Posts Tagged ‘Iraq Chemical and Biological Weapons’
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 6
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 6
How the west is hell-bent on killing and maiming its own troops and millions of innocent civilians
Hold your breath guys this dust is deadly!!
Being ex military myself, we have all disembarked from helicopters amidst a cloud of dust but did we ever give thought to the fact that this secondary contamination was laced with millions of radioactive nano particles or other carcinogenic additives from our own allied “Dirty Weapons.”?
Were Coalition Forces exposed to Chemical and Biological Weapons supplied to Iraq by our own governments during the Gulf War?
Iraqi Scud Missile
It is fact that Saddam used CBW warheads in his Scud Missiles which resulted in 40 Scuds being launched against Israel and 46 against Saudi Arabia.
Patriot missile intercepting Iraqi Scud overhead Riyadh 1991.01.20
Did anyone give thought to the fact that in carrying out intercepts overhead such cities could/would cause its CBW contents to consume the city below?
Another successful Scud intercept but was it? – The warhead is missing – Did it explode and if so was it CBW?
Were Coalition Forces injected with potentially fatal/harmful vaccines during the Gulf War?
You bet they were!!!
We have heard our respective governments give reference to “Gulf War Syndrome” and how it has been blamed on a combination of stress disorders and atmospheric pollution associated with oil field fires etc etc but never have they admitted to it being directly associated with their own extensive use of depleted uranium weapons, their own troop vaccination programme or the fact that many were exposed to Chemical and Biological Weapons that were delivered via Saddam’s Scud Missiles.
Although they tell us no CBW were ever found in Iraq it is fact that such munitions/stockpiles were destroyed by coalition air attacks or on the ground by controlled demolition resulting in their contents becoming airborne.
We have already covered the fact that the Chemical and Biological technology was supplied , funded and in some cases built by western governments with the US and UK playing a major role.
Don’t you find it most offensive and hypocritical to know that our governments supplied most of the above knowing that Saddam had used CBW on the Kurds in Halabja, the Iranians during the Iraq-Iran war and furthermore knew at the outbreak of the Gulf War that Saddam could and would use the technology that we in the west had supplied!!
Add to this the fact that the British Government and in particular the Ministry of Defence had intentionally withheld evidence that Saddam had used their CBW technology on Coalition Troops during the many Scud Missile raids………..it is also fact that the government and MoD had been pre warned about the severe risks associated with the vaccinations that were about to be injected into all the troops participating in the Gulf War.
When one now looks at the many deaths and severely debilitating illnesses that war vets around the globe have endured it is unspeakable that our respective governments refuse to accept that it is they that put the troops in harms way and directly caused many of the health problems that continue to kill or maim our war vets………that in itself is clearly in breach of the Geneva Convention and is one of many war crimes our leaders and governments have committed.
Just think that every-time the troops entered the war zones they were immediately at risk from our own vaccinations, our own weapons and also were likely to succumb to the technology that our governments had given Saddam when they were trying to secure more crude oil and more contracts!!
I can recall someone recently asking me what was the purpose of all these articles…………..obviously it is to reveal just how hypocritical and two faced our governments are when it comes to their own imperialistic greed…………it is also obvious that our troops have no value whatsoever and are sent on these “Suicide Missions”……not in the name of democracy or some other humanitarian cause but purely to enforce their own “Geo Political Plan” into forcing a regime change or securing someone else’ s natural resources.
Lets now look at what some of the vets themselves were reporting, in their own words followed by evidence that the vaccination programme was not only deeply flawed but highly dangerous to those that received these multiple injections:
Below is extracted from Nexus Magazine, Volume 4. 5(August-September 1997).
PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld 4560 Australia
GULF WAR SYNDROME –
Biological Black Magic
Already, more than 10,000 are dead and 250,000 are sick from Gulf War syndrome. What secret is so terrible (or embarrassing) that necessitates a cover-up of the facts?
TRUTH IS THE FIRST CASUALTY OF WAR
The air raid siren went off.” Former Royal Air Force Corporal Richie Turnbull wheezed and coughed as he spoke. He is one of tens of thousands of Gulf War veterans who have been diagnosed with a fistful of illnesses attributed to service in the Gulf War. These include emphysema, angina, asthma, arteriosclerosis, arthritis, short-term memory loss, muscle wasting, cough syncope and numerous other debilitating ailments. Before deployment to the Gulf, Turnbull was an accomplished and superbly fit sub-aqua diver. Today, he walks with the aid of canes, slowly.
With understandable pride he told me how he had “proved Soames to be a liar three times”. The reference was to the former Conservative Minister of State for the Armed Forces, the Honourable Nicholas Soames, MP. Many vets uncharitably call the former minister “Fatty Soames”, owing to his handsome girth. The appellation reflects the seething contempt of an individual whom vets regard as one of the principal architects of a monstrous transatlantic cover-up.
Turnbull was an RAF Senior Electrician in a Nuclear, Biological & Chemical (NBC) unit and an experienced instructor on NBC equipment. He was stationed at the giant military base located at Dhahran on the night of 20 January 1991, when air raid sirens began wailing madly. Incoming Scud missiles were detected and a nearby US Patriot battery fired off intercept missiles. One of the missiles downed the Scud which landed a mere 400 yards from Turnbull. The impact left an eight-foot-deep crater but, curiously, the giant ground-to-ground missile did not explode.
“All the nerve agent detectors sounded the alarm,” Turnbull recalls. As an NBC expert he ran three tests which confirmed the presence of “G agent”, otherwise known as Sarin-the deadly nerve agent developed by the Nazis in World War II. Turnbull ran a further three “residual vapour detector tests” which also showed the presence of nerve agents. In all, he says, “thirty-three items of equipment showed that chemical weapons had been detected”.1
“NBC Condition Black” was sounded and everyone on the base rushed to don their NBC “Noddy” suits. Incredibly, 20 minutes later an all-clear siren (“NBC Condition White”) sounded and troops removed their protective clothing accordingly. Twenty minutes later “NBC Condition Black” sounded again, and remained in force for a further eight hours.
Turnbull, who says he is “absolutely certain it was a chemical weapon attack”, is understandably angry. Sounding the all-clear when nerve agents were shown to be present was, he says, “the biggest cock-up in history”. Hundreds of troops were needlessly exposed to Sarin, he believes.2
Turnbull continues to be a thorn in the side of Britain’s Ministry of Defence (MoD) and the US Department of Defense (DoD). Both maintain that chemical weapons were not intentionally used by Iraq’s Saddam Hussein. A spokesman at the MoD had earlier told me that he was a Royal Navy officer and was “in theatre” during the Gulf War. He went on to assure me personally that had the Iraqis intentionally used chemical and biological (CB) weapons “we would have retaliated in kind”-an allusion to US President Bush’s threat to retaliate with a nuclear strike if Saddam Hussein unleashed his prodigious chemical armoury on coalition troops.
In the event, it was an empty threat-old-fashioned political rhetoric dished out for the folks at home.
CHEMICAL ATTACK OR COCK-UP?
Faced with mounting evidence of chemical weapons exposure by coalition troops, both the British and US governments belatedly acknowledge that chemical weapons dumps were bombed, or otherwise destroyed, by coalition forces. They even acknowledge that the resulting plume of toxic material, blown by the wind, is likely to have exposed many thousands of coalition troops to these deadly agents. In other words, it was an unforeseen accident. This admission is known in intelligence parlance as a “limited hangout”-a technique designed to show that they are now telling the truth. They are not.
Pat Eddington, a former CIA intelligence analyst, in his book, Gassed in the Gulf, scathingly uncovers the institutionalised dishonesty within the CIA and the DoD over Gulf War Syndrome (GWS).3 Reasonably, he argues that based on the increasing number of vets prepared to speak of their experiences, it is clear beyond all doubt that coalition forces came under a series of Iraqi chemical and biological weapons attacks.4 Like Admiral Nelson placing a telescope over his blind eye, then exclaiming he can “see no ships”, the Mandarins in Whitehall and Washington are willfully blind to what they don’t care to acknowledge. Yet, the evidence is overwhelming.
Ray Bristow had served 20 years with the Territorial Army. When not involved with his TA duties, Bristow was an operating theatre technician at his local hospital. He was mobilised on 27 December 1990, promoted to a Warrant Officer, and sent to the 32 Field Hospital located at Wadi al Batin, just a few kilometres away from the town of Hafar al Batin.5 On 19 January 1991 he and other personnel watched as a Scud missile roared overhead and exploded in an airburst. He could clearly see a cloud of vapour discharge from the Scud. The NBC alarms (known as NAIADS), scattered around the base, wailed loudly, alerting the troops of “NBC Condition Black”. “We were Scudded,” Bristow said, and the specialised equipment detected the presence of chemical agents.6
Also present at Wadi al Batin that evening was former Sergeant Shaun Rusling. Previously with 23 Para Regiment’s 5 Airborne Field Ambulance, Rusling was an experienced Special Forces medic. His duties were to attend to the sick and wounded of Britain’s One Armoured Brigade. This soon grew to encompass caring for other coalition forces and Iraqi casualties, too. He watched the Scud explosion and saw the cloud of vapour bloom overhead. He also believes the unit came under artillery attack with rounds containing chemical weapons.7
Numerous boxes of 155-mm chemical ammunition were secretly recovered by coalition troops in the Kuwait Theatre of Operations (KTO) during the ground war and subsequent mopping-up operations. Made in the USA, they had been supplied to Iraq via Jordan.
