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Japan declares nuclear no-go zone

Under the order, which goes into effect at midnight local time, it will be illegal to enter a 20km (12-mile) evacuation zone around the Fukushima nuclear reactor Tens of thousands of people who were evacuated from near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant risk arrest if they return home, after the government declared the area a no-entry zone due to high radiation levels. Under the order, which goes into effect at midnight local time, people living within a 20-kilometre radius of the atomic plant will be given up to two hours to enter the area to collect belongings. The move came amid concern over the long-term health risks posed by high levels of accumulated radiation, despite signs of progress in bringing the stricken facility under control. The government has also extended the evacuation zone to several locations outside the 20-kilometre zone, including areas in which as many as 130,000 people had initially been asked to leave voluntarily or stay indoors. Residents in those areas will be given a month to evacuate. The government’s chief spokesman, Yukio Edano, urged people living inside the new no-entry zone to abide by the order for the sake of their health. “The plant is not stable,” he told reporters. “We have been asking residents not to enter the area as there is a huge risk to their safety.” Under the order, people who enter the zone without permission face fines of up to 100,000 yen and possible arrest. “We beg the understanding of residents,” Edano said. “We really don’t want them to enter the area, but unfortunately some people are still living there.” Almost all of the 8,000 people living in the 20-kilometre zone have been evacuated, but some have refused to abandon their livestock or move from their homes into evacuation centres. Police said about 60 families had defied the evacuation order imposed after the crisis began, adding that some had been persuaded to leave. The contaminated bodies of as many as a 1,000 people who died in the 11 March earthquake and tsunami have yet to be recovered from the area. The stricter measure was introduced to stop people from returning to collect belongings and to prevent theft. Until now, police have not had the legal authority to block returnees. Edano said that over the next one to two months, one resident per household would be permitted to return home on chartered buses to collect belongings. They will all be required to undergo radiation screening on their way out. Those living within three kilometres of the plant and other areas where very high levels of radiation have been detected will not be allowed to return, even for a short period, Kyodo said. “We realise this is extremely inconvenient for residents, but we urge you to be patient,” Edano said. The prime minister, Naoto Kan, flew to Fukushima prefecture on Thursday to explain the order to officials and evacuees. Kan, whose approval rating has fallen over his handling of the nuclear crisis, said the government would enforce the no-go zone order. He asked the prefecture’s governor, Yuhei Sato, to help win the understanding of local communities, according to Kyodo news agency. Tens of thousands of people affected by the nuclear crisis, many of whom fled with nothing but the clothes they were wearing, face many more months living in evacuation centres. The plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power [Tepco], said last week it would take between six and nine months to bring down radiation levels and make the facility safe, a time line some experts have described as optimistic. Edano conceded that Tepco had not been adequately prepared to cope with the disaster. “Leaving aside the question of whether the accident could have been predicted, it is clear that there was insufficient preparation. “We urge all nuclear plant operators to immediately take every possible precaution in light of the Fukushima disaster.” A Tepco official on Wednesday admitted that ful inside the plant’s No 1 reactor could be melting. ”I can’s say with absolute certainty that [the fuel] jas not melted,” Junichi Matsumoto said, adding that the firm had been unable to confirm the condition of the reactor’s core. Japan disaster Japan Nuclear power Natural disasters and extreme weather Justin McCurry guardian.co.uk

