Portuguese soul, a melancholy, he noted, that is present in most things Portuguese like the existential angst of fado music.
Salazar's ghost is everywhere in Santa Comba Dão, the dictator's birthplace, a dusty agricultural town about 200 kilometers, or 125 miles, north of Lisbon.
Such is the taboo associated with the former dictatorship that there are few visible signs of the town's most famous son. The modest house where Salazar lived sits crumbling and empty, the only signpost a tiny plaque on the façade saying: "a gentle man who governed and never robbed."
"It is shame that such a great man is treated like this," Idalina Da Conceicão, 75, a neighbor, shouted down from her window next to Salazar's home. "If Salazar was bad, the people who run the country today are even worse."
Miguel Arriaga, a 17-year old engineering student, said he voted twice for Salazar because today's Portugal was "godless" and bereft of values and purpose.
The television contest may help Santa Comba Dão to resurrect Salazar from the shadows of history - in addition to providing a commercial opportunity.
For 30 years, a bust of Salazar's head has been hidden away in the city hall's attic after the rest of the statue was blown up during the revolution. Now the mayor wants to resurrect the statue, next to a planned Salazar museum. Plans also are in the works for a Salazar gift shop, T-shirts and commemorative figurines.
"Whatever you think of Salazar, he ran the country for nearly 40 years, during which we were treated like children," said the mayor, João Lourenço, a conservative politician. "Now, we Portuguese have finally grown up and we need to confront our past."
In a potent sign that a historical reckoning is finally taking place, a new satirical play - "Salazar, the Musical" - is now drawing large crowds on a Lisbon stage.
On a recent night, the audience howled with laughter as the pious Salazar, who never married and was staunchly Catholic, was depicted as an ineffectual and lecherous womanizer who kills his mother, gropes dancing nuns and leaves the running of the country to his famously powerful secretary and housekeeper, Doña María.
José Pedro Vasconcelos, 29, and Miguel Melo, 40, the two actors who play Salazar and who co-wrote the play, say they felt compelled to stage the musical because Salazar was the last sacred cow in Portugal.
"Abortion is no longer a taboo. Homosexuality is no longer a taboo. Dope is not a taboo. Yet Salazar still gives us goose bumps," Vasconcelos said.
Some say the vote for Salazar was a backlash against the government of Prime Minister José Sócrates, 52, a Socialist, who has recently pushed through painful economic reforms. But in an interview with Sócrates at his modest official residence where Salazar once lived, Sócrates blamed the vote on the mobilization of a small fringe group of rightists.
"We are a modern European country," he said. "We voted 59 percent in favor of liberalizing abortion."
Salazar, Europe's longest-serving dictator, became the strongman of the regime that overthrew an elected government in 1926. His New State initially brought economic stability and social order to Portugal. Many Portuguese still revere him for keeping the country out of World War II.
But his dark record includes the creation of a secret police force that tortured opponents, and widespread censorship that stifled cultural expression. He also is criticized for clinging to a crumbling empire.
Sociologists here say Salazar's popularity may also be part of a global trend in which economic insecurity and fears of international terrorism have created nostalgia for the authoritarianism of the past.
In Russia, where the standard of living collapsed after the breakup of the Soviet Union, one out of four Russians recently said they would vote for Stalin if he were running for office today.
When the Spanish government proposed ending all political tributes to Franco at his grave last year, it drew a strong and hostile response.
Adriano Moreira, 86, a former minister for overseas affairs under Salazar, argues that if today's Portuguese idealize Salazar, it is because he was not a fascist dictator, but rather a "soft authoritarian" and father figure who gave the country a strong sense of national identity. Independent historians say only 60 people died in jails for political reasons during Salazar's nearly 40-year regime.
Whatever the explanations for the late dictator's grip on the Portuguese psyche, Dacosta, his biographer, argues that both the young and older generations need to confront his ghost.
"Salazar is not an extraterrestrial who just landed here. He is part of the Portuguese soul," he said. "Until we come to terms with Salazar, we Portuguese will never be who we really are
A ESQUERDA JÁ FAZ "TEATRO" BOTA-ABAIXO...
ISTO SÓ SE RESOLVE COM UM DOUTORAMENTO
ly 2007 11:03 Home > News > Europe
Rival accuses Portuguese PM of lying about degree
By Elizabeth Nash in Madrid
Published: 23 July 2007
As Portugal takes centre stage as holder of the EU presidency for six months, the Prime Minister, Jose Socrates, is embroiled in a row over the authenticity of his university degree.
Antonio Balbino Caldeira, an activist in the conservative opposition Social Democratic Party, has posted alleged discrepancies about Mr Socrates' academic record on a blog. The claims have received massive press coverage, prompting Mr Socrates, 49, to sue Mr Caldeira for defamation. Meanwhile, a criminal investigation opened last month to establish whether the Prime Minister is guilty of using false academic titles.
The row focuses on whether Mr Socrates completed the necessary coursework at Lisbon's private Universidade Independente to justify his use of the esteemed title, "Engineer". The issue is particularly sensitive as Portugal strives to relaunch the EU's stalled "Lisbon agenda", which aims to combat economic stagnation caused by poor schooling.
Mr Socrates took three weeks to answer the allegations, prompting newspapers to uncover several inconsistencies in the awarding of the degree. Journalists found that qualifications awarded did not follow procedure and that four of the five courses were given by the same professor, Antonio Jose Moraes, a socialist government appointee. Details emerged when the government closed down the Independent University in April amid allegations of mismanagement and the misuse of funds.
