30 Oct 2012

UK DAILY MAIL


Hungary is planning to offer citizenship to any foreigner who buys at least £200,000 of its government’s bonds.
Legislation would grant residency and ultimately a Hungarian passport... allowing the holder to live and work anywhere in the European Union.
The move, backed by the ruling party, is aimed at wealthy investors, especially from China.
Radical proposals: The Hungarian Parliament in Budapest, where legislators are considering issuing bonds to foreign investors in exchange for citizenship
Radical proposals: The Hungarian Parliament in Budapest, where legislators are considering issuing bonds to foreign investors in exchange for citizenship
Hungary has billions of pounds of foreign currency debt maturing in the next few years and needs to find ways to refinance it.

Budapest has asked for help from the EU and the International Monetary Fund but talks are dragging on and analysts see only a 50 per cent chance of a deal.
 
The citizenship scheme calls for the debt management office to issue special ‘residency bonds’ to foreigners.

Holders of at least a quarter of a million euros of Hungarian debt would get preferential immigration treatment.
Legislation would grant residency and ultimately a Hungarian passport... allowing the holder to live and work anywhere in the European Union (flag pictured)
Legislation would grant residency and ultimately a Hungarian passport... allowing the holder to live and work anywhere in the European Union (flag pictured)
'The goal of the modification is to create the institution of ‘investor residency’ in Hungary,' the lawmakers who put forth the legislation wrote in their proposal.

‘The proposal ties gaining citizenship to buying bonds because it intends to aid state financing this way.

‘Other investments from those applying for such residency could boost the real estate, retail and investment markets.’

Mihaly Babak, a lawmaker with the ruling party, said: ‘The Chinese have articulated repeatedly that we should help their Hungarian investments.’
Public debt in Hungary is equivalent to about 80 per cent of its annual economic output and households also are struggling with a mountain of foreign-currency debt.

HUNGARY'S DEBT

  • Hungary is currently in recession – its GDP contracted by 1.2 per cent in the first half of 2012 and is expected to fall by 1.5 per cent over the full year, according to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)
  • Many of Hungary’s local governments have warned they could be bankrupt by early next year. They have $5.5 billion of debt – the highest level among the EU’s eastern nations
  • The country is in discussions with the EU and IMF over a financing backdrop
One of the authors of the proposal said Chinese investors were specifically targeted.
Tory MP Priti Patel said: 'This is a shocking abuse of EU membership by the Hungarian Government and highlights one of many flaws in the EU and in the way it operates.
'This policy could pose significant challenges for the EU when it comes to immigration, social and economic policies and will do little to restore any trust and confidence in the EU with the British public.'
Tory MP Ian Liddell Grainger said: 'At the end of the day this is not the way to encourage investment. It never has been and it never should be. All you do is undermine your institutions.
'It is up to them what they do. But dare I say it it is not a very clever way of doing it.'

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2225339/Hungary-offer-wealthy-foreigners-citizenship-return-investment.html#ixzz2Ape2cqmI
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27 Oct 2012

Jul 16, 2011

Photo. study of the CPSO CEO Dr.R.V.GERACE MD FRCSC(ER) LLD(Hon.)

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CPSO CEO "Registrar" Dr.R.V.Gerace.commissioned Toronto photographer D.W.DORKEN of 1 Yonge St, for a portrait to be published in "Dialogue"., the CPSO publication.

FINAL SELECTION WAS USED FOR INCLUSION IN CPSO'S PUBLICATION "DIALOGUE'. 
TIME REQUIRED FOR PHOTOGRAPHY:   HALF A DAY
COST TO THE MEMBERSHIP;                  $ 500  
  
PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF :   
(click on link, then on thumbnail, use arrows to view all 76 proofs)

CPSO Registrar Dr. Rocco Gerace - DW Dorken

Above is link to approx 75 photos.