Nor were Scud and artillery bombardments isolated incidents. Terry Walker was a Corporal with the Royal Army Ordnance Corp and detached to a “Forward Repair Group” of an armoured workshop. He was present at Al Jubayl when two Scuds exploded above them.8 No prior warning was sounded. This, he recalls, was “the worst morning with two almighty explosions above the Port”. Immediately chemical detectors madly sounded “NBC Condition Black”, and this was “followed by sheer panic with hundreds of guys running for cover”. Walker hid among the rocks of the Port “for about four five hours”. Later, “an officer came along saying we’ve been hit with chemical agents”. The next day he and the other personnel on the base were told the cloud vapour was nothing more than aircraft fuel leaking from a damaged plane-an explanation he and the others disbelieve. Aviation fuel does not trigger the NAIAD detectors. Today, Walker suffers from a number of illnesses and strongly believes there has been a massive cover-up. “My wife is ill and my little girl is ill, too,” he said during a telephone interview, then added that his “medical notes from the RAF hospital have gone missing”.
The Al Jubayl attack was also witnessed by Sergeant-Major Paul Grant who commanded a team of Royal Army Ordnance Corp specialists. In the early hours of 19 January 1991, Grant was awoken by a distinctive overhead explosion. He is in no doubt whatsoever that this was an airburst, not a ground explosion. NAIADS detectors began sounding “NBC Condition Black”. The first explosion was followed by a second airburst explosion. Around the base loudspeakers warned, “This is not a drill!” His story corroborates those of other vets I have interviewed. However, Scud chemical attacks were not limited to Al Jubayl.9
COALITION COMPLICITY
Yet despite this testimony, these and other vets continue to be treated with official contempt. As recently as January 1997, the Countess of Mar posed a parliamentary question in the House of Lords which asked if the MoD had any “documentary evidence of chemical warfare” in the Gulf conflict-a curious question which was limited only to chemical attack. Questions regarding the use of biological weapons remain unutterable. In his reply, the Earl Howe stated that research conducted by the MoD “does not indicate any confirmed use of chemical warfare agents during the conflict”-which is an even more curious answer.
Who, conceivably, could confirm the use of chemical weapons other than those trained soldiers present during a chemical attack? Likewise, the tens of thousands of “detections” triggered by chemical agent detectors throughout the conflict are simply categorised as “alleged detections” which were “uncorroborated at the time”. Again, a careful and deceitful choice of words.10,11
But behind the intentional use of chemical agents by Iraq lurks a far more sinister story which hitherto has not being told in any detail. Biological weapons, unlike chemical agents, don’t just kill on the battlefield: survivors returning home carry with them the potential seeds of destruction. These, in turn, can infect the families of Gulf War vets-a situation that is now occurring.
Importantly, the British and US governments were well aware of the potential use of both chemical and biological weapons by Saddam Hussein. They had, after all, supplied him with the wherewithal to develop his ferocious CB armoury. This included sophisticated equipment together with the necessary chemical precursors and biological cultures.
This knowledge led the British and US governments to vaccinate their troops with a ‘cocktail’ designed to protect them against both chemical and biological attack. Vaccines given to coalition troops included, amongst others, anthrax, botulism and bubonic plague. Cultures for all three were supplied to Iraq by the US Government during the middle/late 1980s for use in Iraq’s CB weapons program.12
BIO-WEAPONS AND “THE SECRET TEAM”
“British personnel were infected with anthrax spores,” spoke Angus Parker with quiet certainty. I had interviewed a number of Gulf War veterans who recounted their experiences of coming under CB attack from the Iraqis. All are angry and frustrated at the stonewalling attitude of Britain’s Ministry of Defence regarding their numerous illnesses which fall under the catch-all banner of Gulf War Syndrome. Eventually, one vet gave me a telephone number, saying, “You should speak to Angus.”
Initially, Angus Parker was cautious, but after a few minutes he warmed to his story. Methodically, he first outlined for me the existing Soviet battlefield doctrine associated with Scud missiles armed with chemical and biological weapons. This is known, Parker said, as “a mixed load”. The Scud warhead would typically consist of a deathly combination of explosives and chemical and biological agents of mixed intensities. The quantity of explosives would be small, but sufficient to ensure that the CB mixture would form a wide vapour plume over the target.
A former soldier in the Territorial Army, Angus Parker operated for a top-secret British unit. He has never before gone on record with his story, but frustration mixed with growing anger has led him to “blow this wide open”.
Following the injection of 12 vaccines in one morning, Parker suffered an adverse reaction. As a result he was hospitalised and his deployment to the Gulf delayed. “I was left behind and got out on the last days of the ground war,” he said. This and his civilian occupation as a technician in a haematology lab resulted in his being attached to the 1st Field Laboratory Unit, known as “The Secret Team”. The unit “existed only once before in World War I, but was mothballed until the Gulf War,” Parker stated, adding that when he returned from the Gulf he was told that “I was not to disclose the nature or role of the team I was serving with”. So secret was the unit, he said, that “it does not appear in any listing”.13,14
What Angus Parker has revealed is extremely disturbing. The 1st Field Laboratory Unit was composed of 40 men working in eight teams of five. It was deployed from Porton Down, Britain’s biological warfare headquarters. Parker, ranked Sergeant, was second in command of one of the five-man teams. “As the biological warfare reconnaissance team, we were sampling the environment looking for biological weapons,” he said, adding that “this was difficult and hard to do. We could only identify four agents: plague, anthrax, botulism toxin A and B-that’s all.” The specialised equipment they had to work with to identify bio-weapons was not very sophisticated.
Parker has confirmed that his unit found numerous positive samples of biological organisms that couldn’t be analysed and identified on the battlefield. “Many, many more were present” than the four they could identify. Positive samples were collected and shipped in freezer units to Boscombe Down for analysis by the Porton Down CB specialists.
Significantly, in addition to confirming that his unit positively identified the presence of anthrax at Dhahran, Parker also revealed that another team of the 1st Field Laboratory Unit identified the presence of plague at Wadi al Batin.
Angus Parker has tried in vain to get other members of his unit to come forward and speak openly, but they are too scared to do so. “They’re not sick and still have their jobs,” he explained.
Parker is not alone in revealing the use of biological weapons in the Gulf War. US Marine Corps battlefield logs released under the Freedom of Information Act confirm the findings of Porton Down’s “Secret Team”. On 24 February 1991, the US Army’s 513th Military Intelligence Brigade confirmed the use of anthrax at King Khalid Military City.15
However, like events in Britain, important and potentially incriminating records have mysteriously gone “missing”. Two US Marines at Camp Pendleton, San Diego, have gone public to say they observed “hundreds of records from the Gulf War being destroyed”.16 This and numerous other accounts of records being “destroyed” and going “missing” can only lead to charges of a massive “Gulf-Wargate” cover-up.
US BIOLOGICAL ARMS TO IRAQ
A 1994 Senate Report, entitled “Arming Iraq: The Export of Biological Materials and the Health of Gulf War Veterans”, underscores the biological threat possessed by the Iraqis. More often referred to as “the Riegle Report”, named after its author, Donald J. Riegle, Jr, the Report itemises biological cultures supplied to Iraq by the US. Riegle and his team identified no less than 61 batches of biologically hazardous materials exported to Iraq. “Between the years 1985 and 1989, the United States Government approved the sales of quantities of potentially lethal biological agents that could have been cultured and grown in very large quantities in an Iraqi biological warfare program,” Riegle stated. These included pathogenic materials, “which means disease-producing items, and toxigenic, meaning poisonous items.”17 The Report added that “we were not able to get any records prior to 1985”. Riegle then included an extract from a Department of Defense summary report written in 1992:
“By the time of the invasion of Kuwait, Iraq had developed biological weapons. Its advanced and aggressive biological warfare program was the most advanced in the Arab world. The program probably began in the 1970s and concentrated on the development of two agents, botulinum toxin and anthrax bacteria… Delivery means for biological agents ranged from simple aerial bombs and artillery rockets to surface-to-surface missiles.”
Other biological agents provided by the US to Saddam Hussein’s biological warfare program included Histoplasma capsulatum, which can cause symptoms resembling tuberculosis and lead to the enlargement of the liver and spleen as well as anaemia and skin disease-symptoms that many veterans now exhibit. Another organism was Brucella melitensis, which, when ‘weaponised’, causes chronic fatigue, profuse sweating and loss of appetite, joint pains, insomnia and nausea, and can potentially result in major damage to the vital organs. Again, these symptoms reflect the conditions experienced by thousands of Gulf War veterans. In addition to the foregoing, shipments to Iraq also included “E. coli and genetic materials, human and bacterial DNA”.18
Furious at the way the Department of Defense has side-stepped these disgraceful issues, Riegle fired off a volley of letters to various officials. One letter identified that the “average cost” of each of the various biological specimens shipped to Iraq was “less than $60.00” and that they were “acquired from a not-for-profit organization”.19
Stories also circulating of a genetically engineered organism being used in the Gulf War are paralleled by stories from British veterans who also claim the use of a modified mycoplasma organism. These vets include Angus Parker who had earlier said it was “an infectious organism manufactured in the US”. Oddly enough, this is one of the enduring aspects of the “Octopus” story involving engineered bio-organisms supplied to Iraq by the Wackenhut Corporation, the giant US private-sector security company whose board of directors reads like a roll call of military and intelligence alumni. It is an allegation supported by US investigative journalist Carol Marshall in her manuscript, “The Last Circle”.20
Marshall has spent years investigating the allegations of Michael Riconosciuto-a former CIA scientific whiz-kid. Riconosciuto claimed that while working for the Wackenhut Corporation at its Cabazon Indian Reservation facility he developed advanced and genetically altered biological warfare agents. One such agent, he alleged, was a “race-specific” organism, genetically engineered to attack certain races or groups. Unleashed it could kill or render ill all those of a particular ethnic group, leaving others entirely unharmed.
