
Salsabil Fayed
Articles
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3 weeks ago |
ftm.eu | Salsabil Fayed |Simon Van Dorpe
Welcome to the second edition of Europe’s Dirty Collars!In this new bi-weekly newsletter, our crime and corruption specialists will bring you the latest on corruption, fraud, money laundering, and shady dealings at the highest levels across Europe. It’s still hard to believe, but the United States is rapidly sliding towards authoritarianism. President Donald Trump has directed his most recent attacks at universities and law firms, some of which seem to be caving under pressure.
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3 weeks ago |
ftm.eu | Dieuwertje Kuijpers |Lise Witteman |Simon Van Dorpe |Salsabil Fayed
Today 13:15 · Newsletter · 6 min. reading time Welcome to the newsletter of Follow the Money’s EU desk, with insights from our EU specialists, news from the Brussels bubble, and the latest on our investigations! This week: an EU lawmaker advocated for more public investment in the defence industry during a lobby event while holding shares in an arms firm. Also, the EU court largely upholds cartel fines for UBS, UniCredit, and Nomura.
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1 month ago |
ftm.nl | Salsabil Fayed |Simon Van Dorpe
Het onderzoek richt zich op een huidige en een oud-Europarlementariër. De twee mannen zouden elkaar als aanwezig hebben opgegeven bij het Europees Parlement. Zo streken ze allebei een dagvergoeding van 350 euro op, terwijl slechts een van beiden aanwezig was. Het gaat om de Italiaanse Giuseppe Ferrandino, oud-parlementslid voor de Socialisten en Democraten, en Fulvio Martusciello, parlementariër namens de Europese Volkspartij.
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1 month ago |
ftm.eu | Simon Van Dorpe |Salsabil Fayed
Belgian police are investigating one current and one former Italian Member of the European Parliament (MEP) over allegations that the men signed off each other’s attendance at the European Parliament, allowing both of them to pocket a daily allowance of 350 euros while only one of them travelled to Brussels.
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Nov 14, 2024 |
ftm.eu | Henk Willem Smits |Remy Koens |Salsabil Fayed
Shoppers in the EU face soaring grocery bills and supermarkets tend to get the blame. Yet industry executives say the fault lies with Big Food as suppliers of top brands squeeze retailers. Through interviews with top supermarket executives and experts, and analysis of consumer goods giants’ finances, Follow the Money found that consumer goods giants use a variety of tactics to tilt the commercial balance ever-more in their favour in European markets.
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