26 Oct 2012

BREAKFAST with the CHIEFS. (Oct.25)
 by
 LONGWOODS PUBLICATIONS,publisher Anton HART.
 sponsored by
 ACCENTURE & SANOFI
at
Toronto DALLA LANA School of Public Health

Ontario Privacy Commissioner Dr. Ann CAVOUKIAN PhD.told 150 Health Policy experts how to prevent medical privacy failures. ENCRYPT by DEFAULT. Main causes of privacy problems: loss of USB  & loss/theft of laptops. Insist on vertical shredding; not horizonal (easy to read).

Dr.Cavoukian complained about poor electronic communication between Toronto Teaching Hospitals.
Told about her experience as a`recent neurosurgical patient. Had brain imaging in one Toronto hospital;was referred to a Toronto neurosurgical centre which could not receive the images from the referring hosp.

(Dr.Cavoukian has no obvious neurological deficits. Normal speech and body movements normal.)

Subscribers to a LONGWOODS publication can attend the morning meetings.






17 Oct 2012

 UK DAILY MAIL

Afghan woman's slow, agonising death after husband slit her throat 'because she let their children live Western lives'

  • The 53-year-old was conscious for five minutes as she choked
  • Doctor said she could not even scream because her voicebox had been slit
  • Her children were allowed to dress and socialise as they pleased, which infuriated her husband, prosecutors said
By Emma Reynolds
|

An Afghan man slit his wife's throat and stabbed her repeatedly while she choked on her own blood - allegedly because she allowed their children to lead 'Western lives'.
Randjika Khairi, 53, remained conscious for five minutes but was unable to scream because her voicebox had been severed, a Toronto court heard.

Her husband Peer Khairi, 65, has pleaded not guilty in Ontario Superior Court to second-degree murder.
Culture clash: The immigrant couple lived in a highrise Toronto apartment block, but argued over how their children should behave
Culture clash: The immigrant couple lived in a highrise Toronto apartment block, but argued over how their children should behave
No one disputes that Khairi inflicted the injuries, only the circumstances and his state of mind.
Crown prosecutors Robert Kenny and Amanda Camara allege Khairi killed his wife of 30 years over cultural differences.
 
He wanted to make their six teenage and adult children follow traditional Muslim Afghan practices, but his wife infuriated him by allowing them to dress and socialise as they liked, prosecutors claim.
Khairi’s second eldest child, Giti, told the court her father was angry she spent most weekends with her fiance at his parents’ home, according to the Toronto Star.
The 29-year-old said her father felt adrift in Canada after moving there in 2003, and was illiterate and unable to speak English, the National Post reported.
His children were going to the mosque and praying less often, the court heard, while the 65-year-old was battling health problems, having survived a brutal car crash and attempted suicide in February 2008 - a month before the death.

He phoned 911 after the stabbing, telling the operator his wife had been murdered. Police arrived at the couple’s highrise Toronto apartment to find her lying on a blood-soaked narrow bed in the living room.
Dr Allan Hunt today told the court that Mrs Khairi’s neck was slit down to the spine, severing her carotid artery and jugular vein and almost decapitating her.
Blood then rushed to her airways, causing her to slowly suffocate.
Five additional stab wounds, to her chest, abdomen and back, bled much less than normal, suggesting they were inflicted several minutes after blood started gushing from her 10-centimetre-long neck gash, he added.
The doctor said there was so little blood left in her petite 5ft 1in body that it was difficult to gather enough for forensic testing.
Khairi showed no emotion in court as he looked at horrific photographs of the deadly, gaping wound he had inflicted upon his long-time wife, the Toronto Sun reported.

He glanced nonchalantly at the images, nodding to his Dari interpreter when he was finished looking at them.
The doctor agreed with defence lawyer Christopher Hicks when he suggested that injuries and bruises on her body were consistent with being attacked from the front and held down on the bed by her attacker.

The pathologist also agreed she appeared to have defensive cuts on her left forearm and hand, consistent with fending off a knife.
The trial continues.

15 Oct 2012

Ontario Pharmacists now gradually becoming Apothecaries; diagnosing and treating.

New law allows Pharms to give immunisations and repeat prescriptions without consulting the MD

The Ontario Health plan also pays pharms $50 a year to give 30 min. advice to those taking over three medications.