Clearly, the possibility of genetically modified bio-weapons having been used in the Gulf War cannot be entirely ruled out.21
Significantly, in the US Army War College publication entitled “The Revolution in Military Affairs and Conflict Short of War” (dated July 25, 1994), authors Steven Metz and James Kievit also discuss this touchy subject. On page 16 they state: “Certain biotechnical weapons-considered by some to violate the biological warfare convention to which the United States is a signatory-also may transgress American values regarding appropriate means.” They go on to ask: “Could the government and military of this multi-ethnic republic face charges that it was developing or using a weapon targeting Africans, Jews Koreans, Hispanics, etc.?” The authors then conclude that, “Overcoming these constraints…would require fundamental changes in the United States-an ethical and political revolution may be necessary to make a military revolution.” This, the authors “hypothesise”, could be achieved by remodelling the way Americans think, and also via the effective control of news management using “advanced psychotechnology” and other techniques such a “morphing”.
EXPERIMENTAL VACCINES COVER-UP
If genetically engineered biological weapons are now available, it is certain that there will have been developed the necessary antidotes in the form of vaccines. All of the vets I interviewed for this article spoke of the large number of vaccines with which they were injected.
Shaun Rusling received 24 vaccinations over a four-week period. Two of these vaccinations were classified secret, and were “experimental”, he believes.
Richard Turnbull got a dose of 13 inoculations in just 10 minutes. Four of them were unidentified and classified secret. He also believes them to have been experimental.
Ray Bristow was informed in a letter from Brigadier McDermott of the MoD that some of his injections were also classified. Later he was informed by the Surgeon General, Admiral Revell, that this was not the case and that Brigadier McDermott’s statement was incorrect.
How many vaccines were classified secret? The Surgeon General, Vice Admiral Revell, during a “behind closed doors” meeting of Parliament’s Defence Committee, was asked, “How many vaccines do we not admit to?” He replied, saying, “I think probably about five or six.” 22
All previously classified vaccines were declassified on 10 December 1996, according to a letter dated 20 January 1997 from the Ministry of Defence. A spokesman at the MoD confirmed this in a telephone call on Friday 30 May 1997, adding that there were only three vaccines that had ever been classified. He told me these were: anthrax, pertussis and plague. This statement is confirmed in a letter to Shaun Rusling, dated 20 January 1997, in which the MoD confided that “the vaccines you were given against potential biological warfare threats were anthrax, pertussis (as an adjuvant) and plague. These are the only vaccinations which have ever been classified.” This is a far cry from the testimony of Surgeon General Revell in the closed-door hearings of the Defence Committee in which he said there were “five or six” vaccines which were “not admitted to”.
I posed this discrepancy to the Ministry of Defence. Surgeon General Revell’s testimony before the Defence Committee was “a misunderstanding”, the MoD spokesman said. Despite this “misunderstanding”, the medical records of Corporal Richard Turnbull clearly state that four vaccines-not three-were classified secret.
Turnbull is not alone in this respect. Ray Bristow’s list of shots, including anthrax (batch no. 0190), plague (batch no. 10H03A) and pertussis adjuvant (batch no. B1868a)-to name just those three that were officially classified-also detail two other vaccines labelled “biological”. These are still classified secret and their contents remain “unknown”. The story is identical for Shaun Rusling, even down to the same batch numbers of the vaccines he received.23
The Surgeon General, Vice Admiral Revell, stated in one letter that, “Unfortunately, medical record-keeping in the Gulf was not as thorough as it should have been…” and, as a consequence, details of certain vaccinations are now missing-a position that remains the government’s official line.
A number of veterans now believe they have been used as unwitting guinea pigs and are deeply concerned at what precisely may have been pumped into them. Once again, Porton Down’s Angus Parker dropped another bombshell. Patiently, he explained that “the MoD has not been totally honest about the vaccines used against us”. I couldn’t help but catch his use of the word “against” us instead of “on” us. Clearly, he now considers the Ministry of Defence and others in the Whitehall bureaucracy to be bitter enemies-and he is by no means alone in holding that view. A few vets repeatedly warned me that the “Security Services” are paying them close attention. Some have had their phones tapped and others experience peculiar mail delivery problems.
Meanwhile, Parker went on to reveal the chemical structure of one of the apparently ‘still not admitted to’ vaccines. “There is an experimental vaccine-an AIDS vaccine,” he said. This “has been around since approximately 1990.” He went on to explain that this vaccine contains two components. One component is known as a “cytokine” which, Parker said, is an “immune potentiator”. It works like a “chemical messenger sent between different cells in the body”. When it detects a foreign organism, “it actually stimulates a response by the human immune system” to fight and hopefully destroy the alien organism present.
Parker’s analysis of this component was confirmed by a spokesman for London’s Biochemical Society, who added that it was “feasible” that cytokines could be “purified and cloned” and used to fight “against any agent”. The spokesman added, moreover, that cytokines were very “hush-hush”, were “cutting-edge technology”, and “logically” would have been “adopted by the military”. They were, she added, “experimental”.
According to Parker, the second component consisted of experimental HIV gene envelopes. He went on to explain one of the basic problems with this experimental vaccine. Whereas cytokines readily drop out of the body after awhile, “fragments” of the HIV genes do not. Although there may have been “good operational reasons” for topping up the vaccine with HIV genes, Parker acknowledged that no one knows the long-term consequences. “It was experimental,” he emphasised, and had been originally developed by Porton Down as an AIDS vaccine.24,25
The question of HIV gene envelopes was put to the Biochemical Society’s spokesman, who stated that these envelopes “can be created to be specifically resistant to CBW”. The spokesman went on to explain that gene envelopes are effectively the “walls” that surround the nucleus of each cell and are thus the first line of defence against diseases-whether they be naturally acquired or as a result of CB weapons attack. HIV gene envelopes are among the most powerful and resistant known to science, she added.
Professor Beverley of the Edward Jenner Institute for Vaccine Research could think of no theoretical reason why HIV gene envelopes would be used other than to “stimulate a response against HIV”. He went on to speculate that had HIV gene envelopes been used in a vaccine, logically this would only have occurred as protection against a possible attack using HIV as a bio-weapon. There was, he felt, no other conceivable reason, but added that had such a vaccine been “given to Gulf War soldiers it would have been speculative”.
The picture that emerges is confusing. The use of cytokines does have a rational explanation, for cytokines trigger the body’s immune system. As such, they could be an ideal general vaccine for use in a CB warfare setting. However, the rationale behind using HIV gene envelopes is less certain and considerably more perplexing. Unfortunately, there is not enough detailed information available in regard to the HIV gene envelopes to reach anything but a speculative conclusion.
Some weeks prior to my interview with Professor Beverley, Angus Parker told me in a throwaway comment, “I don’t even want to get into AIDS as a weapon.” At that time, nor did I. Professor Beverley’s certitude that this is the only conceivable reason why HIV gene envelopes would have been used, leaves a sour taste in my mouth.
However, for clarity’s sake, I leave the last word with Angus Parker. Told of Professor Beverley’s theory, he remained adamant that there was another reason why HIV gene envelopes had been used. His information, he insisted, came directly from the horse’s mouth, and I am inclined to accept what he has revealed. At the outbreak of the Gulf War there were not enough stocks of cytokines to go around; thus, a decision was made to top them up with the HIV gene envelopes which, he assured me, act in a very similar fashion to cytokines in that they trigger the body’s immune system. Significantly, Professor Beverley confirmed this when he said that “they do indeed trigger and regulate the way the body relates to pathogens”.26
Clearly, Parker’s revelations-if proved true-are stunning.27 The secret use of an experimental vaccine on British military personnel may be one of the most significant reasons why the Ministry of Defence continues to stonewall vets about the vaccines they received. To admit to involuntary human testing on such a sensitive issue will lead to a public relations disaster of huge proportions. As one ill vet told me, “I was ordered to volunteer” for the shots. He now wishes he hadn’t. The second potential reason clearly opens a can of worms about the possible development of HIV as a biological weapon.28
BUSINESS AS USUAL
But there are other equally powerful reasons to keep the lid on the Gulf War Syndrome story. Pat Eddington, the former CIA analyst, has no doubt that the principal reason for the US Government’s stonewalling tactic is to cover up the supply of CB weapons to Iraq prior to the Gulf War. For the US Government to admit to such cynical irresponsibility would result in public outrage, Eddington says.
