Hi, my nickname is Mishaal Bint. In this blog I will write articles or I will upload music, videos, news, articles of different disciplines or anything related to the culture and the reality of this place of the world. I hope you will enjoy an open window to this culture portrayed by this blog and, hopefully, you will travel soon here to visit our region.
Sunday, 29 April 2012
Argentine senate approves oil nationalisation.
President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner's plan for takeover of
country's largest oil company. YPF, receives wide support in
early-morning senate vote.
Thursday, 19 April 2012
Spain lobbies for US support against YPF expropriation
Spain will discuss a joint response with the United States to Argentina‘s forced nationalization of the YPF oil company, Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo said today.Garcia-Margallo spoke ahead of a bilateral meeting with US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, on the margins of ongoing NATO talks in Brussels.The meeting will serve to "study together what kind of actions we can take to restore a good climate for investment" in Argentina, the Spanish minister said.Garcia-Margallo claimed that the Argentine government‘s decision - which will strip Spain‘s Repsol of its controlling stake in YPF - "can help hide its shortcomings.""But very soon it will be shown that a policy of isolation from the world is the worst policy that you can have in the 21st century," he added. The US initially declined to take sides in the Argentinean-Spanish dispute, but overnight, after some prodding from Madrid, it said that it viewed the expropriation of YPF "as a negative development."The United States said yesterday Argentina's plan to nationalize leading energy company YPF was a "negative development" that could hurt the Latin American country's economy and investment climate.State Department spokesman Mark Toner said the United States was very concerned about Argentina's bid to seize the company, controlled by Spanish energy group Repsol, and had raised its concerns with the highest levels of the Argentine government."Frankly, the more we look at this we view it as a negative development," Toner told a news briefing."These kinds of actions against foreign investors can ultimately have an adverse effect on the Argentine economy and could further dampen the investment climate in Argentina," he pointed out.Spain is due to consider its next steps at a cabinet meeting on Friday.
Taken from here.
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