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Showing posts with label Tin Tức Sự Kiện. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tin Tức Sự Kiện. Show all posts

Days May Be Numbered for the World’s Oldest Bank

 After performing poorly in a stress test, Monte dei Paschi di Siena, founded in 1472, could be swallowed by UniCredit.


Credit...Susan Wright for The New York Times

SIENA, Italy — Last month Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, the world’s oldest bank, acquired another distinction: Europe’s weakest lender.

The bank performed worse than any other in a test of its financial health by European regulators, the latest gloomy chapter in a long-running saga of ill-fated deals, financial shenanigans, criminal wrongdoing and even a mysterious death.

The stress test by regulators, which showed that a severe recession would wipe out the bank’s capital, has forced the Italian government to face an unpleasant truth: Monte dei Paschi’s five-and-a-half-century run is coming to an end. With prodding from Rome, UniCredit, one of Italy’s largest banks, said last month that it was in talks to buy Monte dei Paschi on the condition that the government keep all the bad loans.

Monte dei Paschi, founded in 1472, will probably live on as a brand name on bank branches in central Italy, and customers probably won’t notice much difference, at least at first. But the bank will cease to be a stand-alone entity and a living reminder that Italian merchants during the Renaissance basically invented modern banking. The bank’s operations will be managed from UniCredit’s headquarters in Milan rather than Monte dei Paschi’s fortresslike home office in Siena’s old quarter. The title of oldest bank will probably pass to Berenberg Bank, founded in Hamburg in 1590.

The bank’s problems are an unwelcome distraction for Mario Draghi, the Italian prime minister and former president of the European Central Bank, as he tries to push through reforms and end Italy’s status as the eurozone’s perpetual economic laggard.

Disposing of Monte dei Paschi, which was effectively nationalized after a government bailout, “would free resources, time and political capital for more important issues,” said Lorenzo Codogno, a former chief economist at the Italian treasury who is now an independent consultant. “There is strong political pressure to find a solution as soon as possible.”

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Credit...Susan Wright for The New York Times

But for Siena and the surrounding area, the troubles of Monte dei Paschi are a psychological as well as an economic blow. Few banks are as enmeshed with the wealth and identity of their communities as Monte dei Paschi was in its heyday. It remains Siena’s largest private employer, and the foundation that owned it bestowed bank profits on a wide variety of civic activities, including kindergartens, ambulance services and even costumes that rival clans wore in the processions preceding the Palio, the bareback horse race normally run twice each summer in Siena’s central plaza.

“Monte dei Paschi is part of the city’s flesh and blood,” said Maurizio Bianchini, a local journalist, historian of the Palio and former head of communications at Monte dei Paschi. “From a human point of view, it’s as if the bank was a branch of every Sienese family.”

Monte dei Paschi’s survival has been in doubt for years. Its troubles began in 2008 after it paid more than it could afford to acquire a rival and become Italy’s third-largest bank, after Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit.

In 2013, as the police investigated allegations that bank executives hid mounting losses from regulators and shareholders, David Rossi, Monte dei Paschi’s head of communications, was found dead in an alley below his office window in an apparent suicide. Members of Mr. Rossi’s family were convinced he was murdered for knowing too much, but the police never found conclusive evidence of foul play.

In 2019, more than a dozen executives of Monte dei Paschi, Deutsche Bank and Nomura were convicted of illegally using complex derivatives to cover up the Italian bank’s problems. They have appealed.

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Credit...Susan Wright for The New York Times

Most banks with Monte dei Paschi’s problems would have been sold long ago, but for the people of Siena the proposed deal with UniCredit would be like auctioning off part of their identity. The city will also suffer economic pain. The sale to UniCredit is likely to lead to as many as 5,000 job cuts, a third of the total, according to Italian news reports. UniCredit declined to comment on what layoffs might be in store.

“The city is infuriated,” an 80-year-old man, who declined to give his name, said as he chatted with friends on the steps of a Monte dei Paschi branch in central Siena. Giving up control to UniCredit in Milan, he said, “would be like losing a daughter.”

Bank stress tests published in July by the European Central Bank exposed how vulnerable Monte dei Paschi remains despite multiple recapitalizations and turnaround plans. In the event of a severe recession lasting until 2023, the bank’s capital would be reduced almost to zero, according to the stress test. The bank would need “well above” 2.5 billion euros, or $2.9 billion, in fresh capital, Daniele Franco, the Italian economics minister, told Parliament this month.

UniCredit disclosed on July 29 that it was in exclusive talks to buy Monte dei Paschi, a day before regulators published the stress tests. Andrea Orcel, the chief executive of UniCredit, told reporters and analysts on July 30 that the bank needed to thoroughly review Monte dei Paschi’s books before making a decision on whether to go through with the deal.

