Assassinations and suspicious deaths

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Assassinations and suspicious deaths

Postby stefano » Tue Oct 21, 2014 2:59 am

These topics might make more sense as a GD thread than a subforum with lots of one-post threads, I think.

So, goodbye then, Christophe de Margerie. Big man in the French military-industrial complex, and comes from old money. Outspoken supporter of good relations between Russia and Western Europe, which can't have been to the liking of the Atlanticists (let's call them). His main worry is falling oil prices when he visits Russia, the top oil-producing country in the world. May have been delegated to bring up the subject of the Mistral-class helicopter carrier that France is holding back from delivering to Russia because of the unpleasantness in the Ukraine. Dies in a freak accident.

Total oil CEO Christophe de Margerie killed in Moscow plane crash

Head of oil giant and three crew died when private jet hit snowplough during takeoff, say Russian sources

theguardian.com, Tuesday 21 October 2014 06.28 BST

The chief executive of the French oil company Total, Christophe de Margerie, was killed when a private jet collided with a snow plough at Moscow’s Vnukovo international airport on Monday night.

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“Tonight a plane crashed when it collided with a snow-clearing machine,” said airport spokeswoman Elena Krylova. “Three crew members and a passenger died. I can confirm that the passenger was Total’s head De Margerie.”

The oil company said in a statement: “Total confirms with deep regret and great sadness that chairman and CEO Christophe de Margerie died just after 10pm (Paris time) on October 20 in a private plane crash at Vnukovo airport in Moscow, following a collision with a snow removal machine.”

The collision occurred just before midnight as the Dassault Falcon business jet attempted to take off bound for Paris.

De Margerie, 63, was on a list of attendees at a Russian government meeting on foreign investment in Gorki, near Moscow, on Monday. Hours before his death he had met the Russian prime minister, Dmitry Medvedev, at his country residence outside Moscow to discuss foreign investment in Russia, the Vedomosti business daily reported.

The Vnukovo airport said in a statement that the Falcon Dassault business aviation jet crashed as it prepared to take off for Paris with one passenger and three crew on board. “During run-up at 11.57pm there was a collision with the airport’s snow plough. As a result of the crash the passenger and all the crew members died.”

The airport said that visibility was at 350 metres at the time of the accident. Moscow saw its first snowfall of the winter on Monday. A fire broke out after the crash and was extinguished by airport firefighters.

Moscow transport investigators said they had opened a criminal probe into breaches of aviation safety rules causing multiple deaths through negligence. French authorities would be invited to take part. The plane’s black boxes had been removed for examination.

The airport was closed temporarily to clear up the scene of the accident but resumed normal operations at 1.30am.

With his distinctive bushy moustache and outspoken manner he was one of the most recognisable figures among the world’s top oil executives.

De Margerie, a graduate of the Ecole Superieure de Commerce in Paris, became chief executive officer of Total in February 2007, taking on the additional role of chairman in May 2010, after previously running its exploration and production division.

De Margerie said in July that he should be judged based on new projects launched under his watch, such as a string of African fields, and that Total would seek a successor from within the company rather than an outsider. Philippe Boisseau, head of Total’s new energy division, and Patrick Pouyanne, who was tasked with reducing the group’s exposure to unprofitable European refining sectors, have long been seen as potential heirs.

A staunch defender of Russia and its energy policies amid the conflict in Ukraine, De Margerie told Reuters in a July interview that Europe should stop thinking about cutting its dependence on Russian gas and focus instead on making those deliveries safer.

He said tensions between the west and Russia were pushing Moscow closer to China, as illustrated by a $400bn deal to supply Beijing with gas that was clinched in May.

“Are we going to build a new Berlin Wall?” he said. “Russia is a partner and we shouldn’t waste time protecting ourselves from a neighbour … What we are looking to do is not to be too dependent on any country, no matter which. Not from Russia, which has saved us on numerous occasions.”


Total is one of the major oil companies most exposed to Russia, where its output will double to represent more than a tenth of its global portfolio by 2020.

Total is one of the top foreign investors in Russia but its future there grew cloudy after the 17 July downing of a Malaysian passenger airliner over Ukrainian territory held by pro-Russian rebels. The disaster worsened the oil-rich country’s relations with the west and raised the threat of deeper sanctions.

Total said in September that sanctions would not stop it working on the Yamal project, a $27bn joint venture investment to tap vast natural gas reserves in north-west Siberia that aims to double Russia’s stake in the fast-growing market for liquefied natural gas.

De Margerie said then that Europe could not live without Russian gas, adding that there was no reason to do so
.

Total is the fourth largest by market value of the western world’s top oil companies behind Exxon, Royal Dutch Shell and Chevron. Russia accounted for about 9% of Total’s oil and gas output in 2013.

The oil company had forecast in April that Russia would become its biggest source of oil and gas by 2020 due to its partnership with the Russian energy company Novatek and the Yamal project.

Total SA is France’s second-biggest listed company with a market value of €102bn.

Like other big oil companies Total has been under pressure from shareholders to cut costs and raise dividends as rising costs in the industry and weaker oil prices squeeze profitability.