Eddington also chastises the Senate whose members selfishly refuse to act against the wishes of the Pentagon. Their delinquency of duty has resulted in the side-lining of in excess of 100,000 Gulf War veterans who now exhibit a range of symptoms typical of chemical, and, in some cases, biological attack. In this ‘business as usual’ scenario, Eddington also reserves some powder and shot for the major media who are largely willing to accept, at face value, the cloying PR handouts from the Department of Defense.
Hopelessly abandoned by one and all, many thousands of vets have now died as a result of their chemically inspired battle injuries, adding even more incentive to the Pentagon to continue the cover-up.
But in the final analysis, the reasons surrounding the British and US governments’ disgraceful obfuscation are many. Certainly, the prior supply of CB weapons to Iraq is enough to make many government officials quake with the fear of disgrace. It is a similar rationale that continues to eclipse the illegal use of experimental, unlicensed and highly sensitive drugs. Not least, however, is the knowledge that defence against chemical and biological weapons attacks is utterly shambolic. Pat Eddington states that CBW protective suits and gas masks are: “…(a) notoriously defective, and (b) in very short supply-two problems that have yet to be corrected more than six years later.” He adds, “That’s not something the Pentagon wants to advertise to the likes of Hashemi-Rafsanjani, Kim Jong Il or Colonel Qadhafi.”29
Yet few can doubt that the intelligence services of Iran, North Korea or Libya are already aware of the published shortcomings of American and British CBW protective equipment. A more significant fear may be the realisation inside the Pentagon and the Ministry of Defence that their own troops will be less than willing to wade into a future CB battle zone virtually buck-naked.
Armed only with an uncertain dose of HIV but the certain knowledge that-thanks to the grace of greed and military commercialism-those chemical and biological organisms you are about to inhale and absorb have “made at home” stencilled all over them, would you volunteer for military service?
About the Author:
Born in England, David Guyatt is a freelance investigative journalist whose former career as an executive in international banking and finance provided the background that inspired his research into the shady world of international weapons financing, narcotics trafficking and money laundering.
He has worked with the International Committee of the Red Cross on weapons-related projects; the charity pressure-group World Development Movement on British arms financing; and the leading British TV documentary program, World in Action.
David Guyatt’s current research interests include military/ intelligence mind-control programs and non-lethal weapons systems, as well as the hidden influence of elitist groups around the globe.
Endnotes:
1. The CB attack on Dhahran on 20 January 1991 is confirmed in US CENTCOM battlefield logs obtained under FOIA. Delivery was via a Scud missile.
2. Telephone interview with this writer, dated 12 May 1997.
3. Eddington, Pat, Gassed in the Gulf, Insignia Publishing Co., Washington, DC, USA, 1997 (http://www.InsigniaUSA.com)
4. Eddington convincingly argues&emdash;based on captured Iraqi documents&emdash;that chemical and bio-warfare agents were used in non-lethal doses. This explains why coalition troops did not keel over and die immediately. Iraqi CB doctrine was to use low but repetitive doses, which they calculated would produce greater long-term damage, Eddington says.
5. US CENTCOM logs confirmed a later Scud attack on Hafar al Batin on 14 February 1991.
6. Telephone interview with this writer, dated 13 May 1997.
7. Telephone interview with this writer, dated 13 May 1997.
8. The Al Jubayl incident is the most comprehensively documented case of CB attack by the Iraqis. Records obtained under FOIA indicate that Scuds were not used. Delivery of the CB weapon was almost certainly as a result of aircraft penetration, possibly a Russian-manufactured Sukhoi SU-22 Fitter fighter-bomber.
9. Telephone interview with this writer, dated 15 May 1997.
10. Parliamentary Q & As in this writer’s possession.
11. A total of 55 incidents have been recorded to date by US CENTCOM logs. CB attacks began on 17 January 1991 and continued throughout the ground war in all major sectors.
12. See Report by Senator Donald J. Riegle to the US Senate, titled “Arming Iraq: The Export of Biological Materials and the Health of Gulf War Veterans”, dated 9 February 1994. Bacillus anthracis cohn and Clostridium botulinum type A cultures were shipped on 2 May 1988. In all, Riegle was able to identify no less than 61 biological cultures supplied to Iraq between 1985-89. Some of these included human gene clones.
13. Telephone interviews with this writer, dated 13 and 14 May 1997.
14. I have been given a copy of an MoD written statement regarding the 1st Field Laboratory Unit which states: “We can confirm that this unit operated in the Gulf. Its primary task was related to the detection of biological warfare agents, of which there was a real and compelling threat. As part of their work they were monitoring the effectiveness of the biological immunisation programme.”
15. Bernstein, Dennis, “Gulf War Syndrome Covered Up”, Covert Action Quarterly, no. 43, Winter 1992/3.
16. ibid.
17. “Riegle Report”, p. 3.
18. op. cit., p. 5.
19. Donald J. Riegle’s letter to William Perry, US Defense Secretary, dated 9 February 1994.
20. Carol Marshall’s manuscript, “The Last Circle”, running to 140 pages, is a comprehensive investigation into the so-called “Octopus”.
21. Significantly, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is concerned about the development of “genetic weapons” and fears that “the possibility exists for their misuse for political ends”. The ICRC warns that developments of gene/race-specific weapons may or could be taking place. See “Expert Meeting on Certain Weapon Systems and on Implementation Mechanisms in International War”, ICRC, Geneva, Switzerland, July 1994.
22. A copy of this memorandum is in my possession.
23. The only difference is that Rusling received a hepatitis B jab, whereas Bristow received hepatitis A. In all other respects their lists of vaccines are identical&emdash;including two that remain classified.
24. Parker states that he has received confirmation of the use of the HIV gene vaccine from a well-placed and extremely knowledgeable source, whom he is unable to identify.
25. I understand Porton Down denies any involvement in HIV research, but see notes below.
26. I couldn’t help but note the use of the plural&emdash;a usage that seems inconsistent with his otherwise firm statement. It had taken me two days and numerous phone calls before I was finally able to make contact with Professor Beverley. I had been given his number by an individual working in the field of immunology. Unbeknownst to me at the time, this individual had contacted Porton Down, revealing the interest and direction of my questions; a fact she revealed the following day when I phoned back with an additional question. Meanwhile, Angus Parker was told, via a circuitous route, that the MoD was very “displeased” with him for talking to me. A paranoid may well consider that two days “in the world of shadows” is a very long time indeed.
27. They also raise the question of why Britain’s top-secret bio-warfare lab is involved in developing an AIDS vaccine. The possibility that AIDS has been ‘weaponised’ (apparently a technical possibility) is an old and largely discounted story attributed to a Cold War disinformation campaign.
28. Perhaps a ‘red herring’?
29. Correspondence with this writer.
End of article
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Finally we now have the “icing on the cake” evidence to prove that not only did the British Government and Department of Defence know of the dangers of the military vaccination programme this highly sensitive memo also clearly states that when Anthrax and Pertussis vaccines were tested alone they were not associated with an unusual degree of toxicity at single dose level. However, when combined there was evidence of severe loss of condition and weight loss in animals .
Pay particular attention to the paragraph in the article above which admits to the vaccination of Anthrax and Pertussis amongst many others….here is that paragraph again:
All previously classified vaccines were declassified on 10 December 1996, according to a letter dated 20 January 1997 from the Ministry of Defence. A spokesman at the MoD confirmed this in a telephone call on Friday 30 May 1997, adding that there were only three vaccines that had ever been classified. He told me these were: anthrax, pertussis and plague. This statement is confirmed in a letter to Shaun Rusling, dated 20 January 1997, in which the MoD confided that “the vaccines you were given against potential biological warfare threats were anthrax, pertussis (as an adjuvant) and plague. These are the only vaccinations which have ever been classified.” This is a far cry from the testimony of Surgeon General Revell in the closed-door hearings of the Defence Committee in which he said there were “five or six” vaccines which were “not admitted to”.
Now read on and note the interest/concern:
To continue
I would emphasise that these findings are preliminary but they do suggest that if used on man as a combined preparation and enhanced degree of reactagenicity could occur. The users of the vaccines may with to take these findings in consideration
Signed Head of the Division of Bacteriology
It is also relevant to publish the reference to the above that was raised in Westminster under Hansard which clearly backs up the above memo but at the same time did not extend further:
Gulf War 1990–91: Vaccines
Lord Morris of Manchester asked Her Majesty’s Government:
Whether they will now publish in the Official Report the terms in which the then Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Dr Metters, advised the Ministry of Defence of his concerns, and those of the National Institute for Biological Standards and Control, about combining the anthrax and pertussis vaccines in immunising troops deploying to the 1990–91 Gulf conflict.[HL40]
Lord Bach: I refer my noble friend to my Written Answer on 9 October (Official Report, cols. WA 67–WA 78), specifically, paragraphs 5 to 8 of Annex A reproduced therein. Dr Metter’s fax to the MoD said:
“We have previously discussed the anxieties my experts have about the simultaneous administration of anthrax and pertussis vaccine.
18 Dec 2003 : Column WA177
There are no such studies in humans that I am aware of, but you may wish to see the enclosed fax which I have just received from [name omitted] of the National Institute for Biological Standards and Control which reports on animal studies they have carried out.