But he said Monte dei Paschi would strengthen UniCredit’s business in central Italy. “The timing is right,” Mr. Orcel said.

Still, many people in Siena refuse to accept that Monte dei Paschi’s half a millennium of independence may soon be over. The potential sale to UniCredit has become an issue in city and parliamentary elections, which will be held in October, and may play into the hands of the League, a right-wing populist party that already supports the mayor of Siena, Luigi De Mossi.

Mr. De Mossi told reporters recently that the bank was “not a supermarket,” where UniCredit could pick only the assets it wants and leave the government to deal with the rest. The bank’s future, he said, is a “social and political issue that concerns not only Siena, not only Italy, but Europe.”

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Credit...Susan Wright for The New York Times

But other leaders say it’s time for Siena to move on. “The E.C.B. stress tests are a sort of final check of the fact that the bank is not able to stand alone any more,” said Enrico Letta, a former prime minister of Italy who, after a stint in academia, has returned to politics as a candidate for Parliament representing the provinces of Siena and Arezzo.

Mr. Letta argues that, while banking will still be a major employer, the city should invest in its other traditional strength, health care. The British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline has a major research center in Siena that develops vaccines for diseases prevalent in poorer countries, like typhoid.

“Siena wanted to be the capital of finance,” Mr. Letta said. “Siena can be the capital of life sciences.”

Mr. Letta has called for the creation of a European district for life sciences in the city, and said part of Italy’s share of the European Union pandemic recovery funds should be used to support research coordinated by Toscana Life Sciences, a nonprofit organization in Siena that helps health care start-ups get on their feet. One of the organization’s research labs is developing an advanced monoclonal antibody treatment for the coronavirus that, if successful, would be less expensive than similar treatments and could be administered by doctors without hospitalizing a patient.

“We have to give Siena a new mission,” Mr. Letta said.

Some Siena residents agree. Like Italy itself, Monte dei Paschi has shown that an illustrious history is no guarantee of success in the modern world.

“It was the prosperity of Siena,” Marco Bruttini, a 70-year-old retired graphic designer, said while sitting on a bench next to the bank’s headquarters on a recent morning.

“But even without this merger,” Mr. Bruttini said, “that time is long gone.”

Gaia Pianigiani reported from Siena, and Jack Ewing from Frankfurt.

Hong Kong Police Arrest Students Over ‘Advocating Terrorism’

  The student union leaders, who were detained under the national security law, had expressed sympathy for a man who stabbed a police officer before killing himself.

 Four student union leaders at the University of Hong Kong were arrested on Wednesday after they had held a moment of silence for a man who stabbed a police officer and then killed himself.CreditCredit...Isaac Lawrence/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

HONG KONG — Four student union leaders at the University of Hong Kong were arrested on Wednesday on suspicion of “advocating terrorism” after they had held a moment of silence for a man who stabbed a police officer and then killed himself.

The arrests, by the new national security police in Hong Kong, represented the latest crackdown on opposing voices as the Chinese territory tries to snuff out any sign of the dissent that flared during the 2019 protest movement.

University students were among the most determined and vocal protesters during the pro-democracy demonstrations in the city in recent years. And Hong Kong officials have used a national security law imposed on the city by Beijing last year to target campuses, which they have branded as dangerous incubators of antigovernment sentiment.

Wednesday’s arrests stemmed from a live-streamed meeting on July 7, when the student union held the moment of silence and passed a motion expressing “deep sadness” over the man’s death and appreciation for his “sacrifice.”

After city officials called for the students to be tried in court or expelled, leaders of the union apologized, retracted the motion and resigned from their posts days later. But Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, called on the university and the police to take further action.

“As the chief executive, as the university chancellor and as an ordinary citizen, I’m extremely angry,” she said at the time. “I’m ashamed of the university for having student representatives do something like this.”

Credit...Isaac Lawrence/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

At the height of the anti-government protests, the police described university campuses as hotbeds of violence and “cancer cells” that were endangering the city. The ranks of student activists have diminished under pressure from university administrators and govern ment officials. Many have said they are fighting for survival against the Chinese Communist Party’s tightening grip.

“To tell the truth, it feels like we’re just waiting to die,” Yanny Chan, a union leader at Lingnan University, said this year.

The Professional Teachers’ Union, which had more than 90,000 members, disbanded last week after the government ceased to recognize it in the wake of attacks by Chinese state media. The Civil Human Rights Front, which organized mass protest marches, dissolved on Sunday after the police repeatedly accused it of illegal operations.

On Wednesday, the largest Hong Kong organization to subsidize the legal costs of arrested pro-democracy protesters, the 612 Humanities Fund, said it would cease operations.

