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UK investigates London ‘terror incident’

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Brutal London killing sparks security alert

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A man has died in a suspected terror attack in London sparking a national security alert.

The victim was hacked to death by two assailants who were then shot by police.

British Prime Minister David Cameron immediately cut short a visit to Paris and called a meeting of the government’s emergency response committee known as Cobra.

Speaking in Paris, David Cameron said:

“It is the most appalling crime. We obviously are urgently seeking, the police are urgently seeking, the full facts about this case, but there are strong indications that it is a terrorist incident.”

The attack happened near the Woolwich army barracks in south east London. It is thought the dead man was a serving British soldier. His alleged attackers were taken to hospital.

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Man killed in ‘terrorist’ attack in London street

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One person has died and at least two others have been wounded in a violent attack near a military training barracks in London.

Police have not commented on whether it is terror-related but there are reports in the British media that the attack was being treated as an act of Islamic extremism. According to eyewitnesses being quoted by Sky News, two men hacked the victim, a soldier, to death with a machete. They reportedly shouted ‘Allah Akhbar’ and invited onlookers to take photographs of them.

It’s understood armed police shot the two men believed to be the attackers, who remain in hospital.

British Prime Minister David Cameron has called a meeting of his government’s emergency Cobra committee – which only deals with incidents that have implications for national security.

Security has been tightened at all military barracks in London, says the government.

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EU agrees to end ‘dangerous’ tax evasion and bank secrecy

Parliament Officials meet in Brussels to address the burden the €1 trillion tax evasion is having on the EU economy, and have again called to end fraud and ‘offshore’ zones. The European Parliament agreed to halve the 1 trillion figure by 2020 through an aggressive dismantling of tax loopholes and havens.  The MEP’s also approved state resources to go after and prosecute tax evaders, in hopes of recovering lost assets.”At a time when finances are tight and taxpayers are squeezed, it’s only right that we crack down on those who pursue illegal means to avoid making any contribution to public coffers, and who put smaller competitors at a disadvantage,” said Conservative MEP Martin Callanan, in a direct challenge to British PM David Cameron to make tax evasion a priority in the UKAustria, notorious for its banking secrecy, has joined its EU partners in the quest against tax fraud, and supports the one year banking secrecy deadline. According to Tax Research UK, a blog maintained by an “anti-poverty campaigner and tax expert” according to the Guardian.The blog’s owner also is involved with Tax Justice Network and is the director of Tax Research LLP.The poverty charity Oxfam said on Tuesday that the EU has missed out on £100 billion from individual tax scammers.Oxfam has called for a blacklist of tax havens and believes EU member states should impose sanctions on members who provide platforms for such activity.Ireland has vehemently denied it is a tax haven and on Wednesday called for an international clampdown on multinationals, yet sits at the center of the controversy. On Monday, it became known that Apple Inc. paid just 2 percent on $74 billion overseas income, which was mostly facilitated by a loophole in Ireland’s tax code.The ‘Irish double dip’ allows a company to file two subsidiaries in Ireland with a corporate tax rate of 12.5 percent, which is far less than the 35 percent rate in the US, for example.This ‘legitimate tax abuse’ by high-profile corporates such as Amazon, Google, and Apple hijacked the EU summit agenda.Martin Callanan has called for an end to tax-havens and doesn’t blame the companies, but the governing bodies which allow such a framework.”Nobody can blame companies for wanting to look after share-holders’ capital by minimizing their tax bill in a legal manner,” he said.Getting all member states to abide by one tax code, seems near impossible.“While companies may be using loopholes to pay as little tax as possible, the truth is it’s a national issue. It’s up to the relevant member states to change their tax codes and tighten the net.”The EU has already agreed to strengthen savings tax agreements with European countries widely regarded as tax havens – Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Monaco, Andorra and San Marino.Luxembourg has taken a lead and has agreed to an automatic information exchange with the United States. Read More

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Britain’s House of Commons votes to legalize gay marriage in England, Wales

The bill will move onto the House of Lords, where it is expected to face opposition.Several Tory MPs spoke out against the bill, which has caused tensions within the party. The Labour and Liberal Democrat leaderships backed the bill.British Prime Minister David Cameron hopes the bill will soon be enacted into law, with the first marriage ceremonies taking place by next summer.Cameron is eager to force the bill’s passage, in attempts to display his party’s liberal and progressive side, particularly following spending cuts and a lurch to the right on immigration policy, which a number of parties are pursuing following a recent surge in the UK Independence Party’s popularity.DETAILS TO FOLLOW. Read More

