
U603 Hose
Transfer gasoline,kerosene,diesel from fuel dispenser to vehicle.
Materials:
Body: oil-proof rubber
Features :
Oil-proof
Hose is soft,light
Little variant when transfer gasoline
Middle conducting layer- working safety
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
31kg/case of 30 34kg/case of 30 37x23.5x19.5 cm / case of 30
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itics
Prodi s unhappy new year fuel dispenser
Jan 5th 2006 | ROME
From The Economist print edition
IBERPRESS
A new scandal threatens to dent the centre-left s election chances
FEW European countries face a more crucial year than Italy. A general election on April 9th will decide whether
Silvio Berlusconi s centre-right coalition, elected in 2001, continues in office. The controversies that always
surround Mr Berlusconi, and even more his disappointing management of the economy, have made his government
deeply unpopular. Italy badly needs radical reform, yet Mr Berlusconi s coalition, notionally committed to economic
liberalism, has done precious little in its five years in office.
Thus a much-hyped shake-up of the pension system will not now take effect until 2008. Labour-market reforms
have been started but not expanded. A strengthening of the country s corporate-governance laws, pushed through
just before the end of 2005, was a delayed response to the Parmalat scandal of 2003. And the economy has
stuttered since Mr Berlusconi came to power. Most estimates of GDP growth last year are coming in at no more
than 0.2%. This year Italy will once again have the slowest-growing economy in the European Union.
The centre-left opposition, led by a former prime minister (and former president of the European Commission),
Romano fuel dispenser Prodi, could hardly have wished for a more propitious start to an election year. But its new-year euphoria
lasted all of 24 hours. By January 2nd, the formerly communist Left Democrats (DS), the biggest party in Mr
Prodi s alliance, the Union, was in crisis. A Berlusconi-backed newspaper, Il Giornale, had published extracts from a
telephone call recorded by magistrates that puts the party s secretary-general, Piero Fassino (pictured above,
talking to Mr Prodi), centre stage in Italy s long-running scandals over bank takeovers. These have already led to
the arrest of several bankers and to th fuel dispenser