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Wfc

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Wfc

Transformers War for Cybertron Decepticons Campaign DS pt 6 Transformers War for Cybertron Decepticons Canpaign DS pt 5 [MKWii] WFC With Gogor 5 Financial Sector Summary:AXP, NYX, WFC | Get Your Ex Back Advice Wells Fargo & Company (Public, NYSE: WFC ). last Market Price: 29.56. Shares trade in the range of 29.35 – 29.88 dollars. It has a market capitalization of 157.81B dollars and has 5.28B outstanding shares. The company has a beta of 1.36, … The Markets Are Open: Banks, ETFs Move Loads of Cash, SPY, WFC SPDR S&P 500 ETF pressed higher by $1.75, moving the stock price to $133.06. Stock volume in SPDR S&P 500 ETF was 91 million shares in the trading session. Wells Fargo & Company ( WFC ) shares dropped $1.415 per share or 4.71%, … Swiss Cheese Rally (NYSE: WFC ) (NYSE:BAC) (NYSE:MOS) (NYSE:CSX … Swiss Cheese Rally (NYSE: WFC ) (NYSE:BAC) (NYSE:MOS) (NYSE:CSX)Inthemoneystocks.com (blog)(NYSE:BAC) are trading near the unchanged level an not participating in the market rally. Mosaic Co.(NYSE:MOS) is a leading agriculture stock that … Mortgage | Wfc Earnings Breakout | Mortgages (Please visit the site to view this media)CNBC’s Mary Thompson gives a breakdown of Wells Fargo’s earnings….(read more)Forward this article via email:Related. TIVO, PII, DRL, DPL, OCZ, WFC are Stocks to Watch on Apr-20 … These are the stocks that are making news this afternoon.TiVo Inc. (NASDAQ:TIVO) is currently up 33.87%. Their market cap is 1.34B . Tivo, Inc. is a provider. DonnaBurton says: $ WFC CFO Tim Sloan tells @MariaBartiromo loan delinquencies are down and credit quality is improving #CNBC #money

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Birth Certificate

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Birth Certificate

Donald Trump’s Allies From Sesame Street Demand Michelle Obama to Show Her Husband’s BC! Facts Birthers Intentionally Ignore or Are Too Stupid to Understand Donald Trump – Obama’s Birth Certificate – Who Made Who Michele Bachmann Says Obama's Birth Certificate Settles The … Recently Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann has flirted on the edges of the birther movement, perhaps in reaction to the attention Donald Trump has been. Charlie Sheen A Birther: Doubts President Obama's Birth Certificate Charlie Sheen brought his violent torpedo of craziness to Washington, D.C. on Tuesday, adding political controversy to his derided stage show. In addition to his usual rants about porn stars, his ex-wife, “Two and a Half Men” creator … TRUMP TO OBAMA: Show Your Birth Certificate , I'll Show My Tax Returns I am back and forth with whether or not the President should show his birth certificate . The reasoning why he should is to shut all these windbags up. Only problem with that is he would be succumbing to them and I’d hate that. … Michele Bachmann On The Obama Birth Certificate Story – Mediaite Republican Congresswoman Michele Bachmann appeared on GMA this morning to talk about her solutions for fixing the nation’s economic problems. However, when the topic of conversation turned to her potential rival for the Republican … Donald Trump to Obama: Show Your Birth Certificate and I'll Show … Donald Trump seeks President Obama’s Birth Certificate and he gets some help from some of his celebrity apprentices. getemBLACK says: “I didn't change it lol @B_AnthonyB : lmfao don't change my tweet!! “@getemBLACK: ” @B_AnthonyB :

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John Fund Carries Water for S&P’s Fearmongering and Pretends Republicans Care About Job Creation in the US

Click here to view this media Well, what do you know. As Karoli noted, Standard and Poor’s decided to do their best to help push some austerity measures that Wall Street would love to see by scaring the crap out of everyone as she wrote about earlier here — Standard & Poor’s Is Playing Us For Fools . And surprise, surprise, Rupert Murdoch’s sock puppet over at The Wall Street Journal John Fund makes an appearance on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal to scare the hell out of all of the viewers there as well that we must do something now to calm the fears of these masters of the universe or we’re going to end up like Greece or Japan. Never mind that we can’t trust what political motives were behind the decision by S&P to come out with the statement that they did this week and Fund even admits as much and that the reasons are political, but he lays the blame on our politicians rather than the ratings agency potentially having political motives for their press release. He also says that Moody’s might not be far behind. As Karoli noted in her post, they were just as culpable for contributing to the fall of the housing market and misleading investors as the S&P was. I think Digby summed up pretty well what their game might be here — Debt Ceiling: The Musical . Fund also rattled off the usual Republican talking points about how we’d better lower the corporate tax rate in America or we’re not going to see any jobs created here. Sorry John, but that ship has already sailed. If multi-national corporations that want to pass themselves off as still being “American companies” cared about job creation instead of a race to the bottom on wages, we’d have full employment in the Unites States right now. They don’t. Until we start taxing them for outsourcing our jobs instead of having a tax code that rewards them for it, lowering their rate is going to do nothing but put more money into the top 1%’s pockets and lowering every American’s standard of living. I’m sure John Fund knows this since he’s not a stupid man no matter how little he cares for the working class in America, but he’s paid well to pretend he doesn’t.