I think you [sic] Medical department needs to be aware of these preliminary results”. The “enclosed fax”, a letter from the National Institute for Biological Standards and Control to Dr Metters, said:
“As you will know, we have recently carried out abnormal toxicity testing in laboratory animals on certain batches of B. anthracis and pertussis vaccine. When each of the two vaccines were tested alone they were not associated with an unusual degree of toxicity at single human dose level. However, when combined there was evidence of severe loss of condition and weight loss in animals.
I would emphasise that these findings are preliminary but they do suggest that if used in man as a combined preparation, an enhanced degree of reactagenicity could occur. The users of these vaccines may wish to take these findings in [sic] consideration.” The texts above were published by the MoD in the paper: Background to the Use of Medical Countermeasures to Protect British forces during the Gulf War dated October 1997, a copy of which is in the Library of the House. This paper is also available on the Internet at: http://www.mod.uk/issues/gulfwar/info/medical/mcm.htm and in hard copy as set out in my Answer of 20 November 2003 (Official Report, col. WA 341).
End of Hansard
To continue:
The second part of this memo was hand written by Dr. J.S. Metters to the Sec (o) (c) MoD
You can clearly see that the experts had many anxieties about the use of Anthrax and Pertussis and that this hand written memo suggested that the MoD medical department should be made aware of the findings etc etc
Here is the evidence of those two memo’s:
I also came across this article that not only links conventional vaccination programmes to Autism but also has the same links to vaccinations given to troops all of which had one particular ingredient called Squalene (shark liver oil):
At first glance, Squalene doesn’t seem too bad given that humans produce some Squalene, but the purpose of shark squalene is to boost the immune system (adjuvant) in sharks. Sharks are known to have an incredible immune system.
Do you want to know if a shark or other animal derivative is injected into your body? Are you going to trust government bureaucrats on what gets injected into your body or that of your child?
Squalene can also be extracted from vegetables, but the vaccine squalene is shark derived. Squalene supplements are popular in some herbal circles to help boost the immune system. Do we really have any clue as to how squalene impacts our own immune systems or how it interacts with the other junk found in our vaccines?
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I will leave this extract just for one moment and add this interesting article that indicated that the Governments denied using squalene ………… this article tells a different story:
Vaccines May Be Linked to Gulf War Syndrome
DOD to Review Possible Use of Illegal Additive -By Michael Devitt
Less than four months after its publication, the Department of Defense (DOD) has agreed to review a controversial study that appears to link Gulf War syndrome (GWS) with a banned substance used in experimental vaccines.
DoD officials originally dismissed the study as flawed and asserted that none of the vaccines administered during the Gulf War contained squalene. In response to pressure from Congress, however, the department has asked the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board (AFEB) to re-examine the study. The Institute of Medicine is also reviewing the research to see what role squalene may play in Gulf-related illnesses.
A naturally occurring molecule, squalene is produced by the human liver and plays a role in the metabolism of cholesterol. It is most commonly found in vegetable oils, shark liver oil,cosmetics and various health supplements.
Under normal circumstances, squalene is released into the blood to help combat physical injuries. However, people don’t usually have enough squalene in their blood to prompt the production of detectable levels of antibodies.
Since the late 1980s, squalene has been studied by the DoD and the National Institutes of Health as a possible adjuvant in vaccines. Because adjuvants boost the immune system’s response to foreign antibodies, the subtance has sparked the interest of researchers. Drug manufacturers, for their part, have incorporated adjuvants into vaccines in the belief that the substance will render the vaccine more effective.
Adjuvants, however, can sometimes trigger unwanted immune responses. While large-scale studies have yet to be conducted in humans, animal studies have shown that squalene adjuvants may generate autoimmune versions of arthritis and multiple sclerosis type-conditions that attack the body from within.2
Although they have been used in a number of vaccines worldwide, only one adjuvant – aluminum hydroxide – has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in vaccines in the United States. And although squalene-adjuvant vaccines have been used on laboratory animals and in experimental human tests, the FDA has not approved the general use of any vaccine containing squalene in the U.S.
“We Never Used Squalene in Vaccines”
Military officials have said all along that no Gulf War vaccines contained squalene. In August 1997, spokespersons for the DoD claimed that squalene “was not an adjuvant that was in any of the vaccines that were used by the Department of Defense,”3 and that “we never used squalene in vaccines” during the Gulf War. However, in a report4issued in March 1999, the General Accounting Office (GAD) – the investigative arm of Congress – stated:
We cannot say definitively whether or not Gulf War-era veterans were given vaccines with adjuvant formulations containing squalene for a number of reasons. Although DoD officials told us they did not administer such vaccines, they stated they did not have documentation on the process and results of decision-making related to the administration of vaccines at the time of the Gulf War. Also, some officials involved in the decisions were no longer employed with DoD at the time of our review, and we were either unable to locate them, or they declined to be interviewed.
A month after the GAO issued its 1999 report, the first hint that squalene might be linked to Gulf War syndrome appeared in an article in New Scientist magazine.5 Robert Garry, a virologist at Tulane University, tested more than 400 Gulf War veterans for antibodies to squalene and found that 95 percent of those with GWS had high levels of squalene antibodies.
Garry also tested a pair of volunteers who had received experimental herpes vaccines containing squalene in trials conducted by the National Institutes of Health. Both had high levels of squalene antibodies and also suffered from GWS-type symptoms.
In February, the peer-reviewed journal Experimental and Molecular Pathology6 published a study written by Garry’s team at Tulane University and Dr. Pamela Asa, an immunologist from Tennessee. Dr. Asa was one of the first health professionals to advance the theory that Gulf War syndrome might be an autoimmune disorder caused by experimental vaccinations.
The research included blinded and unblinded studies. In the blinded study, 56 Gulf War-era veterans and military personnel who were on active service in 1990-91 were tested for squalene. Of those 56, 38 had been deployed to the Persian Gulf and had GWS-type symptoms; 12 had been deployed but were healthy; and six had not been deployed but were nevertheless ill.
The researchers found that among the 38 ill veterans who had been deployed, 36 (94.7 percent) tested positive for squalene antibodies. None of the deployed healthy individuals, however, tested positive.
Furthermore, all six subjects who were ill, but had not been sent to the Gulf, also had squalene antibodies. While they did not serve in the war, they had received the same type and number of vaccinations given to Gulf War troops.
Approximately 700,000 Americans served in the Gulf War between 1990-91. One hundred and forty-eight Americans were killed in action; 467 were wounded. The Department of Veterans Affairs estimates that as many as 100,000 veterans may be suffering from Gulf War syndrome or related symptoms, and that approximately 6,500 soldiers have died since the war’s conclusion, including more than 1,300 soldiers between the ages of 18-24.
————————————
To continue with the original article:
Squalene is most interesting to me related to the Anthrax vaccine. It seems the government denied, denied, denied that this vaccine even had squalene in it. (I am having Deja-vu again). This changed in 2004. They act bewildered at how squalene got in the vaccine. Give me a break, it actually was in there, but we have no idea how it could have gotten in there? That alone instills loads of confidence in me. Seeing how our troops have been treated in government run Veterans Administration hospitals, I would not be surprised at anything the government does now days.
Did they spike the vaccine with squalene and use the troops as guinea pigs?
After years of repeated obfuscation, the federal government finally admitted that a banned chemical additive linked to the Gulf War syndrome has been found in some of the vaccines developed to protect military personnel from biological attack. – FDA Tests Fins Squalene in Anthrax Vaccine.
The article also gave some of the other ingredients/problems associated with current vaccines:
VACCINE INGREDIENTS:
Adjuvants (immune response boosters)
Preservatives:
Stabilizer/solvent:
Vaccine Contaminants:
- Blood supply
- Hepatitis B vaccine & AIDS
- Polio vaccines (SV40 & aids)
- Acanthamoeba
- Bird viruses
- CJD, BSE
- DNA, RNA
- Mycoplasma
- Simian cytomegalovirus
- Nanobacteria
One could spend weeks investigating each of the above ingredients but time does not allow and so one can only leave it up to each individual War Vet or parent to read between the lines and reach their own conclusion.
I came across this banner during my investigations and thought it summed up everything in such a simple way:
I am sure you would all agree that all of this is pretty convincing stuff and I would also add that I believe the author of the original memo who’s details have been removed was Dr. M Corbel who was head at the National Institute of Biological Standards and Control. Dr. M Corbel has and continues to do much work for the WHO which as we all know is the health/medical arm of the New World order
You may or may not have noticed that in the large article printed above there is reference to a specific genes programme using CBW to attack the genes of certain races such as Afro, Chinese etc………this CBW programme was first initiated in both the UK and Rhodesia and just before Magabe took over the then British Prime Minister, Maggie Thatcher, panicked and moved everything (lock stock and barrel) down to South Africa (including research staff) where further developments were made into the “Black Only Bomb.” It is clear that behind closed doors the evil cabal are still working on such projects!
My final article Part 7 will cover the hypocrisy of the world’s Zionist controlled media and how they themselves sometimes slip up in their publications and accidentally expose the mindset of some of our leaders to much embarrassment!!
It is my intention to distribute this article to certain Members of Parliament in both the UK and Australia and in particular to UK Prime Minister, David Cameron and Leader of the Opposition Ed Miliband- Australian Prime Minister, Julia Gillard and Leader of the Opposition, Tony Abbott and many others for their comments based on the facts and evidence that is now available.
