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EU suspends $90m aid to Honduras

breaking news

The European Union has suspended more than $90m (63m euros; £54m) in aid to Honduras in the wake of a coup there.

It follows the failure of talks to resolve the country’s political crisis.

President Manuel Zelaya was ousted from office by troops on 28 June over his plans to hold a referendum on changing the constitution.

The current interim government, led by Roberto Micheletti, has rejected a proposal that Mr Zelaya return as leader of a unity government. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Airport nightmare

By Jonathan Head
BBC News, Bangkok

Bangkok airport duty free

Bangkok’s showcase new international airport is no stranger to controversy.

Built between 2002 and 2006, under the governments of then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, the opening date was repeatedly delayed.

It has been dogged by allegations of corruption, as well as criticism of the design and poor quality of construction.

Then, at the end of last year, the airport was shut down for a week after being occupied by anti-government protesters.

Now new allegations have been made that a number of passengers are being detained every month in the duty free area on suspicion of shoplifting, and then held by the police until they pay large sums of money to buy their freedom.

That is what happened to Stephen Ingram and Xi Lin, two IT experts from Cambridge, as they were about to board their flight to London on the night of 25 April this year.

They had been browsing in the duty free shop at the airport, and were later approached by security guards, who twice asked to search their bags.

Stephen Ingram and Xi Lin

They were told a wallet had gone missing, and that Ms Lin had been seen on a security camera taking it out of the shop.

The company that owns the duty free shop, King Power, has since put the CCTV video on its website, which does appear to show her putting something in her bag. However the security guards found no wallet on either of them.

Despite that, they were both taken from the departure gate, back through immigration, and held in an airport police office. That is when their ordeal started to become frightening.

Interpreter

"We were questioned in separate rooms," Mr Ingram said. "We felt really intimidated. They went through our bags and demanded that we tell them where the wallet was."

The two were then put in what Mr Ingram describes as a "hot, humid, smelly cell with graffiti and blood on the walls".

Mr Ingram managed to phone a Foreign Office helpline he found in a travel guide, and was told someone in the Bangkok embassy would try to help them.

The next morning the two were given an interpreter, a Sri Lankan national called Tony, who works part-time for the police.

They were taken by Tony to meet the local police commander – but, says Mr Ingram, for three hours all they discussed was how much money they would have to pay to get out.

police station

They were told the charge was very serious. If they did not pay, they would be transferred to the infamous Bangkok Hilton prison, and would have to wait two months for their case to be processed.

Mr Ingram says they wanted £7,500 ($12,250) – for that the police would try to get him back to the UK in time for his mother’s funeral on 28 April.

But he could not arrange to get that much money transferred in time.

‘Zig-zag’ scheme

Tony then took them to an ATM machine at the police station, and told Ms Lin to withdraw as much as she could from her own account – £600 – and Mr Ingram then withdrew the equivalent of £3,400 from his account.

This was apparently handed over to the police as "bail", and they were both made to sign a number of papers.

Later they were allowed to move to a squalid hotel within the airport perimeter, but their passports were held and they were warned not to leave or try to contact a lawyer or their embassy.

"I will be watching you," Tony told them, adding that they would have to stay there until the £7,500 was transferred into Tony’s account.

On the Monday they managed to sneak out and get a taxi to Bangkok, and met an official at the British Embassy.

She gave the name of a Thai lawyer, and, says Mr Ingram, told them they were being subjected to a classic Thai scam called the "zig-zag".

Their lawyer urged them to expose Tony – but also warned them that if they fought the case it could take months, and they risked a long prison sentence.

After five days the money was transferred to Tony’s account, and they were allowed to leave.

Mr Ingram had missed his mother’s funeral, but at least they were given a court document stating that there was insufficient evidence against them, and no charge.

"It was a harrowing, stressful experience," he said.

The couple say they now want to take legal action to recover their money.

‘Typical’ scam

The BBC has spoken to Tony and the regional police commander, Colonel Teeradej Phanuphan.

They both say Tony was merely helping the couple with translation, and raising bail to keep them out of prison.

Tony says about half the £7,500 was for bail, while the rest were "fees" for the bail, for his work, and for a lawyer he says he consulted on their behalf.

In theory, he says, they could try to get the bail portion refunded.

Colonel Teeradej says he will investigate any possible irregularities in their treatment. But he said any arrangement between the couple and Tony was a private affair, which did not involve the police.

Letters of complaint to the papers here in Thailand make it clear that passengers are regularly detained at the airport for alleged shoplifting, and then made to pay middlemen to win their freedom.

The Danish Embassy says one of its nationals was recently subjected to a very similar scam, and earlier this month an Irish scientist managed to flee Thailand with her husband and one year-old son after being arrested at the airport and accused of stealing an eyeliner worth around £17.