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Captain Lisa Head, 29, killed clearing IEDs in Helmand, becoming second British servicewoman killed in Afghanistan A woman serving with the British army’s bomb disposal team in Afghanistan has died of injuries sustained on duty in Helmand province, the Ministry of Defence has announced. Captain Lisa Head, 29, from Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, is the second British servicewoman to have been killed during the 10-year conflict in Afghanistan. She had been there less than a month when she was fatally injured, having volunteered to become a specialist in the clearance of IEDs (improvised explosive devices). Defence officials said she had been severely wounded on Monday while attempting to defuse a complex set of hidden devices during a clearance operation in Helmand’s Nahr-e Saraj district. She had already defused one IED, which had been found by soldiers from the Parachute Regiment in an alleyway used by Afghan and coalition troops. “After rendering safe the identified IED, Captain Head was fatally injured while dealing with a second IED,” the MoD said. She was airlifted by helicopter to a military hospital at Camp Bastion, the main British base in Helmand, then evacuated to the Queen Elizabeth hospital in Birmingham, where she died of her injuries on Tuesday. Her family issued a statement, saying they were extremely proud of what she had achieved: “Lisa always said that she had the best job in the world and she loved every second of it. Lisa had two families – us and the army. Lisa had a fantastic life and lived it to the full. No one was more loved.” Her commander in the Royal Logistics Corps, Lieutenant Colonel Adam McRae, said: “She took particular pride in achieving the coveted ‘high threat’ status which set her at the pinnacle of her trade. Lisa deployed to Afghanistan with the full knowledge of the threats she would face. “These dangers did not faze her as she was a self-assured, highly effective operator and a well-liked leader. Her potential was considerable and she will be an enormous loss to us all.” Lieutenant Colonel Mark Budden, in charge of the counter-IED task force, said the team had been “rocked” by her death. “My heartfelt condolences go out to Lisa’s parents, her sister, family and friends.” Two other female soldiers, Lance Corporal Sarah Drury and Lance Corporal Alexis Wort, issued a statement saying: “We are both privileged to have met Lisa on deployment to Afghanistan on 26 March. Having never served together before, ‘us girls’ were accommodated together in the same tent. Lisa was our senior and mentor.” A graduate from Huddersfield University, Capt Head went to Sandhurst in 2005 and then on duty with the Royal Logistics Corps. She deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan in 2006 and 2007 as an air transport liaison officer before being selected to train as a bomb disposal expert. The pressure experienced by the IED specialists was underlined earlier this year at the inquest of Staff Sergeant Olaf Schmid, who was posthumously awarded the George Cross after he was killed attempting to defuse a device on 31 October 31 2009. He had defused 64 devices during his tour of duty, and was on his last patrol before heading back to the UK going on leave. The army insists that since Schmid’s death, the number of specialists has increased, and ministers approved an extra £67m for additional counter-IED equipment last year. The first British servicewoman to die on duty in Afghanistan was Sarah Bryant, 26, a military intelligence soldier killed by a roadside bomb near Lashkar Gah together with three special forces reservists in 2008. They were on a joint British-Afghan counter-insurgency mission 10 miles north-east of Lashkar Gah, in Helmand province, when the blast hit their open-topped Land Rover. There have been 364 British military deaths in operations in Afghanistan since 2001; 44 died from illness or accidents. There are 44 service personnel who have died from accidents, illness, or non-combat injuries. Afghanistan Military Nick Hopkins guardian.co.uk

