NEW YORK HORROR: 14-YEAR-OLD GIRL LEAPS TO HER DEATH FROM LUXURY SOHO APARTMENT BUILDING. (PHOTO).

Image
 New York horror: 14-year-old girl leaps to her death from luxury SoHo apartment building A girl, 14, leaped to her death from a luxury SoHoapartment building on Sunday, November 17, cops have said. The incident took place at about 7:20 am. An NYPD spokesperson said that following the tragedy, police were notified of an unconscious girl at 101 Wooster Street, New York Post reported. The victim could not be saved and was reportedly pronounced dead at the scene. Law enforcement sources said the girl lived with her family on the third and fourth floors of the building. The units reportedly sell for upwards of $5 million. The incident is under investigation, cops confirmed.

AUSTRALIAN MINER PAYS MALI INITIAL $80M OUT OF TOTAL OF $160M OCER TAX DISPUTE, STATEMENT SAYS. (PHOTO).


 Australian Miner Pays Mali Initial $80 Mln Out of Total of $160 Mln Over Tax Dispute, Statement Says


The Malian government is demanding $161 million from Resolute Mining, which operates the Syama gold mine, to settle a dispute primarily involving alleged back taxes, Sputnik reports.


Australian gold miner Resolute Mining, which operates Mali's Syama gold mine, has paid an initial $80 million to the government of Mali and will pay a further $80 million in the coming months over a tax dispute, the company said in a statement on Monday.


"The protocol [a memorandum of understanding between the Malian government and the miner] also provides that all outstanding claims by the government against the company, including those related to tax, customs levies, maintenance and management of offshore accounts are settled," the statement read.


Resolute has made an initial settlement payment of approximately $80 million to Mali's government from existing cash reserves, with future payments of approximately $80 million to be made in the coming months.


The move follows more than a week of detention in Mali of the company's CEO, Terence Holohan, and two of the company's employees, who were in the capital, Bamako, for discussions with the country's mining and tax authorities about Resolute's operations in the country and to pursue unfounded tax claims against the company, the miner noted in a statement last Monday.


"The executives were in Bamako to hold discussions with the mining and tax authorities regarding general activities related to Resolute’s in-country business practices, and to progress open claims made against Resolute, which the Company maintains are unsubstantiated," the statement said.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

INNOSON GIVES OUT BRAND NEW IVM G5 AND SALARY FOR LIFE TO THE MAN WHO PROPHESIED ABOUT HIS VEHICLE MANUFACTURING IN 1979.(PHOTO).

SHAKIRA COVERS WOMEN'S HEALTH MAGAZINE,APRIL ISSUE.

SSANU, NASU THREATEN STRIKE OVER WITHHELD SALARIES. (PHOTO).