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itsfinancethings · 4 years
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Arab Republic of Egypt : Request for Purchase Under the Rapid Financing Instrument-Press Release; Staff Report; and Statement by the Executive Director for the Arab Republic of Egypt
Arab Republic of Egypt : Request for Purchase Under the Rapid Financing Instrument-Press Release; Staff Report; and Statement by the Executive Director for the Arab Republic of Egypt Published September 01, 2020 at 05:00AM Read more at imf.org from Blogger https://ift.tt/3hRLSFL via IFTTT
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
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New story in Politics from Time: “Patriotic Education”: Trump Rejects Grappling With America’s Racist Past
This article is part of the The DC Brief, TIME’s politics newsletter. Sign up here to get stories like this sent to your inbox every weekday.
At a moment when books about America’s racist history are selling out, and some in the country, including many in corporate boardrooms, are trying to grapple with the enduring legacy of systemic racism, President Trump and Republicans are laying out a gauzy story of America that requires no reckoning for the country’s history of slavery, racial terror and social, economic and political injustice.
Over the past several weeks, Trump has painted criticism of America’s past as unpatriotic, and attempted to create a space where White voters can feel OK with that. That includes “restoring patriotic education” in schools “where they’re trying to change everything that we’ve learned,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Monday. “The only path to unity is to rebuild a shared national identity focused on common American values and virtues, of which we have plenty,” Trump said.
In his Republican National Convention acceptance speech, Trump promised “new pride in our history” and said “Americans build their future, we don’t tear down our past.” He hailed America’s westward settlement under Lewis and Clark, a movement that shaped the modern U.S. and ultimately led to the forced removal of Native Americans from their ancestral lands, and touted his protection of monuments to Confederate figures.
Context is everything, and these statements come at a moment when large protests continue to call for an end to police practices that brutalize Black Americans. Trump has continued to show that he doesn’t understand the main thrust of the protests against systemic racism in policing. When asked about the shooting of Jacob Blake on Fox News Monday night, Trump compared police officers shooting people to golfers who “choke” when trying to make “a three-foot putt.”
Make sense of what matters in Washington. Sign up for the daily D.C. Brief newsletter.
But as with most everything, Trump sees the protests not as Americans standing up to be treated fairly, but as a part of a political battlescape. “The left’s war on police, faith, history, and American values is tearing our country apart, which is what they want,” Trump said earlier on Monday. And as he travels to Kenosha, Wisconsin, he is stepping into that war, days after street protests left two dead and a White 17-year-old, Kyle Rittenhouse, was charged with first-degree intentional homicide in the killings. Trump did not criticize Rittenhouse for pulling the trigger when asked about the shooting Monday, saying it was “an interesting situation.”
All of this has put White voters in the middle of a political tug-of-war not only over votes but also for how to view American history. Should Americans continue to see the Pilgrims as smiling newcomers happily sharing food with Native Americans? Enslaved people were held in pens just steps from the White House, but there is no plaque commemorating that, as TIME’s Justin Worland wrote for TIME’s cover story in June. The country is continuing to come to grips with the long legacy of injustice and slavery, Jim Crow laws, federal housing loans that advantaged Whites, and a justice system that unfairly targets Black Americans. The next several months will show if the country is ready to confront the challenges that live on from that history, and do something about it.
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
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Arab Republic of Egypt : Request for Purchase Under the Rapid Financing Instrument-Press Release; Staff Report; and Statement by the Executive Director for the Arab Republic of Egypt Published September 01, 2020 at 05:00AM Read more at imf.org
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
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This article is part of the The DC Brief, TIME’s politics newsletter. Sign up here to get stories like this sent to your inbox every weekday.
At a moment when books about America’s racist history are selling out, and some in the country, including many in corporate boardrooms, are trying to grapple with the enduring legacy of systemic racism, President Trump and Republicans are laying out a gauzy story of America that requires no reckoning for the country’s history of slavery, racial terror and social, economic and political injustice.
