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Τρίτη 28 Μαΐου 2013

Μερκελ και Διαφθορα Γερμανικων Εταιριων


EINAI ΚΑΘΑΡΟΙ ΟΙ ΓΕΡΜΑΝΟΙ. ΕΙΔΙΚΑ Η ΜΕΡΚΕΛ. ΕΧΟΥΝ ΝΟΜΟΥΣ ΚΑΤΑ ΤΗΣ ΔΙΑΦΘΟΡΑΣ ΑΛΛΑ Η ΜΕΡΚΕΛ ΟΠΩΣ ΒΛΕΠΕΤΕ ΔΕΝ ΠΕΡΑΣΕ ΤΗΝ ΝΟΜΟΘΕΣΙΑ ΝΑ ΒΓΕΙ Η ΛΙΣΤΑ ΤΩΝ ΔΙΑΦΘΑΡΜΕΝΩΝ ΓΕΡΜΑΝΙΚΩΝ ΕΤΑΙΡΙΩΝ. !!! ΕΔΩ ΒΕΒΑΙΑ ΣΤΟ ΕΛΛΑΔΙΣΤΑΝ ΕΙΜΑΣΤΕ ΟΛΟΙ ΣΤΟ ΚΛΑΡΙ, ΕΝ ΔΥΝΑΜΕΙ ΕΓΚΛΗΜΑΤΙΕΣ ΚΑΤΩ ΑΠΟ ΓΕΡΜΑΝΙΚΗ ΦΟΡΟΛΟΓΙΚΗ ΝΟΜΟΘΕΣΙΑ ΕΛΛΑΔΑΣ. ΕΝΑ ΜΕΓΑΛΟ ΜΠΡΑΒΟ ΣΕ ΣΑΜΑΡΟΜΠΕΝΟΚΟΥΒΕΛΗΔΕΣ ΚΑΙ ΤΣΙΠΡΕΣ ΚΑΙ ΑΝΤΙΠΟΛΙΤΕΥΣΗ !!
2010 Investment Climate Statement – Germany
2010 Investment Climate Statement
Bureau of Economic, Energy and Business Affairs
March 2010
Report
http://www.state.gov/e/eb/rls/othr/ics/2010/138071.htm

Corruption
Germany ratified the 1998 OECD Anti-Bribery Convention in February 1999, thereby criminalizing bribery of foreign public officials by German citizens and firms abroad.
Opinions differ, however, on the effectiveness of these steps, particularly in the area of foreign corruption. German industry – while generally in favor of creating a central, national-level register of corrupt companies that would be barred from bidding for public contracts – refrained from openly calling for its creation out of fear of an added regulatory burden. Draft legislation to create such a register passed the lower chamber of the German Parliament but was blocked by opposition parties in the upper chamber in 2002.
The CDU-SPD Government, which took power in November 2005, did not include a similar initiative in its program.Nevertheless, some individual states maintain their own registers. Transparency Deutschland, the German Chapter of Transparency International, sees a national corruption register as one of its main goals in Germany and a speedy ratification of the UN Anti-Corruption Convention placing bribery of parliamentarians on the same level as bribery of public officials. Federal freedom of information legislation entered into force in January 2006 but is seen by many as ineffective. Several states have introduced their own freedom of information laws.
The German government has successfully prosecuted hundreds of domestic corruption cases over the years. To date, only a small number of charges have been filed involving the bribery of foreign government officials since the 1999 changes in German law to comply with the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention were enacted. However, the corruption scandal involving Siemens AG with its ongoing litigation and fines and the agreement with the Securities & Exchange Commission on an $800 million fine focused attention on foreign bribery for the first time.
ΠΠ
www.olympia.gr

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