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Reinrassig
13.11.2008
Ein einflussreicher deutscher Unternehmer will eine Hamburger Reederei "reinrassig deutsch halten".

9. November
10.11.2008
Zum 70. Jahrestag der Pogromnacht vom 9. November 1938 haben deutsche Gerichte mehrere Kundgebungen von Neonazis genehmigt.

Klare Vorteile
04.11.2008
Der weltgrößte Chemiekonzern BASF übernimmt den Schweizer Konkurrenten Ciba.

Embassies meet Business
29.10.2008
Im Rahmen einer Schulung vernetzt das Auswärtige Amt afrikanische Diplomaten mit deutschen Unternehmern.

Überprüfung
09.10.2008
Der Internationale Gerichtshof in Den Haag wird die Sezession des Kosovo überprüfen.

Ohne Erfolg
03.10.2008
Trotz massiver Proteste übernimmt die Deutsche Telekom die griechische Telekomfirma OTE.

Nach Ostasien
26.09.2008
Die russische Staatsbahn RZD plant den Einstieg bei der Deutschen Bahn AG.

Kontrolleure
18.09.2008
Die Ernennung eines deutschen Diplomaten zum Leiter der EU-"Mission" in Georgien komplettiert die Kontrolle Berlins und Paris' über die Aktivitäten Brüssels in Tbilisi.

Expansionslaune
25.08.2008
Die deutschen Discounter Aldi und Lidl expandieren in Westeuropa.

Zugriff
21.08.2008
Berlin meldet eine neue Vereinbarung über den deutschen Zugriff auf die Gasreserven Nigerias.

The Price of Redistribution
2007/03/07
LONDON/BERLIN
(Own report) - British trade unions announce new protests against the privatization of the National Health Service and several German buyers. Hospital strikes took place last autumn, over the Deutsche Post subsidiary, DHL, being granted a billion Euro contract for lucrative logistics services for the National Health Service (NHS). The conflict will be continued beyond last Saturdays demonstrations. The privatization measures are being sharply criticized in Great Britain, because they will lead to the shutting down of numerous health service facilities and to the deterioration of treatment. The risk of infection in British hospitals, for example, has notably increased since private businesses provide services, according to trade unionists in a discussion with german-foreign-policy.com. The EU Constitution Treaty that the German government would like to see implemented, in spite of the failed referenda in two states, would favor privatizations of health services in other EU member states. German companies are in the "starting blocks" ready to take over hospitals all over Europe.
The protests against the privatization of the British health service (National Health Service - NHS) are to be continued, according to trade union circles in London. In a nationwide action day with rallies and demonstrations in several cities last Saturday, thousands protested the NHS sellout. Already In the 1990s the British government began to transfer the national health service to profit-oriented companies and is still continuing at this privatization. Also German enterprises such as the Deutsche Post are benefiting.
Outsourcing Trend
The DHL had been granted a billion Euro contract for logistics services for the NHS already last fall. The Deutsche Post, a formerly state owned company, with headquarters in the former German capital Bonn, recently announced a new record sales volume and its plans to become the world's leading logistics group.[1] DHL relies heavily on the British logistics giant, Exel, that it had taken over in 2005.[2] Exel is providing not only sales volumes, but also business contacts for the German enterprise. According to circles in the logistics sector, the Deutsche Post's British competitor, that it recently bought out, furnished contacts in London, that enabled access to the National Health System.[3] In the meantime, the German company is even responsible for printing legal texts and parliamentary protocols. According to its own admission, Deutsche Post disposes of a "outstanding platform", in London "enabling it to draw above average profit from the growing outsourcing trend in the public sector."[4]
Billion-Contract
The DHL contract for NHS logistic services, which had become possible through the "growing outsourcing trend in the public sector", is conferring to the German company the comprehensive tasks of furnishing approximately 600 hospitals and other health service facilities. During the ten year duration of the contract a sales volume is expected to reach up to 2.3 billion Euros, according to the company, but the trade unions are estimating more than the double (5.5 billion Euros). There will be a turnover of goods and services valued 32 billion Euros. DHL has announced extensive austerity measures of up to 1.4 billion Euros.[5] Soon after the conclusion of the contract was announced, strikes were called - the first nationwide protests in the National Health Service in two decades.[6] The DHL's billion Euro contract played also a role in last weeks demonstrations.
German Portion
Alongside DHL activities in the NHS privatization, British trade union circles are also very attentive to the involvement of one of the most important German financial institutions. About a year ago, Netcare, the largest South African hospital operator, obtained a narrow majority (50.1 per cent) of General Healthcare, the largest private health service in Great Britain, at a price of 2.2 billion British Pounds.[7] This takeover was financed to a considerable degree by the Dresdner Bank, thereby increasing the German portion in the transfer of the British health system to private control.
Brussels
Regulations of the European Union are accelerating the NHS privatization, from which German enterprises are increasingly profiting. Brussels' Stability Pact is contributing by placing limits on the amount of public financing and, therefore, also the expenditures for tax financing of the British health system. The German government is pushing this policy by demanding that the draft of the EU Constitution Treaty be adopted as completely as possible. This would enact regulations favoring the privatization of the health service in all European Union member states. Critics fear a dramatic degradation of the services and point to the example of British development, where hospital wards and even entire hospitals are closed down without substitution and large scale layoffs will follow. Approximately 40,000 people per year are forced to sell their homes, to pay for expensive health services, reports Ron Dorman, National Organizer of the Campaign against Euro - Federalism (CAEF), an EU critical trade union organization, in a discussion with german-foreign-policy.com.[8] John Boyd, editor-in-chief, of the CAEF magazine "The Democrat", points to the dramatic rise in - at times - fatal hospital infections: "the hospitals' cleaning and catering services have been privatized."[9]
Europe
EU laws are simultaneously causing a drainage of British NHS tax funds. Due to long waiting lists at home, patients are going abroad (also to Germany) for treatment. Their treatment fees are being paid by the British health system.[10] NHS is also paying millions of Euros to German physicians, who work weekends in British hospitals.[11] The British hospital personnel is paying the price for this redistribution. According to recent estimates, up to 25,000 NHS full time jobs are endangered, because the costs of treatment are not covered.
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