Hopefully with elections on the horizon in both the UK and Australia someone may just decide to hang out some dirty washing and get much support from the many war vets that continue to suffer and also from all the mums and dads of those victims!!
This article will also be sent to the respective War Vets organisations around the world and the British Legion etc etc
Peter Eyre -8/2/2013
Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 5
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 5
The Kurdish Genocide compliments of Chemical and Biological technology supplied by the US, UK and many other western countries
Iranian war dead as a direct result of the US, UK and other western governments giving Saddam Chemical and Biological Warfare Weapons
I find it rather sad that the Kurdish Regional Government are seeking a special day in memory of this tragic event and yet continue to have very close ties with the nations that supplied and set up Saddams CBW programme……The US played a significant role leading up to this genocide and the good old Brits actually built and funded Saddam laboratories …….with both assisting in the supply of the deadly ingredients.
Let me remind you of both the Iranian and Kurdish attacks carried out by Saddam:
In July 1988 Iraqi airplanes dropped chemical cyanide bombs on the Iranian Kurdish village of Zardan (as they had done four months earlier on their own Kurdish village of Halabja). Hundreds were killed at once, and the survivors are still suffering from a variety of physical and mental disorders. It has since been proven that the agent used on the Kurds and later on Iran was the deadly VX Gas.
To continue with the story:
A conclusion was draw up which gave a very accurate assessment as follows:
This paper rests its case on the following principal points:
1. That it is known that a range of pathogenic (disease producing) and toxigenic (poisonous) biological materials were exported to Iraq from the United States between 1985 and 1989, and that, among other warfare-related materials, these included a strain of anthrax utilized and tested over many years as a weapon, including during well documented WW2 and post-WW2 trials, to which the US was a party.
2. That the US Government was fully aware of the dangers vested in the biological materials exported to Iraq by the American Type Culture Collection between 1985 and 1989, and was, at the least, grossly negligent in failing to prohibit these exports to a state which was known by the US Administration at that time to be actively utilizing chemical weapons of mass destruction, and suspected – if not known – to also be developing a biological weapons programme.
3. That with knowledge of the US biological exports, the British Government, being bound to act according to the law, and having stated as much in the UK Parliament in the name of Her Majesty the Queen, has a responsibility to formally report this matter to the UN Security Council for investigation. Furthermore, that failure to do so effectively renders the BTWC meaningless, and, thereby, compromises the very concept of international law.
Beyond the case made in this paper, the following appears to be the disturbing international political reality: The invasion of Iraq by the United States and Britain in 2003 was predicated upon Iraq’s possession of ‘weapons of mass destruction’ – the primary threat presented both to Parliament and the People being anthrax. This anthrax was exported to Iraq from the US, having previously been exported from Britain, where it had been tested as a biological weapon “because its capability to produce infection and death after the inhalation of spores had been demonstrated in the laboratory”. This information is well known to the US, Britain, and Canada, due to a trilateral agreement concerning biological research between the three nations. Meanwhile, more than 20% of Britain’s MP representing approximately 12 million people – have twice called for a UN investigation into the US exports, a call which has been dismissed by the British Government by means of flimsy responses and a refusal to answer questions properly.
The United States with Great Britain blocked all Security Council resolutions condemning Iraq’s use of chemical weapons, and on March 21 the US becomes the only country refusing to sign a Security Council statement condemning Iraq’s use of these weapons
The US Department of Commerce licenses 70 biological exports to Iraq between May of 1985 and 1989, including at least 21 batches of lethal strains of anthrax
May, 1986. US Department of Commerce approves shipment of weapons grade botulin poison to Iraq.
April, 1988. US Department of Commerce approves shipment of chemicals used in manufacture of mustard gas.
September, 1988. US Department of Commerce approves shipment of weapons grade anthrax and botulinum to Iraq.
It should also be noted that the MK-84 bomb that was stockpiled in Saudi Arabia also formed part of the support for Saddam when hundreds of these U.S.-made general-purpose “dumb bombs” were transferred to Iraq.
What was even more surprising was when Saddam’s elite troops received instruction in unconventional warfare at Fort Bragg , North Carolina USA. “The idea was that, in the event of an Iranian victory, the Iraqi soldiers would be able to wage a guerrilla struggle against the occupying Iranian force”
On May 25, 1994, the U.S. Senate Banking Committee released a report in which it was stated that “pathogenic (meaning ‘disease producing’), toxigenic (meaning ‘poisonous’), and other biological research materials were exported to Iraq pursuant to application and licensing by the U:S: Department of Commerce.” It added: “These exported biological materials were not attenuated or weakened and were capable of reproduction.”
The report then detailed 70 shipments (including Bacillus Anthracis) from the United States to Iraqi government agencies over three years, concluding “It was later learned that these microorganisms exported by the United States were identical to those the UN inspectors found and recovered from the Iraqi biological warfare program.”
Iraq purchased 8 strains of anthrax from the United States in 1985, according to British biological weapons expert David Kelly. The Iraqi military settled on the American Type Culture Collection strain 14578 as the exclusive strain for use as a biological weapon.
Donald Riegle, Chairman of the Senate Committee that authored the aforementioned Riegle Report. said: “U.N. inspectors had identified many United States manufactured items that had been exported from the United States to Iraq under licenses issued by the Department of Commerce, and [established] that these items were used to further Iraq’s chemical and nuclear weapons development and its missile delivery system development programs. … The executive branch of our government approved 771 different export licenses for sale of dual-use technology to Iraq. I think that is a devastating record.”
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control sent Iraq 14 separate agents “with biological warfare significance,” according to Riegle’s investigators.
It is now known that a vast network of companies, based in the U.S. and elsewhere, fed Iraq’s warring capabilities right up until August 1990, when Saddam invaded Kuwait.
Innocent victims of western supplied CBW to Iraq (namely US and UK)
On the military hardware front, MD 500 Defender helicopters were also part of the deal with the US when Iraq acquired 60 multi-role military helicopters directly from the United States in 1983. Additional helicopter sales prompted congressional opposition, forcing the Reagan administration to explore alternative ways of assisting Saddam.
Alan Friedman wrote that Sarkis Soghanalian, one of the most notorious arms dealers during the Cold War, procured Eastern Bloc and French origin weaponry, and brokered vast deals with Iraq, with the tacit approval of the Central Intelligence Agency.
This most prominent arms merchant, Sarkis Soghanalian, was a Miami-based former CIA contractor who brokered tens of billions of dollars’ worth of military hardware for Iraq during the 1980s, reporting many of his transactions to officials in Washington. Soghanalian was close to the Iraqi leadership and to intelligence officers and others in the Reagan administration. He played a vital role serving as a go between for the CIA and other US government operations.
In an interview with William Kistner, Soghanalian stated that he was “working closely with the U.S. government”. Soghanalian also helped the Iraqis obtain TOW Anti Tank Missile , for which he was later prosecuted by the United States Department of Justice.
What is so upsetting was the fact that almost 150 foreign companies supported Saddam Hussein’s WMD program. Twenty-four U.S. firms were involved in exporting materials to Baghdad. Add to this an even longer list of American companies, UK, many EU countries, South Africa, South East Asian countries, including Singapore and Japan.
The whole episode is rather sickening when one believes that one day those responsible would be put before the International Court System. Every inquiry to reveal this broad based corruption and illegal arms trading has failed…..The Matrix Churchill Inquiry, The Scott Inquiry and now the Chilcott Inquiry (Iraq Inquiry) all totally rigged.
Basically “business as usual prevails” whilst the unscrupulous offenders, Heads of State, Senior Politicians, Government Departments and Company Executives get away with murder. If one adds to this the massive fraud that exists we find ourselves living amongst a den of thieves……but do not worry our governments know how to rob the poor to feed the rich!
We certainly live in a highly corrupt society with those that lead us leading the way!!
Maybe now you can better understand as to why people like David Kelly were assassinated and even possibly politicians such as Sir John Biggs Davison , Robin Cook and not forgetting Princess Diana.
Maybe you have never questioned as to why leaders of countries that have fallen victim to the greed of the west have never been tried in the Hague for war crimes etc………the answer is simple……the likes of Saddam, Mubarek and Ghadaffi all knew too much and if they were presented to the Hague they could well spill the beans of exactly what the US, UK and other EU countries gave them……….you will see that Mubarek will end up the same way and no doubt the President of Yemen will follow……..such is the “Axis of Evil” that exists here in the west.
Part 6 and the final Part 7 will prove beyond a shadow of doubt just how hypocritical and two faced the US and UK were in all of these unnecessary wars and how they having knowingly provided Chemical and Biological technology to harm innocent civilians in mass and how as a direct result of their illegal arms dealings have caused harm and injury to all the coalition forces.
Documentation will also be supplied to show how the government and MoD were pre warned of the dangers associated with the vaccination of troops prior to the Gulf War with accounts by experts (in the field) of CBW attacks on their facilities by Saddam using Scud Missiles armed with CBW warheads………… the technology of which was supplied by the west!!!
Peter Eyre -6/2/2013
Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 4
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 4
We can now look into the illegal arms trade to Iraq which in itself became very sophisticated with its concealed web of distribution. The UK played a major role in support for Saddam Hussein with one company that really did stand out from the rest.