The national security police said on Wednesday that they had arrested the student union’s president, Charles Kwok Wing-ho; the chairman, Kinson Cheung King-sang; and two other representatives, Anthony Yung Chung-hei and Chris Shing-hang Todorovski. None of the students or their lawyers could be reached for comment.

Hong Kong’s secretary for security, Chris Tang, said at a news briefing on Wednesday that they would be charged with “inciting” a terrorist attack. “If there is evidence,” he added, “we will arrest and we will prosecute.” Those convicted of terrorism under the national security law could face a minimum of five years in prison.

At an earlier news briefing outside Police Headquarters, Li Kwai-Wah, a senior superintendent in the National Security Department, said the student union’s language “rationalizes, beautifies and glorifies terrorism.” He suggested that there was a close relationship between terrorism and “hatred” of the government and the police force.

When asked by reporters why the students were not given a second chance after retracting their comments, Mr. Li said that the crimes were irrevocable. “Retractions can only be taken as apologies,” he said.

He added that “praise, defense and promotion” of the man’s attack on the police were all tantamount to “advocating terrorism,” and that the police would interview the 30 attendees at the July meeting who had voted in favor of the motion. (Two had abstained.)

In July, the University of Hong Kong cut ties with the student union. A month later, it barred all students who had attended the meeting from campus facilities, citing concerns that the “continued presence” of union members would pose “serious legal and reputational risks” to the institution, Hong Kong’s premier university.

Alumni signed an online petition calling on university leaders to revoke the punishment. A prominent law professor, Eric Cheung, resigned from the university leadership council over its decision.

“I am very sad,” Professor Cheung said in a radio interview at the time. “Why, as a university, are we not helping students to correct themselves after making a mistake?” He declined to comment on the arrests.

A university spokeswoman also declined to comment, saying, “It is not appropriate for us to comment as the case is under investigation.”

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Chính trị gia Ấn Độ được xóa cáo buộc trong cái chết của vợ

 Shashi Tharoor had been accused of driving Sunanda Pushkar to suicide in a case that the main opposition party had long criticized as politically motivated.

Credit...Prakash Singh/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

NEW DELHI — An Indian court on Wednesday cleared an influential politician of all charges in connection with the death of his wife, in a case long criticized by the country’s main opposition party as politically motivated.
 Shashi Tharoor, a member of Parliament from the opposition Indian National Congress, was charged with cruelty and abetment to suicide in 2018, four years after his wife, Sunanda Pushkar, was found dead under mysterious circumstances.
 The charges were dismissed by a court in Delhi, effectively setting Mr. Tharoor free in a case that riveted India’s political and media circles for years and put the details of his private life in the spotlight.

 A lawyer for Mr. Tharoor argued that Ms. Pushkar’s cause of death had still not been clearly established, undermining the abetment to suicide charge. In a statement on Twitter, Mr. Tharoor thanked the court, calling the charges against him “preposterous.” “This brings a significant conclusion to the long nightmare which had enveloped me after the tragic passing of my late wife Sunanda,” he said. Mr. Tharoor, 65, a former diplomat and cabinet minister who represents a parliamentary constituency in the southern state of Kerala, married Ms. Pushkar in 2010, the third marriage for each of them. 

The couple, who often posed for photographs and shared them online, were regulars on India’s party circuit, and neither of them were shy about airing their thoughts on Twitter. In early 2014, Ms. Pushkar shocked her social media followers by accusing her husband of having a “rip-roaring affair” with a Pakistani journalist, which both Mr. Tharoor and the journalist denied. 
The public dispute with his wife became an embarrassment for Mr. Tharoor, who had served at high levels of the United Nations in New York, as discussion of their private lives intensified on social media platforms and in the news media. 

When tweets were posted from his account that appeared to be addressed to the Pakistani journalist, Mr. Tharoor said his Twitter account had been hacked. Ms. Pushkar, in turn, told reporters that she planned to seek a divorce. But within a day, the couple issued a statement on Facebook declaring that they were “happily married.” A day later, on Jan. 17, Mr. Tharoor said he found Ms. Pushkar dead in the luxury Delhi hotel where they were staying. She was 52. Mr. Tharoor faced a barrage of accusations, rumors and suspicions. In 2015, the police in New Delhi said they had filed a preliminary murder case, without naming a suspect. Three years later, they said they had “medico-legal and forensic evidence” tying Mr. Tharoor to his wife’s death.

