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11-26-2009, 05:22 AM | #21 |
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If you wondered how the Algerian v Egyptian football s**** couldnt transform into something else, the reality it was very likely something else all a long.
Reuters reported and the Cairo based OT Telecom confirmed that on November 17 2009, the Algerian tax authority issued to Egypt's Telecom company in Algeria, Djezzy, a reassessment of back taxes owed amounting to $USD 595 million dollars. "Orascom Telecom Algeria received Last Night the Official Tax Assessment for the years 2005, 2006 and 2007 Cairo, November 17th, 2009: Orascom Telecom Holding (“OTH”) announces that its Algerian subsidiary Orascom Telecom Algeria (“OTA”) has received last night the official tax notification from the Algerian Direction des Grandes Enterprises (Tax Department for Large-Scale Companies) (the “DGE”) in respect of the years 2005, 2006 and 2007, in which the DGE has assessed taxes and penalties alleged to be owing by OTA in the amount of DZD 43.9 billion (approximately USD596.6 million) (the “Reassessment”). The Reassessment is based primarily on the unfounded and unacceptable allegation that OTA did not keep proper accounts for the years 2005, 2006 and 2007 notwithstanding that OTA’s accounts were fully audited and approved by both OTA’s international auditors, and its local statutory auditors. The DGE rejected the methods applied by OTA’s in its accounts and took the following position: • The DGE reconstituted OTA’s Total Revenue for the 2005, 2006 and 2007 years to an amount of DZD387 billion (equivalent to USD5.25 billion) versus reported audited figure of DZD325 billion (equivalent to USD4.42 billion) denoting an additional DZD62 billion (equivalent to USD840 million) compared to the actual revenue generated. It is worth noting that for the year 2005 alone the variance between the OTA’s audited figures and the DGE’s claim reached 36%. OTA invited the tax authority to revisit its decision by performing a thorough audit on the company’s switches and IT systems responsible for the recording and reporting of the company’s revenues. The DGE did not consider OTA’s invitation." http://www.otelecom.com/files/media_...and%202007.pdf Its very likely that OTA expected this verdict and reported back to Cairo that Algeria was going to bury Egypt's telecom business interests with outstanding tax claims. Formal documents of this size rarely arrive unexpected. Thus, the attack on the Algerian football team could have easily have been an indication to Bouteflika's regime that Egypt was not going down lightly. This entire spat could easily be about money and Bouteflika's efforts to remove foreign businesses in Algeria's telecommunications market. In the end, the Muslim people are being used as pawns by both regimes. Subhanna Allah. |
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11-26-2009, 06:23 AM | #22 |
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11-26-2009, 10:12 AM | #23 |
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BTW, the censored word above is NOT a curse word, BTW They're getting brother Ashraf Sa3d Involved in this as well, they started accusing him of robbing money ect.. only because he appeared on al Mustakillah TV to try and create unity. Thanks for the info bro wassalam |
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11-26-2009, 10:22 AM | #24 |
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This all would have died down if it wasn't for the Egyptian Media, the insults and duas against us by the media, an entire people of 30 million, fellow Muslims, even before the match was just pathetic, it' s one thing to have crazy soccer fans insulting each other over the Internet it's another thing to hear it on Egyptian TV channels including the one that is state run. What happened on their TV channels afterwards has us Algerians baffled about what's going on over there. All those famous people calling those shows and insulting us well at least all the Egyptian musicians that called promised to never give a concert in Algeria again. Having a TV Host tell people after the Sudan match to go out and kill the Algerians in Egypt seriously I couldn't believe my ears it and they haven't stopped till now, their goal is to stirr up the Egyptian people even further for their agenda and sadly just like everywhere, many people are easily manipulated by the media. It was a game no one died get over it, inshallah my Egyptian brothers and sisters will see through the plan of those that play the game of shaytaan by trying to divide these two nations and the entire ummah Btw 135 matches without fans?? seriously you actually believed that but then again that's what I mean |
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11-26-2009, 10:37 AM | #25 |
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We as Arabs respect The Amazigh and The Algerians and all the Honest people of Egypt, The Problem is Egyptian Media is much stronger than Algerian one and the secular rulers of Egypt especially are Excuse my French DONKEYS. much peace and respect from Lebanon. |
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11-26-2009, 11:53 AM | #26 |
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11-26-2009, 11:47 PM | #28 |
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I don't know much about Algerians though i do hear that they are quite aggressive people, but, what i hear from my egyptian colleagues shows that they have been a victim of media frenzy. They tell me of stories of algerians i find hard to beleive, like , 5000 prisnors were released from algerian jails, put on military plains, brought to Sudan and given knives to attack egyptian fans! And the anger at Sudan that they did not shoot the algerian hooligans!
