Thursday, March 8, 2012

France - Nicholas Sarkozy to quit politics if not re-elected

Published on Mar 8, 2012 by
http://www.euronews.com/ Nicholas Sarkozy said he will give up politics if he's not re-elected as he struggles to regain lost ground in France's Presidential campaign.

Sarkozy, who's been in government since the 1980s when he was a district mayor in Paris, is lagging behind Socialist challenger François Hollande in opinion polls.

"I'm telling the French people that I'm going to fight hard to gain your trust, to protect you, to lead you, to build a Strong France. But if you decide otherwise, I'll bow out after having a really nice life in politics," Sarkozy told Paris-based RMC radio.

April's Presidential election is expected to go to a second round run-off in early May.

Main rival François Hollande was once described as the invisible man of French politics and Sarkozy's hit out at his lack of ministerial experience.

Nigeria - Cameron: hostages 'murdered by their captors' A al-Qaeda group

Uploaded by on Mar 8, 2012
The Prime Minister, David Cameron has confirmed one British and one Italian
hostage have been killed following an unsuccessful attempt to rescue them
from an al-Qaeda group who kidnapped the men in Nigeria.

Día Internacional de la Mujer - 'Las mujeres somos más luchadoras, no es fácil conciliar vida laboral y...

Uploaded by on Mar 8, 2012
http://www.rtvcyl.es/Noticias.aspx
María Tovar abrió en Valladolid un centro de belleza hace 10 meses y a pesar de la crisis ha sacado su negocio hacia delante. Asegura que para emprender "hay que tener el miedo justo"
.
Uploaded by on Mar 8, 2012
http://www.rtvcyl.es/Noticias.aspx | Este jueves es el Día Internacional de la Mujer. Un exposición en Salamanca recoge el trabajo de una fotoperiodista salmantina que aborda la realidad de las mujeres en diferentes países del mundo.

La muestra fotográfica se titula 'Miss Universos'.

euronews U talk: Rating agencies in the spotlight "let rating agencies dictate how European stock markets are run?"

Published on Mar 8, 2012 by
http://www.euronews.com/ Arnaud from Brussels asks: "My question for European officials is: how far are we going to let rating agencies dictate how European stock markets are run, and are we ever going to react against this speculative lobbying?"

Arnaud from Brussels asks: "My question for European officials is: how far are we going to let rating agencies dictate how European stock markets are run, and are we ever going to react against this speculative lobbying?"

Thierry Philipponnat, Secretary General of public interest association Finance Watch, responds: "That's a good question. We can't let this diktak continue. There's a very simple solution. It's to permit investors to follow the rating agencies' opinions without being obliged to. We're in an absurd system today in which, once an agency's opinion is given, the investor is obliged to follow that opinion. Why? Because the ratings are in the financial regulations. So we have to get rid of all reference to the ratings in the rules so investors can follow the ratings if they want to. They are free to - fine - but are not obliged to. That's really the key."

Sébastien, from Brussels, asks: "My question is as follows: which of Europe's directives concern how the rating agencies are financed?"

Philipponnat responds: "The alternative to the borrower paying the agency would be that the investor pays the agency. The potential conflict of interest would not be the same but it could be just as real. The essential question is to ensure that the whole system does not depend on a single opinion. The key to not having a system that degenerates is that when an agency issues an opinion it remains simply an opinion and not the truth with a capital 'T'. That's why one of the European Commission's proposals consists of establishing a European index of ratings, which would be given a framework and organised by the European financial market authorities. It's an excellent proposal, because index means averaging what's given by several agencies, and we'd depend less and less on the opinion of a single agency."

Michael from Brussels asks: "I'd like to know when we're going to set up a European rating agency for sovereign debt."

Philipponnat responds: "Yes, let's increase competition, yes, let's create European agencies - but that's not enough. Other measures must also be taken: a European ratings index, removing ratings from all financial regulation so that we find ourselves in a healthy situation in which, as I said earlier about what seems important to me, we would have analyses coming out, and not verdicts."