
U603 Hose
Transfer gasoline,kerosene,diesel from fuel dispenser to vehicle.
Materials:
Body: oil-proof rubber
Features :
Oil-proof
Hose is soft,light
Little variant when transfer gasoline
Middle conducting layer- working safety
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
31kg/case of 30 34kg/case of 30 37x23.5x19.5 cm / case of 30
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.
e live and where poverty is concentrated. People
in the rural areas urgently need micro-credit and training to improve and diversify their crops, as well as better
sanitation and roads. Unless this changes, the Timorese will remain, as the UNDP puts it, politically free but
chained by poverty.
© 2006 .
About sponsorship
Nuclear diplomacy and Iran
The world wants Iran to stop
Mar 9th 2006 fuel dispenser
From The Economist print edition
At last, Iran s nuclear programme is to be referred to the UN Security Council. But then what?
IF THE barrage of threats and recriminations it fired off this week is any measure, Iran s nuclear defiance can only
strengthen when the UN Security Council takes up its case. That could be as early as next week. Yet the volume
and pitch of Iran s displeasure—threatening “harm and pain? particularly to America, if Iran itself starts feeling the
squeeze—is also a measure of its failure fuel dispenser to convince not only hated America, but also the Europeans and its
erstwhile allies Russia and China that, despite two decades of lies and cover-ups, its nuclear intentions are as
peaceful as it claims.
But if Iran s UN-avoiding diplomacy has failed, it is not clear that the Security Council will do any better than others
in crimping the regime s nuclear ambitions. Britain, France and Germany had tried for two years without success to
broker an end to Iran s troubling plans to enrich uranium and make plutonium (to make electricity, said Iran; for
eventual bomb-making is the growing suspicion). Russia has lately done no better. Iran used a month s grace
offered in February by the 35-nation board of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), supposedly to seek
an end to the crisis, to step up its enrichment work instead. When the board met again this week, neither camp
was giving an inch.
Iran s “final offer”—to allow Russia to do most of its planned enriching for it for a time, so long as it was free t fuel dispenser