Over the past several weeks, Trump has painted criticism of America’s past as unpatriotic, and attempted to create a space where White voters can feel OK with that. That includes “restoring patriotic education” in schools “where they’re trying to change everything that we’ve learned,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Monday. “The only path to unity is to rebuild a shared national identity focused on common American values and virtues, of which we have plenty,” Trump said.
In his Republican National Convention acceptance speech, Trump promised “new pride in our history” and said “Americans build their future, we don’t tear down our past.” He hailed America’s westward settlement under Lewis and Clark, a movement that shaped the modern U.S. and ultimately led to the forced removal of Native Americans from their ancestral lands, and touted his protection of monuments to Confederate figures.
Context is everything, and these statements come at a moment when large protests continue to call for an end to police practices that brutalize Black Americans. Trump has continued to show that he doesn’t understand the main thrust of the protests against systemic racism in policing. When asked about the shooting of Jacob Blake on Fox News Monday night, Trump compared police officers shooting people to golfers who “choke” when trying to make “a three-foot putt.”
Make sense of what matters in Washington. Sign up for the daily D.C. Brief newsletter.
But as with most everything, Trump sees the protests not as Americans standing up to be treated fairly, but as a part of a political battlescape. “The left’s war on police, faith, history, and American values is tearing our country apart, which is what they want,” Trump said earlier on Monday. And as he travels to Kenosha, Wisconsin, he is stepping into that war, days after street protests left two dead and a White 17-year-old, Kyle Rittenhouse, was charged with first-degree intentional homicide in the killings. Trump did not criticize Rittenhouse for pulling the trigger when asked about the shooting Monday, saying it was “an interesting situation.”
All of this has put White voters in the middle of a political tug-of-war not only over votes but also for how to view American history. Should Americans continue to see the Pilgrims as smiling newcomers happily sharing food with Native Americans? Enslaved people were held in pens just steps from the White House, but there is no plaque commemorating that, as TIME’s Justin Worland wrote for TIME’s cover story in June. The country is continuing to come to grips with the long legacy of injustice and slavery, Jim Crow laws, federal housing loans that advantaged Whites, and a justice system that unfairly targets Black Americans. The next several months will show if the country is ready to confront the challenges that live on from that history, and do something about it.
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
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WHY WOULD YOU HANG ON INTEL AT $50
AMERICAN CHIPMAKER INTEL  CHART HAS A POSSIBLE BUY OPPORTUNITY AT $50 SHARE PRICE, AS THE TENKAN LINE MOVES THROUGH THE KIJUN LINE AS A BUY SIGNAL, PROVIDED THE STOCKS HOLD THE $50 DOLLARS LEVELS. BUY OPPORTUNITY, THAT CAN SEE THE STOCK PRICE FILLING THE, VACUUM GAP, GOING UP TO $60 DOLLARS SHARE PRICE, PROVIDED THE 200 MA $57.75 VALIDATES THE MOVE HIGHER, OTHERWISE WOULD BE SAFER TO SELL, IF UPTREND REJECTION AT 200 DAYS MOVING AVERAGE
DEFINITIVELY WOULD HANG ON INTEL, CUM GAUDIO, STOCK HAS GONE UPSIDE DOWN. TRULY NOT GOING TO BETRAY, CAN GO UP TO $60, LIKE A ROCKET
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
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A Sotheby's auction in London was just announced!
The Pimlico Road: London’s Design & Antiques District https://ift.tt/34SHRNH
Sale L20322
Nestled between Belgravia and Chelsea, the Pimlico Road is a mecca for discerning collectors and decorators on the hunt for the extraordinary and the unusual. Sotheby’s invites you to take a virtual tour of this unique quarter of London through a dedicated online sale of carefully selected artworks, design and antiques from its internationally renowned galleries.
  The sale features property from Rose Uniacke, Jamb, Howe, Sibyl Colefax & John Fowler, Patrick Jefferson, Tarquin Bilgen, 88 Gallery, Hemisphere Gallery and Robertaebasta. From country house articles with peerless provenance to cutting edge contemporary design - and everything in between – the carefully chosen pieces epitomize each dealer’s inimitable eye.
