Word: latinizes
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Bennett worked in Peru in 1982 as a stringer for the Post, then joined the Boston Globe, where he covered local news and then reported on violence in Latin America, according to the Post story. In 1995 he became the Globe’s foreign editor before jumping to the Post...
...Amnesty International, he hosted Buenos Aires Herald Editor Robert Cox for dinner, and Cox told Bennett and his roommates about the detainment of reporters during the years of the “disappearances” in Argentina. After leaving dinner, Bennett aid, he knew he had to go to Latin America as a journalist...
...actually diminished, rather than grown, since he went to war some 20 months ago. By measure of boots on the ground, his coalition was narrow to begin with, but today it is smaller than when the war began, following the departure of troops from a number of European and Latin American countries, and plans for others to leave in the next four months. European allies who backed the war despite overwhelming domestic opposition suffered a major credibility blow when the weapons of mass destruction cited as the reason for invading failed to materialize. Even more damaging was the fact that...
...signed a major contract to produce gas in Australia. In February, President Hu Jintao traveled to Gabon hoping to secure deals in Africa, and in June he led a delegation from China's natural-gas industry to Uzbekistan. Chinese oil executives have even begun courting Ecuador and Colombia. "Latin Americans feel frustrated that the U.S. has virtually ignored the region, so turning to China is prudent and will pay financial dividends down the line," says Cynthia Watson, a professor at the National War College in Washington...
...accounting by Bondi shows that €6.5 billion - almost half of Parmalat's total debt - went to pay interest, commissions and Of that, €2.8 billion went to the banks alone. By 1995, Tonna and others have told magistrates, the company was losing more than $300 million annually in Latin America alone. Parmalat decided to move some of its debt off the company's consolidated financial statements. It did so through three shell companies based in the Caribbean. These firms pretended to sell Parmalat products, and Parmalat would send them fake invoices and charge costs and fees to make...