
U211-A Power Regulator
Features:
Power in : AC 100Vď˝?00V; Power out : AC 200V , 2kW
Voltage protection device under unstable voltage
Easily installed into fuel dispenser
100% Factory Tested.
Packing:
Weight: Dimension:
10.3kg/case of 1 150Ă—200Ă—340mm/case of 1
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.
was barred because he holds dual nationality and has not lived in Haiti for
fuel dispenser
the required five years before the vote. He is challenging this ruling in court. Gérard Jean-Juste, a radical priest (as
Mr Aristide once was), is in jail on charges his supporters consider trumped up.
Mr Aristide s party is split. Its largely exiled leadership is boycotting the election. A candidate from one faction
trails in the polls. Many of Mr Aristide s support fuel dispenser ers favour René Préval, once a close ally and himself a former
president. Mr Préval says privately that he now wants nothing to do with Mr Aristide. If Mr Siméus is excluded, his
votes may go to Mr Préval, perhaps giving him an outright victory. Haiti s businessmen might feel that their revolt
against Mr Aristide had been in vain. But at least the election would have resulted in a clear mandate—when, or if,
it takes place.
© 2006 .
Peru and Chile
Fujimori s trials
Jan 5th 2006 | LIMA AND SANTIAGO
From The Economist print edition
An extradition test for Chile s courts
AFP
WHEN he left his refuge in Japan in November and flew to Chile in a private jet,
Alberto Fujimori, Peru s strongman president from 1990 to 2000, took a
gamble. Although an international warrant had been issued for his arrest on
charges of human-rights abuses and corruption, his advisers expected he would
face no more than a brief period of house arrest in Chile. From there he planned
to orchestrate a campaign to get his name on the ballot for a presidential
election in April—or at least get supporters elected to Peru s Congress.
The gamble quickly came unstuck. At the urging of Peru s gover fuel dispenser nment, Mr
Fujimori was locked up at a prison-officers training-school, where he now has
limited access to visitors and cannot tape his programme for two Peruvian radio
stations or update his web page. How long he will stay there will be settled