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Bolivia accepts US aid in coca fight

President Evo Morales rules out return of US agents, but says he will accept $250,000 from Washington for satellite monitoring Bolivia has relaxed its hostility to US involvement in Latin America by accepting help to combat the country’s growing drug trafficking problem. President Evo Morales, an outspoken critic of Washington “imperialism”, has accepted financial aid to monitor efforts to eradicate coca, the raw ingredient for cocaine. The government accepted the $250,000 offer following setbacks to its counter-narcotics programme which prompted calls for a return of the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Morales, an Aymara Indian and former coca grower, expelled around 30 DEA agents in 2008, claiming they were plotting against his socialist revolution. The president allowed coca cultivation to expand, arguing the Andean leaf had multiple legitimate uses. As a coca farmer in the 1980s he had been beaten by Bolivian police who tried to enforce the DEA’s campaign against the crop.However, he pledged “zero tolerance” for cocaine, a chemical derivative of coca, and said Bolivia could crack down on traffickers without US help. The effort to rehabilitate coca, considered sacred by the Incas, gained widespread international support but Bolivia’s law-enforcement institutions have struggled against well-funded drug gangs. Authorities said they seized 28 tonnes of cocaine last year, more than neighbouring Peru, but the US and UN said drug trafficking was spiking. In February the government was embarrassed when three senior police officers and the former commander of the counter-narcotics force, Rene Sanabria, were arrested on suspicion of smuggling cocaine to the US. Around 40 other Bolivian officials and agents are facing trafficking charges. Morales has ruled out the DEA’s return but this week the vice-minister of social defence, Felipe Cáceres, said the government would accept $250,000 from Washington for satellite monitoring of manual eradication of illicit coca crops. The deal, expected to be signed this week, was part of a joint initiative with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and Brazil, which will contribute $100,000 to the satellite tracking. The minister stressed that US agents would not be returning. The deal was limited to logistical support and economic assistance and would help make Bolivia’s anti-drug efforts more transparent and quantifiable. “In no way would north American personnel” be involved in interdiction and eradication, he said. Brazil has grown alarmed that more cocaine from Peru and Bolivia is crossing its border and being consumed there, fuelling violence and corruption. Bolivia Evo Morales Drugs trade Drugs Peru Brazil US foreign policy United States Rory Carroll guardian.co.uk

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Tribesmen to sue ‘kidnapped’ author

Three Cups of Tea author to have lawsuit filed against him by Mansur Khan Mahsud, who says his story is ‘lies from A to Z’ Greg Mortenson, the author and philanthropist accused of fabricating large parts of his autobiographical writings, is to be sued by the Pakistani tribesmen he claimed kidnapped him. In his bestselling books about building schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan, one of the most startling stories tells how he was kidnapped by the Taliban and held hostage in Waziristan, the most dangerous part of Pakistan’s western tribal border area with Afghanistan. A photograph in one book showed him with a dozen tribesmen, some armed, who were supposedly holding him captive. However, as with much else in the books, Three Cups of Tea and Stones into Schools, the tale is unravelling, following a US television exposé earlier this week. Mansur Khan Mahsud, who featured in the photograph, said that Mortenson came to his village of Kot Langer Khel, in the Laddah area of South Waziristan, in July 1996. Mahsud, who is the research director of a thinktank in Islamabad that specialises in the tribal area, said that the Taliban did not appear on the Pakistani side of the border until 2002, following the US-led invasion of Afghanistan. “Greg Mortenson came with a relative of mine and he was a guest of the village. He stayed for about 10 days. He was living in the village, sightseeing, taking photographs. He had a really good time,” said Mahsud, adding that some of the tribesmen carried guns to protect Mortenson. In Mortenson’s account, his hosts from the Mahsud tribe have been turned into the then better-known Wazir tribe, while the location has morphed to Razmak, North Waziristan. “It’s lies from A to Z. There’s not one word of truth. If there had been a little exaggeration, that could have been forgiven,” said Mahsud. “The way that he’s portrayed the Mahsuds, as hash-smoking bandits, is wrong. He’s defamed me, my family, my tribe. We are respected people in my area. He’s turned us into kidnappers.” Mahsud said that he had decided to file a lawsuit against Mortenson and was in contact with a lawyer in the US. “I am looking into how to sue him,” said Mahsud, who only found out about the story in the book when he was contacted in February this year by a whistle-blower, Jon Krakauer, who was featured in the US investigative show 60 Minutes on CBS News. The programme raised serious doubts over how many schools Mortenson had actually built in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and even his original story that he vowed to build his first school, for a Pakistani village, after its inhabitants rescued him when he got lost mountaineering. It also questioned the use of the millions in charitable funds he collects each year for the schools. Mortenson, whose charity is now under investigation by US authorities, has defended his work, admitting to only “some omissions and compressions”. United States Pakistan Afghanistan CBS Charities Saeed Shah guardian.co.uk

