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...thirds of the public thinks Blair should resign if Hutton declares him a liar, according to an ICM poll. It's Blair's perfect storm. Frustrations with his leadership - his determination to introduce more private contractors into the public sector, his presidential style, his assumption that Labour M.P.s should repay his electoral success by toeing the line, his defiant Iraq policy - have been swirling around him for months. Now, the whirlwind could prove too strong even for Blair's legendary survival skills. How could it have come to this? After all, Blair's Labour Party has been consistently ahead...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tony Blair's Perfect Storm | 1/25/2004 | See Source »

...port city of Pusan on Dec. 19 (the day of the presidential elections). There, he allegedly held a secret dinner meeting with Sohn Gil Seung, CEO of the SK oil and telecom conglomerate. The businessman told the SK chief he should contribute nearly a million dollars to help repay Roh's presidential campaign debts, prosecutors allege. In return, Lee Young Roh promised, SK would get help from the new administration if the company "faced any problems," according to the indictment. During a follow-up meeting in the luxurious Plaza Hotel in downtown Seoul less than a week later, Sohn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Losing Face | 12/1/2003 | See Source »

Even today, African countries continue to repay interest on loans whose principal has already been paid, and this debt repayment constitutes an average of 15 percent of their budget—often equal to or more than that allocated for health. Rather than coming to terms with how international financial institutions have treated Africa differently from Europe after World War II, Summers once again resorted to blaming Africa for the largest part of the problem...

Author: By Felipe A. Jain, | Title: Summers in a Matrix | 11/12/2003 | See Source »

...Paul Bremer, so a separate fund was created under the supervision of the IMF and World Bank to attract grants. But loans, presumably, would be a different matter. Those who loan money to others expect to be repaid, and therefore they need to know that the entity undertaking to repay the loan will be in a position - legally and financially - to do so. That rules out Bremer's Coalition Provisional Authority, the Iraqi Governing Council and even the World Bank-run fund. All of these are designed as temporary entities, and there would be no legal obligation on a future...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Weblog: War Without End | 10/30/2003 | See Source »

...believe the government-loan statistics don't tell the whole story. In many cases, claims TDRI economist Somchai, villagers have used their loans to buy consumer goods. "Much of this money has been used for consumption," he says, "not for development." Others charge that many villagers have managed to repay their debt to the Village Fund only by borrowing from ever-present moneylenders who charge high interest rates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Thaksin Effect | 10/20/2003 | See Source »

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