Tony told the BBC that so far this year he has "helped" about 150 foreigners in trouble with the police. He says sometimes he does it for no charge.

The British Embassy has also warned passengers at Bangkok Airport to take care not to move items around in the duty free shopping area before paying for them, as this could result in arrest and imprisonment.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Chinese president’s son linked to multi-million pound African corruption probe

Hu Haifeng, a Chinese businessman and the eldest son of Chinese President Hu Jintao, has been linked to a multi-million pound African corruption probe and faces questioning in connection with the investigation.
Haifeng was the president of the state-owned Chinese company Nuctech until last year, from where three people have been arrested on charges of fraud, [...]

Hughes continues pursuit of Terry

John Terry

Manchester City manager Mark Hughes has reignited his interest in Chelsea captain John Terry.

City had a recent £30m bid for the 28-year-old England defender, a product of Chelsea’s youth scheme, rejected.

"We think we could offer him a different challenge," said Hughes, who saw Terry as a youngster when the ex-Wales boss was a striker at Chelsea.

"When you have been with a club a long time, you get to a point when a change of scenery could reignite you."

Hughes spent the majority of his career at Manchester United before moving to Chelsea in 1995 for £1.5m.

He scored 39 goals in 123 appearances over three seasons for the west London club, while Terry was coming through the youth system.

"I have fantastic respect for John Terry, ever since I saw him as a young player when I was at Chelsea as a player myself," added Hughes.

"He’s a great player and an outstanding captain but he’s very much a Chelsea player at this moment in time."

City have reportedly offered Terry a £200,000-a-week deal, but Hughes stressed that money would not be the deciding factor.

606: DEBATE

"Will Terry move north"

BBC Sport’s Peter Scrivener

"It’s not a question of finance, or money, it is about a different challenge," he said.

"It is about John being at a different stage in his life and career, and maybe that is why there hasn’t been a response (to commit himself to Chelsea) because John is seriously thinking in those terms.

"I went through that process as a player and I can understand if that is the way he is thinking." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Adebayor passes Man City medical

Emanuel Adebayor

Manchester City are in negotiations to sign Arsenal striker Emmanuel Adebayor, BBC Sport understands.

The Togo international, 25, is believed to be on sale for about £25m after three-and-a-half seasons at Arsenal.

Adebayor, who scored 16 times for the Gunners last season, has also been linked to AC Milan and Chelsea.

City are intent on building a new-look attack and are on the verge of signing Carlos Tevez, while they have already captured Roque Santa Cruz this summer.

The Eastlands club are eager to break into the Premier League’s top four this coming season, and have shown their determination with their close-season spending.

Midfielder Gareth Barry was bought from Aston Villa, and from under the noses of last season’s Premier League runners-up Liverpool, for £12m and City paid Blackburn about £18m for Paraguay international forward Santa Cruz.

City are expected to complete a deal for Tevez on Tuesday – the Argentine will be a free transfer after his contract with Premier League champions Manchester United expired.

And if Adebayor also makes the switch to Eastlands, City will have captured players from three of the top six clubs in the top flight last season.

Additionally, there is growing speculation that Chelsea and England captain John Terry could join the Sky Blues’ revolution.

In Adebayor, City would be buying a player who has scored 62 goals in 142 appearances for Arsenal since he joined from Monaco for £7m.

He hit 30 goals in the 2007/08 season but struggled with injuries in the last campaign, and also incurred the wrath of some Arsenal fans who felt the striker lacked commitment. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Man City boss urges Terry to ‘reignite’ himself with move from Chelsea to his club

Manchester City boss Mark Hughes has urged star player John Terry to turn leave Chelsea and lead his club’s revolution.
“We would like to think we could offer John Terry a different challenge,” The Sun quoted Hughes, as saying.
Hughes, fresh from signing 26.5 million pound Carlos Tevez, spoke on for the first time about [...]

Goldman Sachs sees bumper profit

Goldman Sachs booth at the New York Stock Exchange

US bank Goldman Sachs has unveiled net earnings of $3.44bn (£2.1bn) for the April to June period – well above what analysts had forecast.

It comes after the bank startled Wall Street by reporting it made $1.8bn in the first three months of the year, despite the economic crisis.

The firm has recently paid back $10bn in federal aid intended to help it steer through the global turmoil.

It is expected to pay about $18bn in pay and bonuses to its 28,000 staff.

Six months ago, Goldman saw its first quarterly loss since going public in 1999, after being battered by the economic crisis.

Its share price, while still well off its high, has gained about 75% in 2009.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Phoenix Four net another £3.5m

Further return for buyers of failed car manufacturer

The Phoenix Four business executives who bought MG Rover from BMW in 2000 have received a further £3.5m in dividends and share payments in the four years since its collapse.