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US plans to send $25m of military equipment to Benghazi rebel council

Gaddafi minister says move to supply ‘non-lethal’ items such as vehicles, radios and medicines will prolong conflict The US plans to send $25m worth of non-lethal equipment to the rebel opposition in eastern Libya, in a move likely to further entangle the west in the two-month-old civil war. The proposal to send surplus Pentagon equipment, including vehicles, medical supplies, protective vests, binoculars and radios, follows Italy’s decision to join Britain and France in sending military advisers to the Libyan opposition and a French pledge to intensify air strikes. The Libyan government has warned that such moves will further prolong the conflict and “encourage the other side to be more defiant”. The US plan, which must be approved by President Barack Obama, is to send “non-lethal assistance” to the Transitional National Council in Benghazi, the de facto opposition government which has not been recognised by Washington. The dispatch of the surplus US stock does not need approval from Congress. As Nato air strikes were reported to have hit Libyan government targets near Ajdabiya in the east, and south of Tripoli in the west, the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, promised to escalate military action to protect civilians. He told opposition leader Mustafa Abdel-Jalil: “We will intensify the strikes. We will help you.” Rebel fighters have repeatedly appealed to Nato and the international community to step up its bombardment of Libyan government forces and military targets. Nato insists its air strikes have been effective in reducing Gaddafi’s military capability, but the action has failed to help the rebels advance. Rebels in the besieged city of Misrata have also demanded ground troops to protect civilians, but the international community is wary of the political and military risks that such a step would entail. However, the international force of military advisers grew after Italy said it was sending 10 experts to Benghazi to work alongside the 20 sent by the UK and up to 10 dispatched by France. The teams are expected to assist opposition forces with logistics and organisation but will not train soldiers. Liam Fox, the UK’s defence secretary, said many of the Libyan rebels “have no military experience, they have little understanding of weaponry or military tactics. The best way we can assist them is to give them some technical capabilities in how to organise themselves.” The Libyan regime has insisted it is ready and willing to negotiate a ceasefire which, it says, must include an end to Nato air strikes. In an interview with the Guardian, the foreign minister, Abdul Ati al-Obeidi, said: “If there is a real ceasefire and these bombs stop, we could have a real dialogue among Libyans. It cannot be done with what is going on now.” It was not true, he said, that the Libyan government was not serious about a ceasefire, as critics have claimed. But, he added, a ceasefire needed a “mutual understanding and a mediator”. In a markedly conciliatory tone, he said a ceasefire could pave the way for a political agreement to end the conflict, which could lead to free elections, supervised by the United Nations, within six months. Obeidi said discussions within the regime about reform had included “whether the leader [Muammar Gaddafi] should stay and in what role, and whether he should retire”. Gaddafi’s future has become a pivotal issue between the regime and the opposition, which has demanded his departure. “Everything will be on the table,” said Obeidi. But he warned the international community against setting Gaddafi’s departure as a precondition for a deal. “The US, Britain and France – sometimes those countries contradict themselves. They talk about democracy, but when it comes to Libya, they say he [Gaddafi] should leave. It should be up to the Libyan people. This should not be dictated from any other head of state. It is against the principle of democracy.” The US and most European countries have made it clear that Gaddafi must relinquish power as part of any negotiated settlement to the civil war that has divided Libya and dominated the international diplomatic agenda for two months. The rebel opposition in the east of the country also insists on Gaddafi’s departure as a precondition for peace talks. Obeidi said that Britain, France “and to a certain extent the US” were discouraging moves towards a peaceful resolution “by continuing bombardment, arming the other side and making them more defiant. “The more the west gives arms, the more they will plant hatred. We do not want to be another Iraq or Somalia. The west could advise the other side to listen to commonsense and study the peace initiatives.” Fighting continued in Misrata yesterday as aid ships tried to dock to deliver humanitarian supplies and evacuate civilians. Nato planes were reported to be flying over the city, which has been under siege by government forces for two months, but they did not carry out air strikes. There has also been heavy fighting in the Western Mountains region, close to the Tunisian border, in the last few days. Up to 11,000 people have fled the area, according to UNHCR, the UN agency for refugees. Libya Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest United States Muammar Gaddafi US military Nato Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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Kindergartener Brings Gun To School

