April 21, 2005

Update Added to Entity behind Kyoto conned public -- Just read it! UNSCAM: Kofi's "Reform" -- Strong, PM, Canadians with Global Connections & More

Update: More on Kyoto is below this first post.


Entity behind Kyoto conned public by Judi McLeod & David Hawkins Thursday, April 21, 2005

(David Hawkins, Foundation Scholar-Cambridge University, and founder of the Citizen's Association of Forensic Economists at Hawks’ CAFE, and CFP investigative journalist Judi McLeod, have teamed up to write a series of articles on the UN’s radical socialist agenda executed across Intranets and virtual private networks, operated by the self-styled "Global Custodians". A new feature of Canada Free Press, the ongoing series combines McLeod’s investigative experience and communication skills with Hawkins’ brilliant research linking $40 trillion hedge funds, via an online portal on the 79th floor of One World Trade Center, to "disruptive technologies" developed by Canada for alleged use in the UN Oil-for-Food scam, 9/11 and Kyoto fraud.) This is the fourth in the series.

We’ve all been had.

The bottom has long since fallen out of the key group that master-minded the Kyoto Protocol credit scheme, but nobody seemed to have joined the dots.

It all began with the flight of Canadian Maurice Strong’s Earth Council from Costa Rica as noted by the National Post’s Peter Foster in May, 2004. [. . . . ]

Search:

"the biggest scam of all time"

"Canada’s Prime Minister Paul Martin"


There is more. Just read it.





UNSCAM: Kofi and Maurice Strong from Canada
Now we have the charges by U.S. prosecutors that Koreagate's Tongsun Park shuttled millions in bribe money from Saddam Hussein to two high-ranking U.N. officials, referred to in the complaint as "U.N. Official #1" and "U.N. Official #2." Outside the U.N., the hunt is on to discover the identities of this duo.


Stale Kofi -- Annan wants to "reform" the U.N. again. He must be in trouble. Claudia Rosett, April 20, 2005

Ms. Rosett is a journalist-in-residence with the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. Her column appears here and in The Wall Street Journal Europe on alternate Wednesdays.

Yet more scandal at the United Nations? Secret deals, millions in bribes, leading to billions in global kickbacks? What to do?

Have no fear, reform is here. The United Nations has already put in place a sweeping set of improvements, with Secretary-General Kofi Annan reorganizing and streamlining the world body to bring about [. . . . ]

All of which sounds terrific. Except that the reforms cited above, heralding the new era of openness, coherence, competence, integrity and improved peacekeeping are all plucked from a U.N. dossier released almost three years ago, in June 2002. These reforms were shepherded through by Mr. Annan starting in the late 1990s, with the help of his handpicked special adviser, Undersecretary-General Maurice Strong.

[. . . . ] Even if Mr. Strong had the best of intentions, his decision as a high-ranking U.N. official to be involved in any business relationship with the star bag man of Koreagate suggests seriously odd judgment. [. . . . ]





Background links for information

In Reply to: Re: Maurice Strong caught stealing at U.N. (again) posted by Wall Street Journal Posted by Walrus on 12:16:48 2005/04/20

Blind Trust -- How much do we really know about Canada's next Prime Minister? Marci McDonald, The Walrus Magazine (http://walrusmagazine.com/), June 21, 04

Marci McDonald is a contributing editor for US News & World Report and a former Washington bureau chief for Maclean's magazine.

On the third floor of a faceless commercial tower in Vienna, Virginia, a landlocked suburb of Washington, D.C., sits the unlikely nerve centre of the Liberian International Ship and Corporate Registry, one of the offshore conveniences that allows the world's maritime moguls to fudge their ownership, hide their profits, and keep their fleets afloat with discount maintenance standards and cut-rate Third World crews. . . .

[. . . . ] Which is why it seems noteworthy that Canada's most celebrated shipowner, Paul Martin as of August still the official proprietor of the Canada Steamship Lines group continued to list five ships on the website of his company's international division that were flagged to Liberia.

At the Canada Steamship Lines' Montreal headquarters, where senior vice-president Pierre Préfontaine rhymes off the vessels in Martin's international fleet, he doesn't mention those Liberian-flagged ships or seven others sailing under the flag of Vanuatu, a tiny South Pacific tax haven first made trendy by the money-laundering set. One reason for that lapse may be the dissonance between the company's iconic national image and its somewhat less patriotic reality. On the masts of all twenty-one cargo carriers owned or operated by CSL International as part of partnership agreements, there is nary a Canadian maple leaf in sight nor, on board, a Canadian crew. [. . . . ]

[. . . . ] CSL took out the second of two new mortgages on the Atlantic Erie for $56.8 million from hsbc [HSBC] Bank Canada, formerly the Hong Kong Bank of Canada, boosting the ship's total registered debt to over $100 million. Might Martin remember that generosity when it comes time to decide whether foreign financial interests rate a bigger piece of the Canadian action?


Search: In David Olive's 1984 Canadian Business profile , " a weekend pilgrimage to Geneva to consult Strong, by then president of Montreal's Power Corporation." , Strong offered him a sobering lesson. , Strong arranged a timely lifeline , "Two stories above, in a corporate penthouse, sits the executive command post and stunning private art collection of its landlord, Paul Desmarais." , " the kingmaker behind virtually every Canadian prime minister since Lester Pearson." , "Power's chairman had been single-mindedly amassing CSL stock" , "CSL's own history is studded with high drama" , The only catch was CSL's $195 million price tag , "Still, that chummy buyout somehow fuelled Martin's reputation as" , "Stelco, CSL's biggest customer" , The captain received a telex from CSL headquarters , Australian courts have since upheld CSL's rights to , At the Liberal leadership convention in 1990, Gossage watched Martin digest the news that he'd lost to Chrétien and , "He blamed his pragmatic course on the policies of an intransigent Tory government that had refused breaks to Canadian shipping and shipbuilding." , "Barbados, The Investor's Paradise," nearly two dozen countries specifically listed in the tax code , "taking advantage of that loophole?" , nobody raised an eyebrow when he blamed it all on , "in January 1995, Martin personally signed the bill." , the loophole didn't benefit CSL alone , "CSL International is registered in the law offices of Clarke, Gittens & Farmer" , The appearance of a ministerial conflict

There is much more but that list should give an idea of the extent of the information included.

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