The cash has come from their investment in MGR Capital, a car finance joint venture with a subsidiary of banking group HBOS, now part of Lloyds TSB.

MGR Capital, which bought the Rover cars finance and lease loan book from BMW for £313m in 2001, was wound up last year. The Phoenix Four could also be entitled to a further windfall of £12m from the assets from the wind-up according to company accounts, although their spokesman disputed this figure.

Government inspectors completed a four-year inquiry last week into the collapse of MG Rover and the role of the Phoenix Four: John Towers, Nick Stephenson, John Edwards and Peter Beale. But the report will not be released until a further investigation has been undertaken by the Serious Fraud Office.

When Phoenix Venture Holdings, (PVH) the four men’s master company, and MG Rover’s parent bought Rover Financial Services, it said the acquisition was a significant achievement.

But the interest in MGR Capital was acquired independently of PVH through a company called the Phoenix Partnership. This is owned partly by Edwards and Beale who were both directors of MGR Capital, with the four men each taking £500,000 of preference capital in the business. HBOS owns the balance of the company. The preference shares have provided a dividend of around £100,000 a year for each of the Phoenix Four. Late last year they redeemed the preference shares, netting them a collective windfall of £2m.

Redemption of the preference shares was a precursor to the winding up of MGR Capital. The company was no longer trading because the loan book had been exhausted.

Net assets stood at £23m at the end of 2008. A simple extrapolation suggests the shares held by Edwards and Beale would net them a return of around £12m from the wind-up of MGR Capital. Given that HBOS and Phoenix each own 50% of MGR Capital’s shares this suggests they would each be entitled to half the company’s net assets.

In a written statement, a Phoenix spokesman confirmed the businessmen had received £1.5m in dividends from MGR Capital as well as their original £500,000 investments each. But he said there had been no further funds distributed to the group. “Any other share redemption will be retained by HBOS.”

At the time of the Rover collapse, the Phoenix Four pledged to put any of the assets and funds recovered into a trust to benefit employees.

If the four benefit from their share of the assets left in MGR Capital, it will swell the bounty from their association with MG Rover to £50m, although they dispute this figure. They are also accused of taking more than £40m in pay and pensions from the collapsed carmaker.

In a dossier issued by their public relations advisers the four argued they had been victims of a smear campaign. “The mythical figure of ‘£40m’ in payments to the Phoenix directors is entirely inaccurate and is based on erroneous and mischievous DTI press briefings. It is not supported by published Phoenix Venture Holdings accounts,” it said.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Phoenix Four net another £3.5m

Further return for buyers of failed car manufacturer

The Phoenix Four business executives who bought MG Rover from BMW in 2000 have received a further £3.5m in dividends and share payments in the four years since its collapse.

The cash has come from their investment in MGR Capital, a car finance joint venture with a subsidiary of banking group HBOS, now part of Lloyds TSB.

MGR Capital, which bought the Rover cars finance and lease loan book from BMW for £313m in 2001, was wound up last year. The Phoenix Four could also be entitled to a further windfall of £12m from the assets from the wind-up according to company accounts, although their spokesman disputed this figure.

Government inspectors completed a four-year inquiry last week into the collapse of MG Rover and the role of the Phoenix Four: John Towers, Nick Stephenson, John Edwards and Peter Beale. But the report will not be released until a further investigation has been undertaken by the Serious Fraud Office.

When Phoenix Venture Holdings, (PVH) the four men’s master company, and MG Rover’s parent bought Rover Financial Services, it said the acquisition was a significant achievement.

But the interest in MGR Capital was acquired independently of PVH through a company called the Phoenix Partnership. This is owned partly by Edwards and Beale who were both directors of MGR Capital, with the four men each taking £500,000 of preference capital in the business. HBOS owns the balance of the company. The preference shares have provided a dividend of around £100,000 a year for each of the Phoenix Four. Late last year they redeemed the preference shares, netting them a collective windfall of £2m.

Redemption of the preference shares was a precursor to the winding up of MGR Capital. The company was no longer trading because the loan book had been exhausted.

Net assets stood at £23m at the end of 2008. A simple extrapolation suggests the shares held by Edwards and Beale would net them a return of around £12m from the wind-up of MGR Capital. Given that HBOS and Phoenix each own 50% of MGR Capital’s shares this suggests they would each be entitled to half the company’s net assets.

In a written statement, a Phoenix spokesman confirmed the businessmen had received £1.5m in dividends from MGR Capital as well as their original £500,000 investments each. But he said there had been no further funds distributed to the group. “Any other share redemption will be retained by HBOS.”

