Wednesday, March 9, 2011

COMO SOMOS ENRIQUECIDOS

Seixal
Juízes sob protecção contra Máfia brasileira

Segurança 24 horas por risco associado ao grupo de Sandro Bala.

TRANSFORMAR O BOM SELVAGEM, EDUCAR A DIFERENÇA, CONSTRUIR O IMPÉRIO DO BEM FOI A MISSÃO QUE A SI PRÓPRIA SE IMPÔS A MAIS VOLUMOSA "NUMENKLATURA" GOVERNATIVA QUE ALGUMA VEZ HOUVE EM PORTUGAL.E QUE SÓ POR SI "DERRUBAVA" O PAÍS...MESMO SEM "INTERNACIONALISMO"!

O MILAGRE DAS ESCALAS DOS PROCESSOS

Processo disciplinar
Freeport: Procuradores em risco de suspensão

Ex-ministro do PS vai ser o relator do acórdão.

DEPOIS DO MILAGRE DE FÁTIMA É O QUE MAIS TEMOS.A "JUSTIÇA" QUE DEVERIA SER APARTIDÁRIA MINADA PELOS PARTIDOS QUE "DISTRIBUEM" AS MORDOMIAS COMO SE DÁ CENOURAS AOS ELEFANTES DO JARDIM ZOOLÓGICO...
A ALGUNS NEM É PRECISO DAR NADA.SÃO "ANTIFASSISTAS" A MALHAR NAS DIREITAS(?) OU NO CAPITAL...E SEMPRE COM OS "AVANÇOS"!

COMO OS ACOLHIDOS PAGAM A MELHOR RECEPÇÃO DO MUNDO

GNR usou agente infiltrado para deter traficantes
Dois marroquinos apontados como cabecilhas de redeforam apanhados ao trazer carga de haxixe para Portugal
00h23m
NUNO SILVA

A GNR recorreu a um agente encoberto para deter dois comerciantes marroquinos, alegados cabecilhas de uma rede de tráfico de haxixe que abastecia o Grande Porto e com ligações a Espanha. Ministério Público de Vila do Conde acusou 13 indivíduos.

A intervenção do "infiltrado" - uma figura prevista na lei, que está normalmente associada às investigações da Polícia Judiciária - cingiu-se a alguns dias, os suficientes para apurar que os dois principais suspeitos se preparavam para trazer um novo carregamento de droga para Portugal. A entrega iria concretizar-se no dia 22 de Dezembro do ano passado, junto ao supermercado Pingo Doce, em Grijó, Gaia. Foi travada pelo Núcleo de Investigação Criminal (NIC) da GNR de Matosinhos.

EM SÍNTESE É ASSIM:PAQUISTANESES IMPORTAM HEROÍNA, GUINEENSES E CABO-VERDIANOS COCAÍNA.OUTROS AMERICANOS É MAIS COCA.EM QUANTIDADE.VIVEM EM BAIRRO SOCIAL, VÃO MUITAS VEZES À TERRINHA BUSCAR A MERCADORIA QUE VÃO VENDENDO AOS ARRUMADORES DE CARROS, AOS FREQUENTADORES DAS DISCOTECAS, BARES IN, CASTINGS, E EM CERTAS REDACÇÕES DE JORNAIS QUE PELO TEOR DAS "NOTÍCIAS" SÓ PODEM ANDAR DROGADOS.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

QUANTOS EX-GUERRILHEIROS INDEPENDENTISTAS SÃO JÁ NOVAMENTE "PORTUGUESES"?

Le centre se mobilise contre la déchéance de nationalité

Soixante-huit députés de la majorité, dont Jean-Louis Borloo, ont cosigné un amendement de suppression.

Décriée à gauche, dénoncée par une partie de la droite, l'extension de la déchéance de nationalité aux assassins de policiers va dominer les débats sur l'immigration qui reprennent cet après-midi à l'Assemblée nationale. L'exercice s'annonce d'autant plus délicat pour le nouveau ministre de l'Intérieur, Claude Guéant, qu'une partie de la majorité se braque contre cette mesure qui répond au vœu exprimé par Nicolas Sarkozy dans son discours de Grenoble du 30 juillet.

