Anonymous ID: 93aa43 April 8, 2019, 5:16 p.m. No.6102241   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2252

https://finance.yahoo.com/chart/DGATE.IS/

 

SRIKE

 

https://www.bloomberg.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapId=7704067

 

Denizbank Anonim Sirketi is a subsidiary of Sberbank of Russia.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sberbank_of_Russia

 

In December 2017, due to sanctions, Sberbank sold its Ukrainian subsidiary, "VS Bank" to Ukrainian businessman Serhiy Tihipko.

Anonymous ID: 93aa43 April 8, 2019, 5:25 p.m. No.6102321   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2396 >>2596 >>2623 >>2720

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ecuador-assange/ecuador-reserves-the-right-to-investigate-assange-foreign-minister-idUSKCN1RK22U

 

Ecuador reserves the right to investigate Assange: foreign minister

 

Assange, an Ecuadorian citizen, has lived in the country’s London embassy for nearly seven years. Moreno has said Assange has violated the terms of his asylum, but that the country has no imminent plan to expel him from the embassy.

 

The Ecuadorian government told the United Nations’ special rapporteur on the right to privacy last week that Wikileaks could be involved in the posting on social media of communications and photographs of Moreno and his family.

 

“Ecuador reserves the right to conduct investigations,” foreign minister Jose Valencia told reporters. “The state has the ability to assign and revise this diplomatic asylum; therefore we can conduct some investigations.”

 

“We have reports that he possibly has access (to the internet). This specifically determines the investigations that we will take forward,” Valencia said.

 

The investigation will be independent from the one conducted by the UN’s rapporteur, who is set to visit Assange in London on April 25, according to Valencia.

 

Assange says Ecuador is seeking to end his asylum, which began in 2012, by implicating him and Wikileaks in accusations of corruption leveled against Moreno and his family that have been shared on social media.

 

Assange’s lawyer in Ecuador, Carlos Poveda, has asked Ecuador to clarify if it is planning to terminate Assange’s asylum.

 

“That decision will be made between two options: continue asylum or revise the situation depending on the merits that may or may not exist,” Valencia said.

Anonymous ID: 93aa43 April 8, 2019, 5:34 p.m. No.6102408   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2417

https://outline.com/FCKXJA

 

Justin Trudeau just can’t quit the SNC-Lavalin scandal

 

The scandal was supposed to be squashed, story over, the damage done. But instead of closing the door on the political controversy that’s dogged his government for months, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has thrown it back open, keeping the story in the news for another week.

 

For months now, the ordinarily prime-time-ready prime minister has struggled to stay ahead of allegations that his team inappropriately pressured the woman who was then Canada’s first indigenous attorney general, Jody Wilson-Raybould, to defer the prosecution of an engineering firm from Trudeau’s home province of Quebec.

 

The story seemed to culminate last week with the ouster of Wilson-Raybould and another high-profile, female ally from Trudeau’s Liberal Party, in what the National Post, a conservative newspaper, called the “Tuesday night massacre.”

 

Trudeau, in announcing the move, tried to cast it as a simple matter of party discipline: They were disloyal, they’ve been expelled, it’s time to move on.

 

Or not. On Sunday, Conservative Party Leader Andrew Scheer held a news conference to announce that he had received a letter from Trudeau’s lawyer threatening to sue him for comments he made about the controversy. In the letter, dated March 31, attorney Julian Porter said criticisms in a Scheer news release two days earlier had gone “beyond the pale of fair debate and is libellous” and warned of possible action under Ontario’s Libel and Slander Act, according to Canadian media.

 

The news conference gave Scheer a jump-start on the news cycle and a chance to grandstand on the issue of the day. He told the cameras that he stood by every criticism Porter mentioned. He said he would welcome the chance to hear Trudeau’s sworn testimony in court — an “I double dare you to sue me” response that evoked some sort of comical, Canadian political duel.