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11-27-2009, 07:02 AM | #29 |
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I don't know much about Algerians though i do hear that they are quite aggressive people, but, what i hear from my egyptian colleagues shows that they have been a victim of media frenzy. They tell me of stories of algerians i find hard to beleive, like , 5000 prisnors were released from algerian jails, put on military plains, brought to Sudan and given knives to attack egyptian fans! And the anger at Sudan that they did not shoot the algerian hooligans! |
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07-02-2012, 02:29 PM | #30 |
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Timeline Algeria1834: France annexes Algeria
1945: Several thousand Algerians are killed during pro-independence riots in Constantine 1954: Algerian exiles in Egypt create the Front de Liberation Nationale (FLN) and start the civil war 1956: Algerian freedom fighter Ben Bella is arrested by French police 1959: DeGaulle grants Algeria the right to vote on independence 1962: After the deaths of about 100,000 French and about 1,000,000 Algerians, Algeria is declared independent 1962: Ben Bella, released from French prison, returns to Algeria and becomes its first president 1965: Houari Boumedienne seizes power in Algeria and keeps Ben Bella under house arrests for 15 years 1976: Algeria is declared a socialist state 1978: Boumedienne dies and is replaced by Benjedid Chadly as president of Algeria 1980: Berbers demonstrate against Arab domination in Algeria ("Spring of Kabyle") 1988: Anti-government riots in Algiers 1990: The Front Islamique du Salut (FIS) defeats the FLN by a large margin of votes in several local elections in Algeria 1992: The Algerian army cancels national elections won by the FIS and seizes power, while Islamic radicals of the Arme` Islamique du Salut (AIS), the military wing of the FIS, begin a guerrilla campaign 1993: A group of of Algerian "Afghans" (Islamic fighters who received their military training in Afghanistan) form the Group Islamique Arme` (GIA) with the mission to exterminate all infidels (basically Jews and Christians) 1994: Liamine Zeroual is appointed Algerian president by the army 1996: All religious parties are outlawed from future Algerian elections 1997: The GIA becomes the main rebel group fighting the Algerian government 1999: Abdelaziz Bouteflika is elected president of Algeria after all other candidates withdraw or are disuqalified 1999: The GIA and the AIS approve peace talks with the Algerian government 2002: The FLN wins national elections boycotted by all opposition parties Link |
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07-02-2012, 02:40 PM | #31 |
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A BBC story.
1959 : National Liberation Front (FLN) had killed 123 settlers of French origin. In retaliation, the French army and pieds-noirs gangs killed as many as 12,000 Algerians. Yasmine was just a schoolgirl with a beautiful face and long black curls, living in the Belcourt district of the capital. Joined FLN to convey messages. Lost both legs in trying to plant a bomb. Spent two years in jail. American doctors spent $60,000 of personal money for her prosthetic legs. 1962, Algeria is independent. Yasmine is not there to witness it. "But the following year, sitting in my chair beside the president as he raised the Algerian flag, I just cried and cried," she remembers. "I was so happy." Then there is some BBC/western romance. That her first thoughts were about not swimming and not dancing. May be these were her thought but who is BBC to peep into what women are doing - particularly Muslim women? Fifty years on Algeria has, in some ways, disappointed the aspirations of the people who fought for its independence from France. They dreamed of building a just, democratic and peaceful state. Oh yeah! The compulsory western gig. The strange thing is that her final statement is: "It was what God wanted me to do, I have no regrets." Now if a Muslimah is trying to get connected with her God then why is BBC trying to connect it with democracy and their own sense of justice? When you talk to a Muslim just assume that he or she takes Islam as legitimate, even if you do not. |
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07-02-2012, 06:48 PM | #32 |
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Women who have gone for holidays to Egypt report of being constantly harrased and stared at by men. Sounds like a bad place. Egypt since Napoleon invaded has been constantly and ruthlessly colonized.
tarawee prayer in Algeria http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RprFi...eature=related |
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