Cronaca Vera: TGCOM e Leggende Urbane che sono vere lo giuro potessi mor (Part 1)

Pisa, in moto spara e ferisce quattro persone: è caccia all'uomo




edit: rido per la causa scatenante, non per il gesto
E' capitato non generalizziamo... no wait... ma come? Pisa?!


Beh pisa dai, come dire, ehm...


Lo incolli pls?


ok


Spoiler



In July 2011, an alarming email dropped into the inboxes of senior figures at Oxfam’s head offices in Oxford.
It came from Paul Caney, a high-level official in Oxfam’s Caribbean and Latin America team. He told the recipients, including Dame Barbara Stocking, who was the charity’s chief executive, to expect an imminent visit from a whistleblower reporting allegations about the conduct of aid workers in Haiti.
The whistleblower went over the heads of line managers in Oxford and met Dame Barbara directly. Senior Oxfam officials in Haiti were not informed. The story that this individual told — one of alleged bullying, harassment, intimidation of Haitian and international staff and serious sexual misconduct — was shocking. Oxfam ordered an investigation but has managed until now to keep its findings and the details of the case secret from the public, who donate or bequeath more than £100 million per year to the charity.



The Times has pieced together an account of what happened through interviews with several sources — Oxfam insiders concerned at the charity’s lack of transparency — and leaked documents including a “confidential” report of the internal investigation.
At the time, Oxfam was engaged in a disaster operation after the earthquake and aftershocks of January 2010 that claimed 220,000 lives, injured 300,000 and left 1.5 million people destitute. The charity had a £70 million fund to distribute relief and rebuild the infrastructure of a poor and devastated country.
The great majority of the charity’s 230 staff in Haiti were working tirelessly in difficult conditions. The whistleblower, however, felt compelled to report disturbing allegations about the behaviour of senior colleagues.
Sources say they gave an account of serious sexual misconduct by a group of male aid workers living at a charity residence in Delmas, near Port-au-Prince. They had detailed notes and records of conversations with witnesses.
“The group lived in a guesthouse rented by Oxfam that they called the ‘pink apartments’ — they called it ‘the whorehouse’,” said a source who says he was shown phone footage by one of the residents of the guesthouse.
“They were throwing big parties with prostitutes. These girls were wearing Oxfam T-shirts, running around half-naked, it was a like a full-on Caligula orgy. It was unbelievable. It was crazy. At one party there were at least five girls and two of them had Oxfam white T-shirts on. These men used to talk about holding ‘young meat barbecues’.”



The group was said to have control over the team of drivers hired by the charity to move staff. A source said: “They said, ‘Listen, if you want your contract to be extended we need girls and you need to pick them up’.”
The Times understands that Oxfam has no record of mobile phone footage being recovered in the course of the investigation.
The investigation team was more used, according to one source, to “dealing with people with their hands in the till in Oxfam shops”.
Internal critics say that the inquiry was limited by a determination to keep it out of the public eye. “The approach was ‘get what you need to get rid of these people and then close it down’,” one former staff member said.
Oxfam said that the team included a human resources representative from Britain “trained in safeguarding” and a Haiti-based counsellor.
The investigators flew into Haiti and were based at a hotel outside the “safe zone” where most aid workers lived. Covert surveillance was carried out on some suspects and contact was made with Oxfam-employed drivers used by the group to bring women to their house, and the prostitutes themselves.
Separately, three sources said they had concerns that some of the “prostitutes” were girls aged 14 to 16, below the age of consent. Several of the women and girls gave statements to the investigation. Oxfam said allegations that under-age girls were exploited had been investigated but “not proven”.