At the time of the Rover collapse, the Phoenix Four pledged to put any of the assets and funds recovered into a trust to benefit employees.

If the four benefit from their share of the assets left in MGR Capital, it will swell the bounty from their association with MG Rover to £50m, although they dispute this figure. They are also accused of taking more than £40m in pay and pensions from the collapsed carmaker.

In a dossier issued by their public relations advisers the four argued they had been victims of a smear campaign. “The mythical figure of ‘£40m’ in payments to the Phoenix directors is entirely inaccurate and is based on erroneous and mischievous DTI press briefings. It is not supported by published Phoenix Venture Holdings accounts,” it said.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Phoenix Four net another £3.5m

Further return for buyers of failed car manufacturer

The Phoenix Four business executives who bought MG Rover from BMW in 2000 have received a further £3.5m in dividends and share payments in the four years since its collapse.

The cash has come from their investment in MGR Capital, a car finance joint venture with a subsidiary of banking group HBOS, now part of Lloyds TSB.

MGR Capital, which bought the Rover cars finance and lease loan book from BMW for £313m in 2001, was wound up last year. The Phoenix Four could also be entitled to a further windfall of £12m from the assets from the wind-up according to company accounts, although their spokesman disputed this figure.

Government inspectors completed a four-year inquiry last week into the collapse of MG Rover and the role of the Phoenix Four: John Towers, Nick Stephenson, John Edwards and Peter Beale. But the report will not be released until a further investigation has been undertaken by the Serious Fraud Office.

When Phoenix Venture Holdings, (PVH) the four men’s master company, and MG Rover’s parent bought Rover Financial Services, it said the acquisition was a significant achievement.

But the interest in MGR Capital was acquired independently of PVH through a company called the Phoenix Partnership. This is owned partly by Edwards and Beale who were both directors of MGR Capital, with the four men each taking £500,000 of preference capital in the business. HBOS owns the balance of the company. The preference shares have provided a dividend of around £100,000 a year for each of the Phoenix Four. Late last year they redeemed the preference shares, netting them a collective windfall of £2m.

Redemption of the preference shares was a precursor to the winding up of MGR Capital. The company was no longer trading because the loan book had been exhausted.

Net assets stood at £23m at the end of 2008. A simple extrapolation suggests the shares held by Edwards and Beale would net them a return of around £12m from the wind-up of MGR Capital. Given that HBOS and Phoenix each own 50% of MGR Capital’s shares this suggests they would each be entitled to half the company’s net assets.

In a written statement, a Phoenix spokesman confirmed the businessmen had received £1.5m in dividends from MGR Capital as well as their original £500,000 investments each. But he said there had been no further funds distributed to the group. “Any other share redemption will be retained by HBOS.”

At the time of the Rover collapse, the Phoenix Four pledged to put any of the assets and funds recovered into a trust to benefit employees.

If the four benefit from their share of the assets left in MGR Capital, it will swell the bounty from their association with MG Rover to £50m, although they dispute this figure. They are also accused of taking more than £40m in pay and pensions from the collapsed carmaker.

In a dossier issued by their public relations advisers the four argued they had been victims of a smear campaign. “The mythical figure of ‘£40m’ in payments to the Phoenix directors is entirely inaccurate and is based on erroneous and mischievous DTI press briefings. It is not supported by published Phoenix Venture Holdings accounts,” it said.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Man City pull plug on Eto’o move

Samuel Eto'o

Manchester City have ended their interest in Barcelona’s Cameroon international striker Samuel Eto’o.

The two clubs had been in talks over the £25m-rated striker after Barca told the 28-year-old Eto’o they were prepared to let him leave the Nou Camp.

City chief executive Garry Cook said: "The circumstances surrounding him were such that a deal couldn’t be completed.

Eto’o is the second marquee player City have missed out on following Kaka’s decision not to sign in January.

City reportedly made a bid in the region of £100m for the Brazilian midfielder, but he opted to stay with AC Milan, before joining Real Madrid in a £60m transfer in June.

Reports suggested the Eastlands club told Eto’o he could earn wages of up to £250,000 per week, which would have made him the highest-paid player in the world.

606: DEBATE

"There are better £20m targets available"

——–HistoryRepeating——-

But the transfer became bogged down in a contractual dispute between Eto’o and Barcelona, who has been offered a new two-year contract by the Catalan club.

Eto’o cost Barcelona £16m when he signed from Mallorca in 2004 and the Cameroon forward has scored more than 100 goals in his five seasons with the club.

He helped the Catalan side win a treble trophy haul of the Spanish league title, domestic cup and Champions League in the 2008-2009 campaign.

City’s summer spending so far has seen them sign striker Roque Santa Cruz from Blackburn for £18m and Aston Villa midfielder Gareth Barry for £12m. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.