
U612 Flexible Pipe
Materials:
Features:
Working Pressure<0.6MPa
Diameter:1.5"
Materials:l
Body: SUS304
Package:
Product ID Weight Dimension
U612-A 37kg/case of200
23×23× 34cm/case of 200
U612-B 37kg/case of200
23×23× 34cm/case of 200
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.
ectarian strife, trigger-happy American fuel dispenser soldiers and just plain old violent
crime�are the main causes, says a senior civil servant.
Neither UN agencies nor Kurdish officials have exact figures, but a fair guess is that, as well as the
200,000 mentioned as displaced, another 40,000-50,000 have sought sanctuary in Kurdistan. Many are
Christians and Kurds; and Baghdad s entire Sabean-Mandean populace, which adheres to a pre-Islamic
faith and numbers around 25,000, is said to have asked the Kurdish authorities for a haven. A lot,
however, are middle-class Sunni Arabs from Baghdad and Mosul, Iraq s biggest northern city.
The influx has squeezed Kurdish services. Housing is scarce; rents are soaring. But most Kurds, with
their own long history of uncertainty and displacement, have be fuel dispenser en kind to the newcomers. Moreover,
Kurdish officials are seizing a chance to beef up the workforce. Labourers from southern Iraq now toil
away in the heat on Kurdistan s many building projects, while some of Baghdad s top academics are now
teaching in Kurdish universities, dentists and doctors are finding jobs, and experienced civil servants
such as Mr Hussein are working in Iraqi Kurdistan s ministries.
© 2006 .
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Seychelles
A president in paradise
Aug 10th 2006 | VICTORIA
From The Economist print edition
Harmony reigns but the economy risks running into the sands
BEST known as a destination for honeymooners in search of perfect white beaches and swaying palms,
the Seychelle islands rarely make any sort of headlines. Few tourists would even have noticed the
presidential election on July 30th, in which James Michel, leader of the Seychelles People s Progressive
Front, was returned with 54% of the ballot. For Mr Michel, it was the first time he had faced the islands
62,000-odd voters, having been promoted from vice-president two years ago by his predecessor, Albert
René, who had ruled the isla fuel dispenser