  There truly is something for every taste, and with estimates ranging from £400-600 right the way up to £80,000-120,000, The Pimlico Road will cater to all budgets.
For assistance with bidding and registration, please contact:
+44 207 293 5000 
For sale enquiries please contact:
Thomas Williams
Deputy Director
Specialist
English Furniture
+44 20 7293 6211
Laetitia Contat Desfontaines
Director
Head of Sale
20th Century Design
+44 20 7293 5568
Please note that as of August 1st 2020, Overhead Premium, a fee payable by all auction buyers in our global salerooms and online sales, will be charged at 1% of the hammer price plus any applicable local taxes. It is an allocation of the overhead costs relating to our facilities, property handling and other administrative expenses. This fee and our Buyer’s Premium rates exclude local taxes and any applicable artist’s resale right.
Begins: September 21, 2020 at 02:00PM Latitude: 51.511834 Longitude: -0.143758 Learn more on Sotehbys.com from Blogger https://ift.tt/3boGzeI via IFTTT
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
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A Sotheby's auction in London was just announced!
Watches https://ift.tt/2G9hzfJ
Our London Watches auction in October focuses on quality and features both modern and vintage timepieces. Highlights include important Patek Philippe watches such as a white gold perpetual calendar Nautilus ref. 5740, the first to be publicly offered at auction in Europe, as well as the elusive platinum World time with enamel dial ref. 5131.Also on offer are spectacular sport Rolex’s, including a Submariner with Explorer dial and several rare GMTs. Earlier timepieces are represented some extraordinary pieces that will be soon revealed. Offering an exciting range of brands, price points, metals and complications, this auction is an exceptional opportunity for collectors worldwide. We will be accepting consignment until 9 September. Please feel free to contact one of our specialists to receive a complimentary and confidential valuation.
For assistance with bidding and registration, please contact:
+44 207 293 5000 
For sale enquiries please contact:
Kate Lacey
Director
Specialist
Watches
+44 20 7293 6109
Joanne Lewis
Deputy Director
Specialist
Watches
+44 20 7293 5327
Benoît Colson
Deputy Director
Specialist
Watches
+33 15 30 55 392
Please note that as of August 1st 2020, Overhead Premium, a fee payable by all auction buyers in our global salerooms and online sales, will be charged at 1% of the hammer price plus any applicable local taxes. It is an allocation of the overhead costs relating to our facilities, property handling and other administrative expenses. This fee and our Buyer’s Premium rates exclude local taxes and any applicable artist’s resale right.
Begins: October 28, 2020 at 10:30AM Latitude: 51.511834 Longitude: -0.143758 Learn more on Sotehbys.com from Blogger https://ift.tt/34TtJ6Y via IFTTT
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
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As of September 1, 2020 at 04:46PM, 1 GBP equals 1.3432 USD.
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
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Brazil : Technical Assistance Report-Strengthening Fiscal Responsibility at the Subnational Level
Brazil : Technical Assistance Report-Strengthening Fiscal Responsibility at the Subnational Level Published September 01, 2020 at 03:00PM Read more at imf.org from Blogger https://ift.tt/3jz01rR via IFTTT
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
Text
New world news from Time: These Are the 10 ‘Most Urgent’ Cases of Threats to Press Freedom Around the World in September 2020
Farhad Hamo, a freelance journalist working for a Kurdish broadcaster, was last seen being taken away from a Syrian prison in March 2015 by a cameraman who has since been released in a prisoner swap. Members of the Islamic State militant group abducted Hamo more than five years ago while he and another journalist were driving to interview a local political leader in northern Syria. The duo were threatened at gunpoint during a security check and told to drive to a town where they were later imprisoned. An Islamic State court sentenced them to death by beheading. Hamo’s fate and well-being remains unknown.
Hamo’s story represents just one of at least 64 cases of journalists missing around the world, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).
Some, like reporter Ibraimo Mbaruco, went missing just a few months ago in Mozambique after leaving work and notifying a colleague that he was “surrounded by soldiers.” Others, like newspaper journalist María Esther Aguilar Cansimbe, have been missing for more than a decade. Cansimbe, a mother of two, was investigating police abuse allegations in Mexico.
