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De ce tremură Angela Merkel/ Care sunt bolile de care ar putea…

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6 comentarii

  1. E clar că Merkel suferă grav de L.S.P.I.A. ,sindrom tot mai răspândit la femei,de aia tremură în halu ăsta….L.S.P.I.A. = Lipsă Severă de P#lă de Imigrați Africani

    • Esti nebun cum folosesti numele domnului

    • ai si tu o obsesie. stupida. cu imigrantii. iti place cand germania are continuu crestere economica? ca sa o aiba are nevoie si de imigranti, ca nemtii vor doar joburi bine platite, alea prost platite nu le mai fac, dar cineva trebuie sa le faca. liderii lor realizeaza asta. ca nu au gasit inca o formula ideala, incat sa accepte imigranti, dar nu prea multi, e firesc. dar o rezolva ei.

  2. Honni soit qui mal y pense!

  3. Lăsați comentariile răutăcioase! Doamna Merkel este un model adevărat de dăruire pentru poporul ei! Nu aveți nici un drept să comentați starea ei de sănătate, pentru simplul motiv că nemții ei (80%) au afirmat că e problema ei personală! Mai bine doriți-va să avem și noi o astfel de Angela Merkel, ce bine ne-ar fi!!!

    • @ MIRU KADAR

      merkelina tremura de emotie, caci germanika este pe locul 7 in clasamentul paradisurilor fiscale

      FINANCIAL SECRECY INDEX 2018

      NARRATIVE REPORT ON GERMANY

      RANK 7

      […] Germany played a key role in 2013-2014 in weakening proposed EU rules to require the public naming and shaming of people or institutions found to be breaking anti-money laundering rules.

      As a result naming such offenders is not always obligatory.

      Over the last 10 years, Germany has confiscated approximately €6 million per year from the Italian mafia but evidence points to the fact that this is just a tiny fraction of the total and completely insignificant compared to the €100 billion estimated to be laundered in Germany every year.

      Following the Arab spring, Germany froze billions of dollars’ worth of assets from countries such as Libya, Tunisia or Egypt,

      raising the question of how they managed to get to Germany unchecked.

      Germany has lagged behind other European partners such as France or Switzerland, in pursuing illicit funds from overseas kleptocrats and

      has played rather an obstructive role when the European Union sought to set up Eu-ropean financial sanctions.

      PART 1: NARRATIVE REPORT

      Overview

      Germany as an offshore centre and intra-German tax competition

      Legal reforms have left important loopholes

      Unregistered bearer shares continue to exist in Germany

      The German beneficial ownership register fails to provide true transparency

      The new reporting obligations for ownership of shell companies have serious flaws.

      No transparency for civil society and poor countries

      Tax enforcement suffers from understaffing and fragmented regional systems of tax collection

      Tax scandals shake confidence in the legislature

      The scale of Germany illicit financial flows

      DETALII

      […] serious loopholes remain in national legislation and negligent enforcement of tax and anti-money laundering regulations still pose a threat to their effectiveness.

      […] the German government has been ambiguous on public CbCR,

      and opposed public registers of beneficial ownership

      as well as unilateral automatic reporting of tax information to developing countries, insisting on reciprocal exchange.

      This opposition to true fiscal transparency

      is alarming

      as the involvement of civil society and the access to information by countries most harmed by illicit outflows are crucial for an effective fight against illicit financial activities.

      […]
      Although Germany does not practice banking secrecy like neighboring Switzerland, regulative loopholes, lax enforcement especially for non-resi-dents, and in general, a strong emphasis on confi-dentiality of tax information have made it an attrac-tive destination for illicit and questionable flows in the past.

      German companies have to publish their annual accounts in a central depository that is accessible free of charge.

      Nevertheless, a significant share of companies, including some of the biggest, as well as foundations and other legal vehicles

      are exempted from the duty to publish profits and tax payments.

      The German tax authorities have been criticised for their fragmented, low-tech and under-resourced approach to collecting tax, especially from wealthy people, and for having inadequate means to deal with large taxpayers.

      [….]
      Major tax evasion (“Steuerhinterziehung in beson-ders schweren Fällen”) is not a predicate crime for money laundering purposes in Germany.

      This implies that banks may easily accept money stemming from tax evasion, especially if committed abroad.

      In addition, the relatively low fines and low number of convictions relating to failures to prevent money laundering by banks and other institutions point to weaknesses in the policing of anti-money laundering rules

      chrome-extension://oemmndcbldboiebfnladdacbdfmadadm/https://financialsecrecyindex.com/PDF/Germany.pdf