Six Year Old Kindergartener Brings Gun To School & Injures Students (VIDEO) RightWire: Obama to be 1st head of state to tour Facebook HQ Kindergartener Brings Gun To School , Kids Injured. 2 hours ago. NewsBusters.org – Exposing Liberal Media Bias · Bozell Column: David Brooks, You’re Fired. 2 hours ago. Flopping Aces · His Majesty Doesn’t Like Pointed Questions – “Let Me … RightWire: UK: How Green Economy Agenda is Killing Jobs, Boosting … Kindergartener Brings Gun To School , Kids Injured. 1 hour ago. NewsBusters.org – Exposing Liberal Media Bias · Bozell Column: David Brooks, You’re Fired. 2 hours ago. Flopping Aces · His Majesty Doesn’t Like Pointed Questions – “Let Me … RightWire: Watch DOWNFALL; Excellent film about Hitler's last days Kindergartener Brings Gun To School , Kids Injured. 1 hour ago. NewsBusters.org – Exposing Liberal Media Bias · Bozell Column: David Brooks, You’re Fired. 2 hours ago. Flopping Aces · His Majesty Doesn’t Like Pointed Questions – “Let Me … County Burn Ban Extended 90 Days – NEWSTALK 860 Houston Kindergartener Brings Gun To School · EEO · Terms & Conditions · Privacy Policy · Help & Contact Information · Townsquare Media Group · Country Music · Music News. Email Password. Remember Me. Forgot Password? csakon says: Kindergartener Brings Gun to School http://on.wsj.com/gbRfvH :: Houston, we have a problem…

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Ppi

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Ppi

Karachi ANP Sindh Sahi Syed Media Talk شاہی سید PPI: ‘Banks behaved disgustingly’ One day with the Samsung Nexus S ( Android Gingerbread) Banks' £3bn bill for PPI | Business Banks will be forced to pay up to £3 billion compensation over the mis-selling of payment protection insurance after a High Court judge today rejected a challenge from the British Bankers’ Association against an earlier ruling. Why you must make PPI claims — Free Press Release List PPI claims will allow you to evade the every month bank charges that your produced to pay out due to circumstances like illnesses, unemployment and redundancies. But if your PPI is not legitimate, then you may have lots of trouble ahead … Information relevant for those getting PPI claims – Dizin, Site … Mis sold PPI claims occur when the customer is unable to become compensated effectively for their claim. The root of this is certainly misinformation as well as a little bit of deceit. Lenders typically really don’t divulge everything … Article Directory Free » Process your PPI claims properly PPI claims will help you evade the per month bank charges that your constructed to spend due to instances like illnesses, unemployment and redundancies. But if your PPI is not legal, then you might have numerous of complications ahead … Information of registering a prosperous PPI claims Mis sold PPI claims take place if the consumer is unable to remain compensated productively for their claim. The root of this is misinformation plus a little bit of deceit. Lenders normally do not divulge everything to their prospects, … BestValueUK says: PPI premiums as proportion of loan: cases reported by breaux

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