To remember these journalists, CPJ launched a #MissingNotForgotten campaign on Aug. 30 to tell their stories and pressure authorities to continue investigating their disappearances even as the pandemic has slowed down or stopped the progress of inquiries.
One Free Press Coalition—a collection of nearly 40 news organizations, including TIME—is helping to keep missing journalists’ stories alive by maintaining a monthly list of the most serious cases of attacks on press freedom around the world.
Here are 10 of the most urgent cases of missing journalists around the world right now.
1. Prageeth Eknelygoda (Sri Lanka)
Journalist, cartoonist and columnist abducted more than 10 years ago after leaving his house.
Prageeth Eknelygoda, a cartoonist and columnist for online news outlet Lanka eNews, was last seen by his wife and two teenage sons as he left his house for work more than 10 years ago. Ahead of the 2010 presidential election, staff of Lanka eNews faced intimidation for its opposition of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government. Last year, the attorney general indicted seven individuals over Eknelygoda’s abduction, and the trial is ongoing. In the past six months, Eknelygoda’s wife, Sandya, said she believed witnesses in the case were being intimidated, and that threats to her and surveillance of her family had increased.
2. Daysi Lizeth Mina Huamán (Peru)
Journalist’s belongings found days after her disappearance 7 months ago.
Daysi Lizeth Mina Huamán was last seen waiting for a bus on Jan. 26, on her way to meet her boyfriend after voting in Peru’s congressional elections and filing a report for television broadcaster Cable VRAEM in the central city of Ayacucho. About a week after the disappearance, family members found her identity card and other personal documents along the side of a road between the bus stop and her destination.
3. Farhad Hamo (Syria)
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Courtesy of One Free Press CoalitionFreelance reporter Farhad Hamo, who was last seen being taken away from a prison, was abducted more than five years ago.
Freelance reporter abducted in 2014 last seen being taken away from a prison.
In December 2014, members of the Islamic State militant group abducted two freelance journalists working for the Kurdish broadcaster Rudaw TV. The journalists had been driving to interview a local political leader when armed men stopped the vehicle, examined the occupants’ phones and laptops and threatened them at gunpoint to drive to the town of Tel Hamis, where they were imprisoned. An Islamic State court sentenced them to death by beheading. Cameraman Massoud Aqeel, who was later released in a prisoner swap, last saw reporter Farhad Hamo being taken away from Raqqa’s prison in March 2015.
4. Vladijmir Legagneur (Haiti)
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Courtesy of Fleurette GuerrierFreelance photojournalist Vladjimir Legagneur was last seen by his wife in March 2018 after he left their home in Haiti.
Investigation stalled more than 2 years after photojournalist’s disappearance.
Freelance photojournalist Vladjimir Legagneur was last seen by his wife in March 2018 after he left their Port-au-Prince home. According to a colleague, Legagneur was working on an independent project in Grand-Ravine, known for high rates of violent gang activity. A police spokesperson said he “feared a fatal outcome” after skeletal remains and a hat were found that month near the site of Legagneur’s disappearance, but officials never announced conclusive results from collected evidence and DNA tests. There is no indication of any further investigation.
5. María Esther Aguilar Cansimbe (Mexico)
Newspaper journalist vanished almost 11 years ago after covering police abuse allegations.
María Esther Aguilar Cansimbe, a mother of two, was last seen leaving her home in the central state of Michoacán in November 2009. She reported for regional news outlets, including Zamora-based daily El Diario de Zamora and regional daily Cambio de Michoacán, and tended to focus on organized crime and local corruption, sometimes omitting her byline out of awareness of possible reprisal. In the weeks before she vanished, Aguilar’s coverage included police abuse allegations and the military’s anti-cartel efforts. According to CPJ data, at least 14 journalists are currently missing in Mexico.
6. Jean Bigirimana (Burundi)
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Courtesy of IwacuReporter Jean Bigirimana is feared to be dead after four years missing.
Reporter feared to be dead after four years missing.