 Among those pressuring the police to bring charges against Mr. Tharoor was Subramanian Swamy, a member of Parliament from the governing Bharatiya Janata Party, or B.J.P., who insisted that Ms. Pushkar had been poisoned. Mr. Swamy has also tried to pursue legal cases against other members of the Congress party. Supporters of Mr. Tharoor, who had been widely seen as prime minister material, said the B.J.P. was threatened by him and was trying to ruin his reputation. In 2018, Mr. Swamy offered to assist the court in Mr. Tharoor’s prosecution. His application was dismissed. Mr. Swamy expressed dissatisfaction with the court ruling on 

Wednesday, saying in an interview that he would offer his assistance again if it were appealed. “It’s all there and I don’t know how the Delhi police argued the matter,” he said. Mr. Tharoor said the court ruling would allow his family to finally mourn Ms. Pushkar in peace. “I have weathered dozens of unfounded accusations and media vilification patiently, sustained by my faith in the Indian judiciary, which today stands vindicated,” he said. “In our justice system, the process is all too often the punishment.” If you are having thoughts of suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline in the United States at 1-800-273-8255 (TALK). In India, contact 91-9820466726 or to go the website of Aasra.info for more resources. 


Ngày mới tốt lành .Taliban gặp cuộc biểu tình đầu tiên của họ bằng bạo lực

  

Good morning. We’re covering the Taliban’s violent response to protesters and Israel’s Covid surge despite high vaccination rates.

A member of the Taliban tried to hit a woman in Kabul on Wednesday, who was waiting to enter the airport with her family in order to flee Afghanistan.Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times

The Taliban met their first protests with violence

Afghanistan’s new rulers fired into the crowd in the northeastern city of Jalalabad and beat protesters and journalists. Demonstrators opposed to Taliban rule also took to the streets in Khost, in the southeast. Here are the latest updates.

Al Jazeera reported that at least two people were killed and a dozen injured during the protests in Jalalabad, which was seized by the Taliban four days ago without much of a fight. Hundreds marched through a main shopping street, carrying flags of the Afghan Republic.

In Kabul, the Taliban moved to form a government as President Ashraf Ghani surfaced in the United Arab Emirates, saying he had fled Afghanistan to avoid a lynching by the Taliban and vowed to return.

Scramble to leave: Chaos erupted outside the airport in Kabul as more people tried to flee. A Taliban commander told crowds that the gate to the airport was closed except for foreigners and for people with documents. Inside, 5,000 U.S. troops were stationed to evacuate people. Afghan women who worked with the U.S. or international groups are frantically erasing any trace of those links for fear that they will be targeted by the Taliban.

The view from Beijing: For China’s leaders, the chaotic scenes in Afghanistan have served as a vindication of their hostility to American might. But the Taliban could also create new geopolitical dangers and security risks.

Difficult path for refugees: European countries were hesitating to take in Afghans after the surge in populism and the far right that followed the influx of Syrian refugees in 2015.

Medics transferred a Covid patient to a hospital in Jerusalem on Sunday.Menahem Kahana/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Israel’s Covid surge raises questions about vaccines

Israel’s swift vaccination campaign quickly brought life back to normal. Coronavirus cases plummeted, and, by March, concerts and sporting events opened up to the vaccinated.

But a fourth wave of infections is threatening to ruin Israel’s progress. The daily rate of new virus cases has more than doubled in the past two weeks, making Israel a rising hot spot. Some are blaming the new government for not taking action quickly enough.

Restrictions were reinstated this week, and the government is considering a new lockdown. “The vaccinations were supposed to solve everything,” a public health expert said. Now, he said, it is clear that masks and crowd limits must be part of the approach.

Details: Over 8,000 new cases were reported on Monday, a six-month high, Haaretz reported. And after many days of zero Covid deaths in June, at least 230 people have died from the disease so far this month.

Explanations: It’s too soon to tell why things turned around so quickly, but experts say that Israel’s high rate of infections among early vaccine recipients indicates a waning of the vaccine’s protections over time. The highly-contagious Delta variant, now the primary version of the virus in Israel, may have also made the vaccine less effective.

In other developments:

Fracileine Jean Louis, 6, and Stefania, 16, stood amid the rubble of a destroyed home in Marceline, Haiti.Adriana Zehbrauskas for The New York Times

Floods and little help after Haiti’s quake

The death toll from the 7.2-magnitude earthquake that struck Haiti on Saturday has reached 1,900, and 10,000 people are injured. These maps and photos show the devastation.

And yet, in some parts of the country, like the village of Toirac, help seems distant. At least 20 people were killed there when a church collapsed, survivors said, and the area has yet to be visited by aid groups or emergency authorities.

“We’re on our own,” said a 66-year-old farmer in Toirac who lost his wife and his house.

Complicating rescue efforts was a deluge from Hurricane Grace.


By Melina Delkic

Writer, Briefings

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

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