De Margerie was the son of diplomats and business leaders, and the grandson of Pierre Taittinger, founder of Taittinger champagne and the luxury goods dynasty.

“His death is a big loss for the global oil/gas industry,” said Gordon Kwan, head of Asia-Pacific oil and gas research at the financial company Nomura.
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Re: Assassinations and suspicious deaths

Postby 82_28 » Tue Oct 21, 2014 4:47 am

Every single day millions of people take to the air. Is there some kind of bargain basement price on chartered flights for "leaders"?
There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Re: Assassinations and suspicious deaths

Postby zangtang » Tue Oct 21, 2014 5:03 am

those that were recently discussing ploughing* thru 'the prize' no doubt thinking of
semi-similarities to 'unsolved' mysterious death of Enrico Mattei, ceo ENI,
one man post-war Italian reconstruction superstar,1962


* absolutely no pun intended, strangely the most appropriate word, someone commented the book was 'hard work!'
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Re: Assassinations and suspicious deaths

Postby stefano » Tue Oct 21, 2014 8:22 am

Thanks zangtang! I have that book on my list but have no idea when I'll get around to it...

According to a draft judicial report leaked to the newspaper La Stampa [in 1997], there now seems to be definitive proof that Enrico Mattei, founding president of Italy's state energy giant Eni, was killed in 1962 by a bomb on board his private aircraft and not, as previously asserted, as a result of a simple accident.

The latest autopsy on Mr Mattei's body has, according to the report, shown "clear signs of multiple lesions caused by waves from an explosion". Investigators in the so-called Mattei Affair, which has obsessed Italy for years and was the subject of an award-winning film by Francesco Rosi in the 1970s, can now concentrate on the even more beguiling questions of who ordered the killing, and why.

Enrico Mattei was a troubling figure for many reasons. He single-handedly built up Italy's state-owned energy sector, to the fury of Italy's Cold War allies who wanted their private companies to be able to exploit the country's oil and natural gas reserves. He forged alliances with Middle Eastern clients of the Soviet Union, gazumped the multinational oil giants by offering better terms for distribution rights, and followed a rigorous price-fixing policy intended to keep petrol and fuel cheap for Italian consumers.

Moreover, Mr Mattei both worked the Italian political system to perfection and also considered himself above it; he once said that he used parties like taxis, "paying what it takes to get where I want to go". He also acted as a one-man ambassador for his country, in particular laying the groundwork for Italy's later policy of clientelistic diplomacy in the Middle East regardless of ethical or geopolitical considerations.

His enemies were legion. The US National Security Council described him as an irritation and an obstacle in a classified report from 1958. The French could not forgive him for doing business with the pro-independence movement in Algeria. Responsibility for his death has been laid at the door of everyone from the CIA, to the French extreme-nationalist group, the OAS, to the Sicilian Mafia.

A defence ministry report five months after his death, which was approved by the then minister Giulio Andreotti, concluded that the aircraft had exploded on the ground a few miles short of Milan's Linate airport, not in the air.

Later inquiries were shelved in 1966 and 1974. A journalist who dug into the affair, Mauro Di Mauro, ended up himself dying in mysterious circumstances. Finally, with the Cold War over, the Mafia informer Tommaso Buscetta announced three years ago that Mr Mattei had been killed by Cosa Nostra as a favour to its friends in the US business community. That statement triggered the latest inquiry, including the exhumation of Mr Mattei's corpse.
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Postby Perelandra » Tue Oct 21, 2014 8:59 am

“The past is never dead. It's not even past.” - William Faulkner
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Re: Assassinations and suspicious deaths

Postby stefano » Wed Oct 22, 2014 6:23 am

Thanks Perelandra - yeah a merge is definitely in order. That's a great thread that I forgot about. I'll do the necessary.
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Re: Assassinations and suspicious deaths

Postby Iamwhomiam » Mon Feb 23, 2015 8:33 pm

Reuters Bureau Chief Is Found Dead in Pakistan

By SALMAN MASOOD FEB. 23, 2015

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The Pakistan and Afghanistan bureau chief for Reuters, Maria Golovnina, was found dead at her office in Islamabad on Monday, according to a statement by Reuters and Pakistani officials.

Ms. Golovnina, 34, fell unconscious in the Islamabad bureau and was taken to a private hospital, “but medical teams were unable to save her,” the Reuters statement read.

No immediate cause of death was available, and hospital officials at Pakistan Institute Of Medical Sciences said an autopsy would be conducted Monday evening at the request of police officials.

Ms. Golovnina was fluent in Japanese and Russian. She joined Reuters in Tokyo in 2001 and became the bureau chief for Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2013.

“Maria was a superb journalist with a long and varied career at Reuters,” the news agency’s statement read. “Her talents, energy and can-do spirit will be sorely missed.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/24/world/asia/reuters-bureau-chief-maria-golovnina-dead-pakistan.html
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Re: Assassinations and suspicious deaths

Postby semper occultus » Tue Apr 07, 2015 10:33 am

...OK...well this all sounds legit and above board.....

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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... -flat.html
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