Jean Bigirimana has not been seen or heard from since July 2016, after he received a call from a source in the country’s national intelligence service and left his home in Bujumbura. The reporter for independent weekly newspaper Iwacu formerly worked for the pro-government radio station Rema FM. Sources report the journalist was arrested by intelligence agents and accused of writing about exiled Burundian journalists living in Rwanda, and family members fear Bigirimana is dead. Four fellow Iwacu reporters, also targeted by government authorities, are currently serving a 2-and-a-half-year prison sentence.
7. Ibraimo Mbaruco (Mozambique)
Journalist went missing after leaving work 5 months ago.
A reporter and news presenter for the Palma Community Radio broadcaster in the northern Cabo Delgado province, Ibraimo Mbaruco disappeared on April 7 after leaving work and then texting a colleague saying he was “surrounded by soldiers.” The journalist’s brother told CPJ he reported the disappearance to local police and the provincial prosecutor’s office but had yet to receive any information about Ibraimo’s whereabouts and did not know if he was still alive. To date, the government has not launched a credible investigation. Mbaruco was also part of the Sekelekani network, a local civil society organization that trains citizen journalists.
8. Oralgaisha Omarshanova (Kazakhstan)
Investigative reporter last seen during business trip 13 years ago.
In March 2007, Oralgaisha Omarshanova, who uses the pen name Oralgaisha Zhabagtaikyzy, wrote about ethnic clashes in rival regions of Almaty, Kazakhstan’s financial capital. On a business trip there, colleagues from Astana-based independent weekly Zakon i Pravosudiye (meaning “Law and Justice”), last saw Omarshanova, director of the anti-corruption department, getting into a vehicle. The following month, her brother said at a press conference that, in the weeks prior to her disappearance, Omarshanova had received several death threats via telephone warning her to stop reporting.
9. Azory Gwanda (Tanzania)
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Courtesy of Mwananchi Publications LimitedAzory Gwanda, a freelancer in Tanzania who had been investigating mysterious killings in his rural community, went missing in November 2017
Investigation needed for rural reporter missing three years.
The Tanzanian government has failed to conduct a credible investigation since Azory Gwanda, a freelancer who had been investigating mysterious killings in his rural community, went missing in November 2017. In a BBC interview in June 2019, Tanzania’s foreign minister said the journalist was among several people who had “disappeared and died;” however, the minister later issued a clarification saying his statements were taken out of context and that he did not know whether the journalist was alive or dead. Authorities have not responded to CPJ’s repeated requests for updates in the case.
10. Samir Kassab (Syria)
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Courtesy of One Free Press CoalitionLebanese photojournalist Samir Kassab has been missing for seven years. He was reporting in Aleppo in October 2013.
Among several unresolved cases in Syria, foreign journalist missing seven years.
Samir Kassab, a Lebanese photographer working for the Abu Dhabi-based broadcaster Sky News Arabia, disappeared in October 2013 while reporting alongside Mauritanian reporter Iszhak Ould Mokhtar in Aleppo. Kassab’s fiancée told CPJ in 2019 that no group had claimed responsibility for the journalists’ abduction. At least nine journalists are currently missing in Syria, a country that also claims the highest number of foreign journalists missing. CPJ recently helped 60 Syrian journalists and their families escape dangerous conditions and resettle in Europe.
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
Link
AMERICAN CHIPMAKER INTEL  CHART HAS A POSSIBLE BUY OPPORTUNITY AT $50 SHARE PRICE, AS THE TENKAN LINE MOVES THROUGH THE KIJUN LINE AS A BUY SIGNAL, PROVIDED THE STOCKS HOLD THE $50 DOLLARS LEVELS. BUY OPPORTUNITY, THAT CAN SEE THE STOCK PRICE FILLING THE, VACUUM GAP, GOING UP TO $60 DOLLARS SHARE PRICE, PROVIDED THE 200 MA $57.75 VALIDATES THE MOVE HIGHER, OTHERWISE WOULD BE SAFER TO SELL, IF UPTREND REJECTION AT 200 DAYS MOVING AVERAGE
DEFINITIVELY WOULD HANG ON INTEL, CUM GAUDIO, STOCK HAS GONE UPSIDE DOWN. TRULY NOT GOING TO BETRAY, CAN GO UP TO $60, LIKE A ROCKET
0 notes
itsfinancethings · 4 years
Link
The Pimlico Road: London’s Design & Antiques District https://ift.tt/34SHRNH
Sale L20322
Nestled between Belgravia and Chelsea, the Pimlico Road is a mecca for discerning collectors and decorators on the hunt for the extraordinary and the unusual. Sotheby’s invites you to take a virtual tour of this unique quarter of London through a dedicated online sale of carefully selected artworks, design and antiques from its internationally renowned galleries.