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BP blasts US judge in fight against compensation claims

BP wants to halt payouts, amounting to millions of dollars, in what it calls “spurious” compensation claims to victims of the spill.  The incident was the largest marine oil spill in history, killing 11 rig workers and discharging some 4.9 million barrels via an uncontrolled leak for 87 days. The ensuing settlement between BP and the US Department of Justice in November of 2012 meant that the oil company pleaded guilty to 11 counts of manslaughter, as well as two misdemeanors and one felony count for lying to Congress. The company is also still in court for criminal and civil settlements, which have thus far cost the company $42 billion. At stake now, according to the new filing by the oil company, are unchecked payouts being permitted under presiding Judge Carl Barbier that could increase BP’s liability by $14 billion. According to The Guardian, BP has expressed in that filing that the additional billions, which the company has not budgeted for, could cause the company “irreparable” harm and make it the target of a takeover. BP was rumored to be a takeover target in late 2012 by Royal Dutch Shell. BP has absorbed large losses stemming from payouts for the massive Gulf spill and sold assets to compensate, taking most of the blame for the extensive damage to surrounding marine and wildlife habitats, as well as the loss of revenue for local maritime industry caused by both the spill, as well as cleanup efforts that involved controversial use of oil dispersant chemicals. In March, the company completed a deal to sell its half of the integrated Russian TNK-BP oil company to Rosneft, in return for $27 billion in cash and shares — $4 billion of which it intended to return to shareholders. Now, citing increasing payouts to Gulf spill claimants under an existing deal, BP has complained that it may have to review its dividend to shareholders. As a result, the company was reportedly considering approaching Prime Minister David Cameron to raise the issue with President Obama, who once called the BP Gulf spill “the worst environmental disaster in American history.”According to the legal injunction filed by BP, Gulf coast businesses in the US are pursuing multi-million dollar claims for “non-existent, artificially calculated” losses.In a filing with a New Orleans court last Friday, BP argues that “while the ultimate amount at stake is at present inestimable, awards for fictitious losses already are hundreds of millions of dollars and could reach billions.”In addition to overseeing payouts to claimants, Judge Barbier is also overseeing a civil claims trial that seeks to determine blame for the 2010 Deepwater spill, now in its seventh week.In response to BP’s claims against him, Judge Barbier accused the oil company of trying to move the claims process to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and beyond his jurisdiction.  ”What you’re really trying to do – it’s quite obvious and there’s no subtlety here – is you’re trying to get this issue to the Fifth Circuit,” Barbier said.”If you believe you have a right to appeal, you can take that up with the circuit and then ask me to stay the order. I don’t know why we’re going through all these machinations,” Barbier added. In April both Florida and Mississippi announced suits against BP and oil rig contractor Halliburton under the Oil Pollution Act, just within the law’s three-year statute of limitation. Officials in Florida announced they would seek lost revenues as a result of the spill, as well as punitive damages “due to the egregious nature of the misconduct” leading up to the oil rig explosion and spill.On Thursday, British officials denied that BP had sought PM David Cameron’s intervention in reducing compensation claims. Read More

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UK: Cameron facing party revolt over Europe

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British Prime Minister David Cameron is facing a potential challenge to his authority – as scores of MPs from within his own Conservative party have vowed to attack him in parliament over his stance on the UK’s membership of the European Union.

A Conservative amendment will be voted upon by MPs on the evening of May 15, while Cameron is in the United States. It expresses “regret” that an EU referendum bill was not included within the list of planned legislation in the Queen’s Speech during the state opening of parliament on May 8.

The prime minister had aimed to dampen squabbling amongst his party in January when he announced plans to renegotiate the UK’s EU role – and then hold a referendum on membership before the end of 2017, provided he wins the 2015 general election.

Since then, Conservative eurosceptics have been pushing for a law before 2015 that guarantees the vote will take place. Cameron offered on May 14 to draft legislation to make his pledge legally binding – but critics said this would not satisfy them because the Conservatives’ coalition partners, the Liberal Democrats, would block it.

The unprecedented success of the Independence Party (UKIP), which advocates Britain’s exit from the EU, in local elections on May 2 has intensified pressure on Cameron to take a stronger position on Europe.

A YouGov poll in April put support for UK withdrawal from the EU at 43 percent, with 35 percent wanting to stay in the union.

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