Mais, depuis, le départ de Jean-Louis Borloo du gouvernement et la volonté de réunir les centres dans une confédération pour contrer l'aile droitière de la majorité ont modifié le climat politique. Soixante-huit députés de la majorité (UMP, ex-UDF, radicaux et Nouveau Centre), dont Jean-Louis Borloo et Hervé Morin, ont cosigné un amendement pour supprimer cette mesure, votée à l'Assemblée le 30 septembre, retoquée au Sénat le 4 février, puis rétablie par la commission des lois de l'Assemblée.

« Une citoyenneté conditionnelle »

OS EX-LAVA PRATOS IMPORTARAM AS BASES DE GUERRILHA CÁ PARA DENTRO.E NÃO PARAM DE GRITAR QUE NÃO LHES PODE FALTAR MUNIÇÃO E CADERNOS...QUE OBVIAMENTE SÃO PAGOS PELO INDIGENATO DESLUMBRADO PELO NOVO IMPÉRIO EM CONSTRUÇÃO.EM QUE SÓ ELES PAGAM...
SIM PORQUE SÓ IMPORTAM OS POBREZINHOS.OS RICOS NÃO GOSTAM DE PAISES SOCIALISTAS-INTERNACIONALISTAS...
AGORA CALCULEM QUANTO CUSTA TRATAR DE 10% DA ACTUAL POPULAÇÃO E CONCLUAM COMO É QUE NÃO TINHAM QUE ESTAR COMO ESTÃO...

Monday, March 7, 2011

LÍDER NAS FRAUDES NA SAÚDE?MAS CONSEGUIMOS QUE AS ATÉ HAJA MULHERES A PARIR DUAS VEZES POR ANO.QUEM É QUE MAIS CONSEGUE?

Portugal é líder nas fraudes no sector da Saúde
por Cláudia Reis, Publicado em 07 de Março de 2011 | Actualizado há 2 horas



Portugal é líder no que respeita a fraudes na área da Saúde. Estima-se que as fraudes custem ao Estado mais de 80 milhões de euros por ano. Os dados foram revelados pela Rede Europeia de Combate à Fraude e Corrupção no sector da Saúde, refere o Correio da Manhã.


Num total de 23 países, Portugal encontra-se no topo do ranking, seguido pela Finlândia, com 722 milhões de euros e a Irlanda, com 709 milhões de euros. Recentemente, uma investigação levou à detenção de 14 médicos, acusados de falsificação de receitas e de uso indevido do nome dos doentes.


De acordo com este estudo, as fraudes resultaram da actividade de vários intervenientes desde o doente ao médico, passando pelos fornecedores de serviços, farmacêuticos, laboratórios e instituições da área da saúde.


Paul Vincke, presidente da Rede Europeia de Combate à Fraude e Corrupção, disse que o dinheiro que se perde com as fraudes na Europa dava para pagar um ano de salários a 2,5 milhões de enfermeiros.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

FELIZMENTE QUE OS PANELEIROS JÁ SE PODEM CASAR...














Portugal hovers on the verge of crisis as eurozone argues over integration

Portugal's cost of borrowing is now over 7% and analysts believe a bailout is just weeks away. But help from the EU may be delayed by a damaging row over closer economic co-operation



Greece, Ireland, Portugal bond yields View larger picture Portugal's bond yields have now risen above 7%. Click to enlarge.

Ireland's election winner, Enda Kenny, jetted off to Helsinki this weekend to lobby for a reduction to the swingeing interest payments on its €85bn bailout, and for a more hands-off approach from Brussels on spending cuts.

Kenny, who is finalising a coalition that would make him Ireland's new prime minister, hopes that backing from the rightwing EU leaders' meeting in Finland, which Germany's Angela Merkel will be attending, will strengthen his hand at a critical summit in Brussels on Friday. But for the eurozone's leaders, Ireland's anger is just one symptom of a deeper crisis.

Portugal, long considered likely to be the next European country to reach crisis point, with its hefty debt burden and struggling economy, is seeing yields on its government bonds rise above 7% (see chart) – something that, as City consultancy Fathom points out, Greece and Ireland were only able to withstand for a couple of weeks before accepting a bailout.

Meanwhile, European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet has ratcheted up the pressure by signalling that he is ready to raise interest rates, making life even harder for Portugal and the other "peripheral" economies. "What this has done is make it much more likely that Portugal is going to have to ask for finance," says David Owen of City firm Jefferies.

Yet with Portugal's plight becoming urgent, the EU remains locked in a row about who should pay the price for the boom and bust of the past decade.