  The sale features property from Rose Uniacke, Jamb, Howe, Sibyl Colefax & John Fowler, Patrick Jefferson, Tarquin Bilgen, 88 Gallery, Hemisphere Gallery and Robertaebasta. From country house articles with peerless provenance to cutting edge contemporary design - and everything in between – the carefully chosen pieces epitomize each dealer’s inimitable eye.
  There truly is something for every taste, and with estimates ranging from £400-600 right the way up to £80,000-120,000, The Pimlico Road will cater to all budgets.
For assistance with bidding and registration, please contact:
+44 207 293 5000 
For sale enquiries please contact:
Thomas Williams
Deputy Director
Specialist
English Furniture
+44 20 7293 6211
Laetitia Contat Desfontaines
Director
Head of Sale
20th Century Design
+44 20 7293 5568
Please note that as of August 1st 2020, Overhead Premium, a fee payable by all auction buyers in our global salerooms and online sales, will be charged at 1% of the hammer price plus any applicable local taxes. It is an allocation of the overhead costs relating to our facilities, property handling and other administrative expenses. This fee and our Buyer’s Premium rates exclude local taxes and any applicable artist’s resale right.
Begins: September 21, 2020 at 02:00PM Latitude: 51.511834 Longitude: -0.143758 Learn more on Sotehbys.com
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
Link
Watches https://ift.tt/2G9hzfJ
Our London Watches auction in October focuses on quality and features both modern and vintage timepieces. Highlights include important Patek Philippe watches such as a white gold perpetual calendar Nautilus ref. 5740, the first to be publicly offered at auction in Europe, as well as the elusive platinum World time with enamel dial ref. 5131.Also on offer are spectacular sport Rolex’s, including a Submariner with Explorer dial and several rare GMTs. Earlier timepieces are represented some extraordinary pieces that will be soon revealed. Offering an exciting range of brands, price points, metals and complications, this auction is an exceptional opportunity for collectors worldwide. We will be accepting consignment until 9 September. Please feel free to contact one of our specialists to receive a complimentary and confidential valuation.
For assistance with bidding and registration, please contact:
+44 207 293 5000 
For sale enquiries please contact:
Kate Lacey
Director
Specialist
Watches
+44 20 7293 6109
Joanne Lewis
Deputy Director
Specialist
Watches
+44 20 7293 5327
Benoît Colson
Deputy Director
Specialist
Watches
+33 15 30 55 392
Please note that as of August 1st 2020, Overhead Premium, a fee payable by all auction buyers in our global salerooms and online sales, will be charged at 1% of the hammer price plus any applicable local taxes. It is an allocation of the overhead costs relating to our facilities, property handling and other administrative expenses. This fee and our Buyer’s Premium rates exclude local taxes and any applicable artist’s resale right.
Begins: October 28, 2020 at 10:30AM Latitude: 51.511834 Longitude: -0.143758 Learn more on Sotehbys.com
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
Link
from https://ift.tt/14RXgoK via IFTTT
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
Link
Brazil : Technical Assistance Report-Strengthening Fiscal Responsibility at the Subnational Level Published September 01, 2020 at 03:00PM Read more at imf.org
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
Link
Farhad Hamo, a freelance journalist working for a Kurdish broadcaster, was last seen being taken away from a Syrian prison in March 2015 by a cameraman who has since been released in a prisoner swap. Members of the Islamic State militant group abducted Hamo more than five years ago while he and another journalist were driving to interview a local political leader in northern Syria. The duo were threatened at gunpoint during a security check and told to drive to a town where they were later imprisoned. An Islamic State court sentenced them to death by beheading. Hamo’s fate and well-being remains unknown.