A Scottish Company called Allivane was at the heart of this activity and did so over a period of six years during the Iraq-Iran War. Needless to say this also involved the US who used the backyard of Britain to promote this joint effort.
It was back in 1976 when George Bush Snr, who was then Nixon’s Envoy in China, came across James Guerin, the founder of International Signal and Control (ISC), a US Defense Contractor. After a long discussion they decided that they could do business together.
Soon after this time there were many investigations carried out by US Congress regarding covert arms shipments and the workings of the CIA. A clean up of the CIA took place plus a complete shutdown of covert arms routes that involved many countries.
However, by this time George Bush Snr himself was running the CIA and realised that with the help of James Guerin, together they could re establish this covert business but not out of the USA. It became obvious that their ally Britain could now become the staging post for such an operation. Britain at the time was on an economical low and so the Prime Minister, James Callaghan, jumped at the idea. Callaghan was later to become an advisor to the Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI) who would soon have a track record of drugs and illegal arms running as their backbone……one could add many more major banks to this list.
The down side to the BCCI was the fact that when it was closed down on 5 July 1991, a million people throughout the world lost their deposits. Many of the losers were from the Third World; small businessmen who had struggled to make a living in countries other than their own, and who had been impressed by BCCI’s multilingual staff and its often-trumpeted concern for the starving millions……no doubt we have all heard this before….a sort of Pandora’s Box!
The formation of this covert Bush – Guerin – Callaghan led to the resurrection of Allivance and the start of one of the biggest cover weapons supply and destabilization operations in the world………..nothing new hey?……..it goes on all the time with the same key players, Heads of State, CIA, MI5 and Mossad etc. The formation and working of this scam did not only involve the British Labour Party but also followed on with the Conservative Party. By this time it was well and truly out of control.
Back in the US meantime (In 1974) the ISC with the knowledge and assistance of US agencies, advanced radar-controlled anti-aircraft systems were shipped to South Africa. South Africa, together with ISC, also developed a sophisticated ground-to-air missiles for its own use and for export. All this equipment was restricted US technology requiring export licenses, which were not obtained. James Guerin claimed the company’s activities were sanctioned by the US government. Mr. Guerin set up a front company with the South African authorities for the US National Security Agency, , as part of a US covert in 1974. This involved shipping advanced electronic sensors, optics and related equipment to South Africa without licenses so as to set up listening posts to track Soviet submarines off the Cape of Good Hope. The company, Gamma Systems Associates, ordered restricted equipment from ISC, then shipped it on to South Africa on board airliners. The equipment was repackaged and the airline companies given false descriptions of the equipment. The operation ceased to have official sanction in 1977 and the activities were dismantled.
From 1984 to 1988, ISC sent South Africa more than $30 million in military-related equipment, including telemetry tracking antennae to collect data from missiles in flight, gyroscopes for guidance systems, and photo-imaging film readers, all of which would form the “backbone” of a medium-range missile system. Some of this technology was reportedly transferred to Iraq. Another link to Iraq was the supply of the specifications for the MK-20 Rockeye cluster bomb through Chilean defence company Carlos Cardoen, which was able to build an almost identical weapon that was subsequently used against coalition forces in the Persian Gulf War of January-February 1991. These activities allegedly happened with the knowledge and assistance of U.S. intelligence agencies (including the CIA) and in violation of United States and United Nations sanctions.
Allivane’s contribution to Iraq certainly allowed both the US and UK to benefit from the exercise and to elongate the war effort between Iraq and Iran which was always paramount in the minds of our leaders. One has to remember that Geo-Politics does not possess any ethics or morality……just simply greed!
There were many other issues behind these covert arms shipments on the political front and none other than Donald Rumsfeld was right in the middle of it all. No doubt his partner in crime Dick Cheney was sitting in the sidelines. Perhaps this account throws more light of events:
Middle East envoy Donald Rumsfeld to Baghdad in 1983, stated:
“While a Staff Member to the National Security Council, I was responsible for the Middle East and for Political-Military Affairs. During my five year tenure on the National Security Council, I had regular contact with both CIA Director William Casey and Deputy Director Robert Gates…CIA Director Casey personally spearheaded the effort to ensure that Iraq had sufficient military weapons, ammunition and vehicles to avoid losing the Iran-Iraq war. Pursuant to the secret NSDD (National Security Decision Directive), the United States actively supported the Iraqi war effort by supplying the Iraqis with billions of dollars of credits, by providing U.S. military intelligence and advice to the Iraqis, and by closely monitoring third country arms sales to Iraq to make sure that Iraq had the military weaponry required. The United States also provided strategic operational advice to the Iraqis to better use their assets in combat. For example, in 1986, President Reagan sent a secret message to Saddam Hussein telling him that Iraq should step up its air war and bombing of Iran. This message was delivered by Vice President Bush who communicated it to Egyptian President Mubarak, who in turn passed the message to Saddam Hussein. Similar strategic operational military advice was passed to Saddam Hussein throughvarious meetings with European and Middle Eastern heads of state. I authored Bush’s talking points for the 1986 meeting with Mubarak and personally attended numerous meetings with European and Middle East heads of state where the strategic operational advice was communicated.”
President Reagan
One can clearly see the double standards that existed and the means of delivery a message from one country to another by way of a third party (Egypt). No doubt the CIA had their own stock of carrier pigeons to spread the word…..one would have to ask the question how did they manage to deliver the messages amidst all the nerve gas and mustard gas etc?
The British origin of anthrax strain 14578 – “Vollum” strain
Anthrax strain 14578 may be found listed in past ATCC catalogues, in which the company’s ordering procedures explain that any request for it (and other pathogenic agents) “should be made on the institution’s official stationery (purchase order) and signed by the director of the institution, the chairman of the department concerned, or the scientist in charge of the project”. So, presumably, ATCC files will hold copies of Iraq’s original purchase orders. Such back-up documents do not appear to have been supplied to Senator Riegle in 1994, but should now be produced during a proper investigation under the auspices of the United Nations Security Council.
Each strain in the ATCC catalogue is listed together with its known history – or rather the individuals who have maintained the strain over the years are named in succession. Anthrax strain 14578 appears to have been deposited with ATCC after being held by P H A Sneath, H M Darlow, P Fildes, R L Vollum, and originally Dunkin. So, who are these people through whose hands this anthrax apparently passed en-route to the ATCC and thence to Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, from where it became the principal element in the widely trumpeted ‘forty-five minute threat’ which provided the pretext for the invasion of Iraq in 2003?
Prof P H A Sneath, now of Leicester University, has recently stated (by e-mail) that he was never in charge of the strain, or a collection that included it. Instead, he suggests that “it was probably sent to ATCC by the National Collection of Type Cultures, Central Public Health Laboratory, Colindale Avenue, London”. However, the ATCC catalogue entry references a paper co-authored by Prof Sneath, which was published in 1964 in the Journal of General Microbiology. The article discusses the anthrax strain and notes that it was isolated from bovine anthrax, has retained its virulence, and was previously in the care of the Microbiological Research Establishment (MRE), Porton Down, Wiltshire. According to the article, Prof Sneath was then at the National Institute for Medical Research, Mill Hill, London NW7.
Part 5 continues with much more detailed information on what was going on.
Peter Eyre -5/2/2013
Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 3
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 3
You kiss my A… and I’ll kiss yours
“Thanks for helping the US, our allies and Saddam genocide the Kurds in Halabja”
The Kurdish Genocide at Halabja
Kurdish Genocide Victims
In this part we will look at actually who moved what and where and how our respective hypocritical governments try to stem the spread of Nuclear and Chemical and Biological Warfare in other countries and yet secretly help them ………as was the case with Iraq!!
It would be relevant at this point to reveal a list of Iraq Purchased Weapons that was provided by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) for the period 1973-2002.
Country | $MM USD 1990 | % Total |
USSR |
25145 |
57.26 |
France |
5595 |
12.74 |
China |
5192 |
11.82 |
Czechoslovakia |
2880 |
6.56 |
Poland |
1681 |
3.83 |
Brazil |
724 |
1.65 |
Egypt |
568 |
1.29 |
Romania |
524 |
1.19 |
Denmark |
226 |
0.51 |
Libya |
200 |
0.46 |
USA |
200 |
0.46 |
South Africa |
192 |
0.44 |
Austria |
190 |
0.43 |
Switzerland |
151 |
0.34 |
Yugoslavia |
107 |
0.24 |
Germany (FRG) |
84 |
0.19 |
Italy |
84 |
0.19 |
UK |
79 |
0.18 |
Hungary |
30 |
0.07 |
Spain |
29 |
0.07 |
East Germany (GDR) |
25 |
0.06 |
Canada |
7 |
0.02 |
Jordan |
2 |
0.005 |
Total |
43915 |
100.0 |
|
|
The next big issue to debate was who provided Iraq with Chemical and Biological Warfare (CBW) know how? The main players here were both the US, UK and Spain.
One has to fully understand that what has been revealed does not give a true account as to the total supply of CBW or of the total supply of military hardware and software. Everything was so cleverly concealed via offshore front companies that it almost became impossible to know it original source. I am sure your imagination can run wild in this respect and realise that the trade in illegal arms is a very profitable business. The deceit and corruption that was linked to supply went right to the top of the political ladder. It is rather ironic that to this day the same policy prevails and war is good for business!