Officially, Friday's summit is to discuss proposals for a "competitiveness pact". A controversial first draft of the pact was presented by German chancellor Angela Merkel and French president Nicolas Sarkozy last month; it would have allowed Europe's giant Financial Stability Facility to pour money into Portugal in exchange for eurozone member states signing up to much closer co-ordination of economic policy on issues including corporation tax, wage bargaining and the retirement age.

However, most other eurozone countries – including the Irish, who want to hang on to their ultra-competitive 12.5% corporation tax rate – reacted furiously to the Franco-German proposals, which they saw as threatening their sovereignty.

In an effort to pick up the pieces, a compromise proposal has been drawn up that will be discussed at this week's summit. But analysts remain concerned that it fails to tackle the real issues.

Away from the political top table, it is widely believed that there will have to be a restructuring of some of the debts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal – in other words, an acceptance that creditors, including Germany's banks, won't get all their money back.

"In the short term, the existential threat is the financial crisis. Dealing with that will have to involve reducing the debt burden on the three small states [Greece, Ireland and Portugal], and moving to recapitalise the banks in the periphery, and in the core," says Simon Tilford, chief economist at the Centre for European Reform.

Owen at Jefferies agrees that the banks in the wealthier "core" states of France and Germany are painfully exposed. "Some of the big holders of Portugal, Ireland and Greek paper are the banks, and the banks are in the core. Everyone is exposed to everyone else. That's why this problem is so intractable, and it's not in anyone's interests for anyone to default."

Europe's leaders are well aware of the scrutiny they face from the markets, so they are likely to cook up some kind of deal this week; but without solid proposals for a Portuguese bailout and a wider debt restructuring, the eurozone will be left stumbling towards its next crisis. "I think this could potentially be a very tricky month for the euro – it's a car crash waiting to happen," says Michael Derks of foreign exchange broker FxPro. "I think Portugal is weeks away, and I think Portugal will be the trigger."

Time and again since the onset of the credit crunch, European leaders have struggled to co-ordinate a convincing response to events, eventually being forced to act by financial markets. "It's Groundhog Day," says Owen.

There is another major summit on 24 March, but by then time will be running out for Portugal. Kenny may win a hint of concessions in Brussels next week, but wrangling over a few million euros with Dublin will be the least of the eurozone's worries.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

MODERADOS E DEMOCRATAS MAS NÃO TANTO...

Nearly 4000 Muslims Attack Christian Homes in Egypt, Torch Church
Posted GMT 3-5-2011 4:20:16



(AINA) -- A mob of nearly four thousand Muslims has attacked Coptic homes this evening in the village of Soul, Atfif in Helwan Governorate, 30 kilometers from Cairo, and torched the Church of St. Mina and St. George. There are conflicting reports about the whereabouts of the Church pastor Father Yosha and three deacons who were at church; some say they died in the fire and some say they are being held captive by the Muslims inside the church.

Witnesses report the mob prevented the fire brigade from entering the village. The army, which has been stationed for the last two days in the village of Bromil, 7 kilometers from Soul, initially refused to go into Soul, according to the officer in charge. When the army finally sent three tanks to the village, Muslim elders sent them away, saying that everything was "in order now."

A curfew has been imposed on the 12,000 Christians in the village.

This incident was triggered by a relationship between 40-year-old Copt Ashraf Iskander and a Muslim woman. Yesterday a "reconciliation" meeting was arranged between the relevant Coptic and Muslim families and together with the Muslim elders it was decided that Ashraf Iskander would have to leave the village because Muslims torched his house.

The father of the Muslim woman was killed by his cousin because he did not kill his daughter to preserve the family's honor, which led the woman's brother to avenge the death of his father by killing the cousin. The village Muslims blamed the Christians.

The Muslim mob attacked the church, exploding 5-6 gas cylinders inside the church, pulled down the cross and the domes and burnt everything inside. Activist Ramy Kamel of Katibatibia Coptic advocacy called US-based Coptic Hope Sat TV and sent an SOS on behalf of the Copts in Soul village, as they are presently being attacked by the mob. He also said that no one is able to contact the priest and the deacons inside the burning church and there is no answer from their mobile phones.

Coptic activist Wagih Yacoub reported the mob has broken into Coptic homes and has called on Copts to leave the village. "Terrorized Copts have fled and some hid in homes of Muslim neighbors," he added.

Witnesses said the mob chanted "Allahu Akbar" and vowed to conduct their morning prayers on the church plot after razing it.

By Mary Abdelmassih