Hamo’s story represents just one of at least 64 cases of journalists missing around the world, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).
Some, like reporter Ibraimo Mbaruco, went missing just a few months ago in Mozambique after leaving work and notifying a colleague that he was “surrounded by soldiers.” Others, like newspaper journalist María Esther Aguilar Cansimbe, have been missing for more than a decade. Cansimbe, a mother of two, was investigating police abuse allegations in Mexico.
To remember these journalists, CPJ launched a #MissingNotForgotten campaign on Aug. 30 to tell their stories and pressure authorities to continue investigating their disappearances even as the pandemic has slowed down or stopped the progress of inquiries.
One Free Press Coalition—a collection of nearly 40 news organizations, including TIME—is helping to keep missing journalists’ stories alive by maintaining a monthly list of the most serious cases of attacks on press freedom around the world.
Here are 10 of the most urgent cases of missing journalists around the world right now.
1. Prageeth Eknelygoda (Sri Lanka)
Journalist, cartoonist and columnist abducted more than 10 years ago after leaving his house.
Prageeth Eknelygoda, a cartoonist and columnist for online news outlet Lanka eNews, was last seen by his wife and two teenage sons as he left his house for work more than 10 years ago. Ahead of the 2010 presidential election, staff of Lanka eNews faced intimidation for its opposition of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government. Last year, the attorney general indicted seven individuals over Eknelygoda’s abduction, and the trial is ongoing. In the past six months, Eknelygoda’s wife, Sandya, said she believed witnesses in the case were being intimidated, and that threats to her and surveillance of her family had increased.
2. Daysi Lizeth Mina Huamán (Peru)
Journalist’s belongings found days after her disappearance 7 months ago.
Daysi Lizeth Mina Huamán was last seen waiting for a bus on Jan. 26, on her way to meet her boyfriend after voting in Peru’s congressional elections and filing a report for television broadcaster Cable VRAEM in the central city of Ayacucho. About a week after the disappearance, family members found her identity card and other personal documents along the side of a road between the bus stop and her destination.
3. Farhad Hamo (Syria)
Tumblr media
Courtesy of One Free Press CoalitionFreelance reporter Farhad Hamo, who was last seen being taken away from a prison, was abducted more than five years ago.
Freelance reporter abducted in 2014 last seen being taken away from a prison.
In December 2014, members of the Islamic State militant group abducted two freelance journalists working for the Kurdish broadcaster Rudaw TV. The journalists had been driving to interview a local political leader when armed men stopped the vehicle, examined the occupants’ phones and laptops and threatened them at gunpoint to drive to the town of Tel Hamis, where they were imprisoned. An Islamic State court sentenced them to death by beheading. Cameraman Massoud Aqeel, who was later released in a prisoner swap, last saw reporter Farhad Hamo being taken away from Raqqa’s prison in March 2015.
4. Vladijmir Legagneur (Haiti)
Tumblr media
Courtesy of Fleurette GuerrierFreelance photojournalist Vladjimir Legagneur was last seen by his wife in March 2018 after he left their home in Haiti.
Investigation stalled more than 2 years after photojournalist’s disappearance.
Freelance photojournalist Vladjimir Legagneur was last seen by his wife in March 2018 after he left their Port-au-Prince home. According to a colleague, Legagneur was working on an independent project in Grand-Ravine, known for high rates of violent gang activity. A police spokesperson said he “feared a fatal outcome” after skeletal remains and a hat were found that month near the site of Legagneur’s disappearance, but officials never announced conclusive results from collected evidence and DNA tests. There is no indication of any further investigation.
5. María Esther Aguilar Cansimbe (Mexico)
Newspaper journalist vanished almost 11 years ago after covering police abuse allegations.
