BOC reinstates Subic port execs as sugar smuggling probe ends pna.gov.ph - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pna.gov.ph Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SIX public servants tagged as involved in “the possible smuggling of 7,021 metric tons of sugar from Thailand at the Subic Port in Zambales” were reinstated after their boss at the Bureau of Customs (BOC) said the agency found no irregularities in their processing of sugar shipments. Acting Customs Commissioner…
Customs officials at Subic port cleared of sugar smuggling allegations cnnphilippines.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cnnphilippines.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
PARIS (Reuters) -Orange, France's biggest telecoms operator, said on Friday that a software failure caused the network outage that affected calls to French emergency services for several hours last week, according to an internal inquiry. Orange's internal investigators found that the emergency calls, which rely on a platform of servers responsible for dispatching calls, were severely disturbed because of a bug in the call server software. Orange's voice services and access to some emergency services were affected most between 1445 GMT and 2200 GMT on June 2, Orange said, putting lives at risk and raising pressure on Chief Executive Stephane Richard.
Cologne Catholic sex abuse probe seen as cover-up
Germany s secular panel on sexualized violence against children says Cologne s Catholic archdiocese has severely damaged moves to own up to its abusive past.
Cologne s archbishopric severely damaged the process of owning up to decades of sexualized violence against children in its ranks as demanded by victims and lay Catholics, a top secular German panel found on Monday.
The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse a commission mandated by parliament since 2016 to probe cases across German society decried the diocese s own internal review, saying this must be done instead by outsiders.
Its statement coincided Monday with Munich lawyers refuting a claim by Cologne Archbishop Rainer Maria Woelki that their report, delivered to him last year but kept secret, only examined 15 selected cases out of all 236 available cases.