
U612 Flexible Pipe
Materials:
Features:
Working Pressure<0.6MPa
Diameter:1.5"
Materials:l
Body: SUS304
Package:
Product ID Weight Dimension
U612-A 37kg/case of200
23×23× 34cm/case of 200
U612-B 37kg/case of200
23×23× 34cm/case of 200
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
an has also become something of a haven for foreigners
wanted elsewhere in the world. This may now change. The next important test comes in May, when the Privy
Council will rule on Samuel “Ninety�Knowles, a Bahamian who has held out since 2000 against an indictment by a
grand jury in Florida.
Procedural complexities and powerful lawyers may still stop extraditions. In September in Belize, Dean Barrow, a
lawyer who is also the leader of the parliamentary opposition, stymied an American attempt to extradite a drug
suspect. He found mistakes in supporting paperwork, which excluded the use of vital wiretap evidence.
Extradition of foreigners, especially to their home country, is often easier. Viktor Kozeny, a Czech-born resident of
the Bahamas, has been held in Nassau fuel dispenser since October. He is wanted in New York for corruption stemming from the
privatisation of Azerbaijan s oil company, and faces other charges in Prague.
Mr Kozeny will fight hard. His lawyers include Philip Davis, a member of parliament for the governing party and
former legal partner of the prime minister. Even so, the authorities seem reluctant to grant bail. Perhaps that is
because Mr fuel dispenser Kozeny holds a pilot s licence and Irish and Venezuelan passports. He was once a diplomat for
Grenada.
Non-citizens are sometimes simply expelled. Two Belizean women picked up $50,000 each on the Oprah Winfrey
show in October, their reward for spotting an alleged rapist from the United States who was sent home two days
later for trial. It is rarely so quick or easy.
© 2006 .
Venezuela
Slow road ahead
Jan 12th 2006 | CARACAS
From The Economist print edition
A bit more cut off from the world
Get article background
fuel dispenser
A MERE 16km (ten miles) separates Venezuela s capital, Caracas, from
its international airport at MaiquetÃa on the Caribbean coast. But if they
lack a helicopter, travellers might be wise to set off the day before. On
January 5th, a viaduct carrying the motorway that crosses the mountains