María Esther Aguilar Cansimbe, a mother of two, was last seen leaving her home in the central state of Michoacán in November 2009. She reported for regional news outlets, including Zamora-based daily El Diario de Zamora and regional daily Cambio de Michoacán, and tended to focus on organized crime and local corruption, sometimes omitting her byline out of awareness of possible reprisal. In the weeks before she vanished, Aguilar’s coverage included police abuse allegations and the military’s anti-cartel efforts. According to CPJ data, at least 14 journalists are currently missing in Mexico.
6. Jean Bigirimana (Burundi)
Tumblr media
Courtesy of IwacuReporter Jean Bigirimana is feared to be dead after four years missing.
Reporter feared to be dead after four years missing.
Jean Bigirimana has not been seen or heard from since July 2016, after he received a call from a source in the country’s national intelligence service and left his home in Bujumbura. The reporter for independent weekly newspaper Iwacu formerly worked for the pro-government radio station Rema FM. Sources report the journalist was arrested by intelligence agents and accused of writing about exiled Burundian journalists living in Rwanda, and family members fear Bigirimana is dead. Four fellow Iwacu reporters, also targeted by government authorities, are currently serving a 2-and-a-half-year prison sentence.
7. Ibraimo Mbaruco (Mozambique)
Journalist went missing after leaving work 5 months ago.
A reporter and news presenter for the Palma Community Radio broadcaster in the northern Cabo Delgado province, Ibraimo Mbaruco disappeared on April 7 after leaving work and then texting a colleague saying he was “surrounded by soldiers.” The journalist’s brother told CPJ he reported the disappearance to local police and the provincial prosecutor’s office but had yet to receive any information about Ibraimo’s whereabouts and did not know if he was still alive. To date, the government has not launched a credible investigation. Mbaruco was also part of the Sekelekani network, a local civil society organization that trains citizen journalists.
8. Oralgaisha Omarshanova (Kazakhstan)
Investigative reporter last seen during business trip 13 years ago.
In March 2007, Oralgaisha Omarshanova, who uses the pen name Oralgaisha Zhabagtaikyzy, wrote about ethnic clashes in rival regions of Almaty, Kazakhstan’s financial capital. On a business trip there, colleagues from Astana-based independent weekly Zakon i Pravosudiye (meaning “Law and Justice”), last saw Omarshanova, director of the anti-corruption department, getting into a vehicle. The following month, her brother said at a press conference that, in the weeks prior to her disappearance, Omarshanova had received several death threats via telephone warning her to stop reporting.
9. Azory Gwanda (Tanzania)
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Courtesy of Mwananchi Publications LimitedAzory Gwanda, a freelancer in Tanzania who had been investigating mysterious killings in his rural community, went missing in November 2017
Investigation needed for rural reporter missing three years.
The Tanzanian government has failed to conduct a credible investigation since Azory Gwanda, a freelancer who had been investigating mysterious killings in his rural community, went missing in November 2017. In a BBC interview in June 2019, Tanzania’s foreign minister said the journalist was among several people who had “disappeared and died;” however, the minister later issued a clarification saying his statements were taken out of context and that he did not know whether the journalist was alive or dead. Authorities have not responded to CPJ’s repeated requests for updates in the case.
10. Samir Kassab (Syria)
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Courtesy of One Free Press CoalitionLebanese photojournalist Samir Kassab has been missing for seven years. He was reporting in Aleppo in October 2013.
Among several unresolved cases in Syria, foreign journalist missing seven years.
Samir Kassab, a Lebanese photographer working for the Abu Dhabi-based broadcaster Sky News Arabia, disappeared in October 2013 while reporting alongside Mauritanian reporter Iszhak Ould Mokhtar in Aleppo. Kassab’s fiancée told CPJ in 2019 that no group had claimed responsibility for the journalists’ abduction. At least nine journalists are currently missing in Syria, a country that also claims the highest number of foreign journalists missing. CPJ recently helped 60 Syrian journalists and their families escape dangerous conditions and resettle in Europe.
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itsfinancethings · 4 years
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Today in History - September 1
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