Mr Socrates joined the university in 1995 and received his degree in 1996, when he was secretary of state for the environment. But in his official biographyMr Socrates claimed to have already obtained the coveted qualification of engineer. He later admitted that was a "lapse", and the government website altered his CV this year, downgrading "Civil Engineer" to "Diploma in Civil Engineering". Such distinctions are hugely important in a country where titles of engineer or doctor are prized as a passport to high office.
The saga throws doubt on Mr Socrates' personal integrity, and consolidates the dismal reputation of politicians among ordinary Portuguese. The indifference with which the allegations were received by most opposition MPs (they say it is a personal matter) fuel suspicions that Mr Socrates is not the only one to profess academic qualifications yet to be received.
Rival accuses Portuguese PM of lying about degree
By Elizabeth Nash in Madrid
Published: 23 July 2007
As Portugal takes centre stage as holder of the EU presidency for six months, the Prime Minister, Jose Socrates, is embroiled in a row over the authenticity of his university degree.
Antonio Balbino Caldeira, an activist in the conservative opposition Social Democratic Party, has posted alleged discrepancies about Mr Socrates' academic record on a blog. The claims have received massive press coverage, prompting Mr Socrates, 49, to sue Mr Caldeira for defamation. Meanwhile, a criminal investigation opened last month to establish whether the Prime Minister is guilty of using false academic titles.
The row focuses on whether Mr Socrates completed the necessary coursework at Lisbon's private Universidade Independente to justify his use of the esteemed title, "Engineer". The issue is particularly sensitive as Portugal strives to relaunch the EU's stalled "Lisbon agenda", which aims to combat economic stagnation caused by poor schooling.
Mr Socrates took three weeks to answer the allegations, prompting newspapers to uncover several inconsistencies in the awarding of the degree. Journalists found that qualifications awarded did not follow procedure and that four of the five courses were given by the same professor, Antonio Jose Moraes, a socialist government appointee. Details emerged when the government closed down the Independent University in April amid allegations of mismanagement and the misuse of funds.
Mr Socrates joined the university in 1995 and received his degree in 1996, when he was secretary of state for the environment. But in his official biographyMr Socrates claimed to have already obtained the coveted qualification of engineer. He later admitted that was a "lapse", and the government website altered his CV this year, downgrading "Civil Engineer" to "Diploma in Civil Engineering". Such distinctions are hugely important in a country where titles of engineer or doctor are prized as a passport to high office.
The saga throws doubt on Mr Socrates' personal integrity, and consolidates the dismal reputation of politicians among ordinary Portuguese. The indifference with which the allegations were received by most opposition MPs (they say it is a personal matter) fuel suspicions that Mr Socrates is not the only one to profess academic qualifications yet to be received.
AINDA BEM QUE PORTUGAL NÃO TEM "CENTRE FERMÉ"...
Un président en exercice a, le 17 juillet, tenté personnellement d'obtenir la libération de deux de ses ressortissantes. Rafael Correa, chef de l'Etat équatorien, s'est rendu en personne dans un "centre fermé" belge, le "127 bis" de Steenokkerzeel, un lieu où sont incarcérés des immigrés clandestins en attente d'expulsion.
DAMOS LIÇÕES AO MUNDO.SOMOS HUMANISTAS.ACOLHEMOS TODA A BANDIDAGEM QUE NOS PROCURE.DEIXAMOS QUE ANDEM A ENVENENAR CENTENAS DE MILHAR DE CIDADÃOS NACIONAIS...A ROUBAR À VONTADE, SEMPRE COM UM JUIZ A DETERMINAR TUDO.PENA QUE OS "QUE NOS ESCOLHEM" NÃO LIGUEM NENHUMA ÀS SUAS DETERMINAÇÕES...
PENA O RESULTADO ECONÓMICO...
DAMOS LIÇÕES AO MUNDO.SOMOS HUMANISTAS.ACOLHEMOS TODA A BANDIDAGEM QUE NOS PROCURE.DEIXAMOS QUE ANDEM A ENVENENAR CENTENAS DE MILHAR DE CIDADÃOS NACIONAIS...A ROUBAR À VONTADE, SEMPRE COM UM JUIZ A DETERMINAR TUDO.PENA QUE OS "QUE NOS ESCOLHEM" NÃO LIGUEM NENHUMA ÀS SUAS DETERMINAÇÕES...
PENA O RESULTADO ECONÓMICO...
BANCO PARA TODO O SERVIÇO E PARA TODO O TIPO DE CLIENTELA
Economia
2007-07-26 - 00:00:00
Bolsa
BES é o mais lucrativo
Ricardo Espírito Santo Salgado
O BES – Banco Espírito Santo lucrou 366,8 milhões de euros no primeiro semestre do corrente ano, mais 82,8 por cento que no mesmo período de 2006.
A progressão do resultado líquido da instituição financeira presidida por Ricardo Espírito Santo Salgado foi acima da expectativa dos analistas. Dos bancos portugueses, o BES passou a ser o mais lucrativo, destronando o BCP.
2007-07-26 - 00:00:00
Bolsa
BES é o mais lucrativo
Ricardo Espírito Santo Salgado
O BES – Banco Espírito Santo lucrou 366,8 milhões de euros no primeiro semestre do corrente ano, mais 82,8 por cento que no mesmo período de 2006.
A progressão do resultado líquido da instituição financeira presidida por Ricardo Espírito Santo Salgado foi acima da expectativa dos analistas. Dos bancos portugueses, o BES passou a ser o mais lucrativo, destronando o BCP.
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