Prostitution is illegal but widespread in Haiti and the age of consent is 18, although girls can marry younger with parental permission. Oxfam was a supporter of the UN inter-agency standing committee on protection from sexual abuse, which prohibits aid workers buying sex. The charity had its own policy declaring it would “not tolerate sexually abusive or exploitative acts being perpetrated by our employees”.
The country director, Roland van Hauwermeiren, a Belgian, was summoned to be questioned about management failings on his watch and allegations that he used prostitutes. These claims were separate from the alleged conduct at the “pink apartments”.
According to the investigation report, he admitted having prostitutes visit his residence — a villa known as the Eagle’s Nest — rented for him by Oxfam. Instead of being dismissed, he was offered a deal: he would be allowed to resign and given one month’s notice if he co-operated with the investigation. “This proposal was subsequently agreed with Barbara Stocking . . . as there were potentially serious implications for the programme, affiliate relationships and the rest of the investigation if he were to be dismissed.”
Six other men left Oxfam as a result of the investigation — no Britons or Haitians but all experienced international aid workers in the employment of Oxfam GB. They held responsible positions and wielded power in a stricken country dependent on aid.
Two resigned while under investigation for allegedly using prostitutes, bullying and CV fraud. Four were dismissed for gross misconduct ranging from “use of prostitutes on Oxfam property” to failing to protect staff to having “pornographic and illegal material” on a work computer.
Oxfam declined to comment on what the “illegal material” was but confirmed none of the allegations was referred to police or authorities in Haiti.
The charity’s spokesman said: “The legal advice we received in Haiti was that given the nature of the allegations, especially with the continued upheaval and chaos, it was extremely unlikely that any action would be taken.”




the end of the inquiry, on September 5, 2011, Oxfam issued a press statement reporting that a small number of staff had been “involved in a number of instances of misconduct”. It stressed that it “was not related to fraud and did not affect the approximately US$98 million Oxfam fundraised following the earthquake in Haiti”.
No mention was made of the exploitative sexual misconduct that the whistleblower had reported and the investigation report had upheld.
One source said: “The final report is weak, it has been watered down — it’s quite lazy. I think that at some point Oxfam switched to brand protection because this was nuclear.”
The charity said it had conducted a thorough investigation into a range of allegations, including sexual misconduct. “Some of the allegations were upheld and a number of staff were dismissed as a result and others left the organisation before the investigation was completed — Oxfam trustees, the Charity Commission and the Department for International Development [Dfid] were informed.”
It said Mr Van Hauwermeiren “took full responsibility for events that took place under his management and was permitted to resign on the basis that he fully co-operated with and supported the investigation”. It added: “The sexual misconduct allegations were investigated and detailed in the investigation report together with the outcomes and lessons learnt. Allegations that under-age girls may have been involved were not proven.
“After the investigation, we carried out a thorough review of the case which resulted in the creation of our dedicated safeguarding team and a confidential ‘whistleblowing’ hotline.”
The Charity Commission said it had not received full details of the case from Oxfam. A spokesman added: “We expect the charity to include in their review incidents that occurred in 2011.”
A Dfid spokesman said: “Dfid has an absolute zero-tolerance of sexual assault or harassment. We expect all our partners to have robust systems in place to prevent such unacceptable behaviour, fully investigate complaints in compliance with the Charity Commission, and support those who have been affected.”



Thx!





Cazzo ti ridi?!

pew pew !


Cazzo guardi?

bam bam bam!
Avete dimenticato gli ajò


TRATTACASU



napolimoney


Torre del Greco, scoperta 'stamperia' clandestina con 41 milioni di euro falsi: un arresto

http://napoli.repubblica.it/cronaca/2018/02/11/news/torre_del_greco_scoperta_stamperia_con_41_milioni_di_euro_falsi_un_arresto-188592340/?ref=RHPPLF-BH-I0-C8-P2-S1.8-T1




Bitcoin 2.0


il titolare di una delle pizzerie dove vado di solito, un paio di anni fa, appena mi ha visto pagare con i nuovi 20 euro (ufficialmente in circolazione dal giorno prima) ha esclamato "ah, le nuove venti euro, a Napoli già le avevamo due settimane fa"