So let’s just look at one typical consignment as shown in the Riegle Report which was obtained under the freedom of information and you will see just how generous western government were with Iraq:
The list in Figure 1 is merely one extract from the invoice details supplied to Senator Riegle by the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC). One item is particularly notable in this list, for it is the strain of anthrax which will be shown to be the exclusive strain of anthrax used in the Iraqi biological weapons programme. Before focusing on anthrax, however, consider the range of materials exported to Iraq. The Riegle Report confirms that from 1985:
“Pathogenic (meaning ‘disease producing’), toxigenic (meaning ‘poisonous’), and other biological research materials were exported to Iraq pursuant to application and licensing by the U.S. Department of Commerce….These exported biological materials were not attenuated or weakened and were capable of reproduction. According to the Department of Defence’s own Report to Congress on the Conduct of the Persian Gulf War, released in April 1992: “By the time of the invasion of Kuwait, Iraq had developed biological weapons. It’s advanced and aggressive biological warfare program was the most advanced in the Arab world… The program probably began late in the 1970′s and concentrated on the development of two agents, botulinum toxin and anthrax bacteria… Large-scale production of these agents began in 1989 at four facilities near Baghdad. Delivery means for biological agents ranged from simple aerial bombs and artillery rockets to surface-to-surface missiles.”
t is at this point we can reveal the effects of these CBW the Report finds that among the US exports to Iraq were the following and it notes their associated disease symptoms:
Bacillus Anthracis: anthrax is a disease producing bacteria identified by the Department of Defense in the Conduct of the Persian Gulf War: Final Report to Congress, as being a major component in the Iraqi biological warfare program. Anthrax is an often-fatal infectious disease due to ingestion of spores. It begins abruptly with high fever, difficulty in breathing, and chest pain. The disease eventually results in septicaemia (blood poisoning), and the mortality is high. Once septicaemia is advanced, antibiotic therapy may prove useless, probably because the exotoxins remain, despite the death of the bacteria.
Clostridium Botulinum: a bacterial source of botulinum toxin, which causes vomiting, constipation, thirst, general weakness, headache, fever, dizziness, double vision, dilation of the pupils and paralysis of the muscles involving swallowing. It is often fatal.
Histoplasma Capsulatum: causes a disease superficially resembling tuberculosis that may cause pneumonia, enlargement of the liver and spleen, anemia, an influenza-like illness and an acute inflammatory skin disease marked by tender red nodules, usually on the shins. Reactivated infection usually involves the lungs, the brain, spinal membranes, heart, peritoneum, and the adrenals.
Brucella Melitensis: a bacteria which can cause chronic fatigue, loss of appetite, profuse sweating when at rest, pain in joints and muscles, insomnia, nausea, and damage to major organs.
Clostridium Perfringens: highly toxic bacteria, which cause gas gangrene. The bacteria produce toxins that move along muscle bundles in the body killing cells and producing necrotic tissue that is then favourable for further growth of the bacteria itself. Eventually, these toxins and bacteria enter the bloodstream and cause a systemic illness.
Figure 1 provides details of a single shipment sent on 2 May 1986. Note the emboldened entry for Bacillus anthracis (ATCC 14578), which the Iraq Survey Group has since determined was the exclusive strain of anthrax used in the Iraqi biological weapons programme. This, then, is the source of the anthrax threat which was repeatedly promoted both inside Parliament and through the news media to the British People, prior to the decision being made for Britain to take part in the invasion of Iraq.
Because Iraq was removed from antiterrorism controls and because controls on missile technology and chemical and biological warfare were not in place until the late 1980s, few foreign policy controls were placed on exports to Iraq during the 1980s…this, along with the lack of national security controls, resulted in a long list of high technology items being sold to Iraq during the 1980s.
Below is a list (Figure 1) of one such consignment sent from the US to Iraq. I would also like to point out that the UK also participated in such exports, which I will cover later.
Bacillus Anthracis Cohn (ATCC 10)
Batch # 08-20-82 (2 each)
Class III pathogen.
Bacillus Subtitles (Ehrenberg) Con (ATCC 82)
Batch # 06-20-84 (2 each)
Clostridium botulinum Type A (ATCC 3502)
Batch# 07-07-81 (3 each)
Class III Pathogen
Clostridium perfringens (Weillon and Zuber)
Hauduroy, et al (ATCC 3624)
Batch# 10-85SV (2 each)
Bacillus subtilis (ATCC 6051)
Batch# 12-06-84 (2 each)
Francisella tularensis var. tularensis Olsufiev
(ATCC 6223)
Batch# 05-14-79 (2 each)
Avirulent; suitable for preparations of diagnostic antigens.
Clostridium tetani (ATCC 9441)
Batch 03-94 (3 each)
Highly toxigenic.
Clostridium botulinum Type E (ATCC
9564) Batch# 03-02-79 (2 each)
Class III pathogen
Clostridium tetani (ATCC 10779)
Batch# 04-24-84S (3 each)
Clostridium perfringens (ATCC 12916)
Batch# 08-14-80 (2 each)
Agglutinating Type 2.
Clostridium perfringens (ATCC 13124)
Batch# 08-14-80 (3 each)
Type A, alpha-toxigenic, produces lecithinase C.J. Appl,
Bacillus Anthracis (ATCC 14185)
Batch# 01-14-80 (3 each) G.G. Wright (Fort Detrick) V770-NPI-R.
Bovine anthrax, Class III pathogen
Bacillus Anthracis (ATCC 14578)
Batch# 01-06-78 (2 each)
Class III pathogen.
Bacillus megaterium (ATCC 14581)
Batch# 04-18-85 (2 each)
Bacillus megaterium (ATCC 14945)
Batch# 06-21-81 (2 each)
Clostridium botulinum Type E (ATCC 17855)
Batch# 06-21-71
Class III pathogen.
Bacillus megaterium (ATCC 19213)
Batch# 3-84 (2 each)
Clostridium botulinum Type A (ATCC 19397)
Batch# 08-18-81 (2 each)
Class III pathogen
Brucella abortus Biotype 3 (ATCC 23450)
Batch# 08-02-84 (3 each)
Class III pathogen
Brucella abortus Biotype 9 (ATCC 23455)
Batch# 02-05-68 (3 each)
Class III pathogen
Brucella melitensis Biotype I (ATCC 23456)
Batch# 03-08-78 (2 each)
Class III pathogen
Brucella melitensis Biotype 3 (ATCC 23458)
Batch# 01-29-68 (2 each)
Class III pathogen
Clostridium botulinum Type A (ATCC 25763)
Batch# 8-83 (2 each)
Class III pathogen
Clostridium botulinum Type F (ATCC 35415)
Batch# 02-02-84 (2 each)
Class III pathogen
“The United States did not believe that they would be used for anything other than legitimate research purposes and therefore did not knowingly export the materials to assist a biological weapons programme”……………….How naive can you get?
The United States secretly supported Iraq in its eight-year war with Iran, and that in February 1982 the US Administration removed Iraq from its list of ‘terrorist states’ in order to do so. Furthermore, there is the astonishing fact that, among the various agencies of the Government of Iraq listed in the Riegle Report, one repeated recipient of these deadly materials was no less than the Iraqi nuclear weapons research facility, the Iraq Atomic Energy Commission. One could ask the US how could the conclusion possibly be reached that between 1985 and 1989 anthrax and other warfare-related biological materials were exported from the US to Iraq for “legitimate research purposes”?
One also needs to look at the fact that the UK supplied Biological and Chemical agents to Iraq, unfortunately documentation on this is well hidden but evidence does exist that the UK certainly did supply such agents.
Back in the 1970’s Iraq had approached the USSR to buy a plant to manufacture chemical weapons, but his request was refused. Saddam then began courting the West, and received a much more favourable response.
An American company, Pfaulder Corporation of Rochester, New York, supplied the Iraqis with a blueprint in 1975, enabling them to construct their first chemical warfare plant. The plant was purchased in sections from Italy, West Germany and East Germany and assembled in Iraq. It was located at Akhashat in north-western Iraq, and the cost was around $50 million for the plant and $30 million for the safety equipment.
In the late 1970′s, it was actually the German firm ‘Karl Kobe’ that sold Iraq the ingredients for its first chemical weapons. Karl Kobe and others sold Iraq over 1,027 tons of the chemicals needed to produce mustard gas, Sarin, Tabun, and various tear gasses including CS and CN. The chemical weapons program was operational by late 1983/early 1984. Iraq then bought botulin toxin and mycotoxin from a total of 5 other German firms to begin a germ/biological weapons program.
The United States CDC (Center for Disease Control) provided Iraq with biological samples up until 1989 for “Medical research and other purposes”. The US supplied anthrax, West Nile virus, botulism, and Brucella melitensis to Iraq for little or no charge. (that was very nice of them).
The United Kingdom paid, in full, for the Iraqi chlorine plant where mustard gas was manufactured.
Brazil provided around 100 tons of mustard gas in the early 80′s before the British funded plant was up and running.
Singapore and India provided the ingredients for VX nerve agent and yet still more Tabun.
Egypt and Spain both provided the majority of Iraq’s munitions that were designed to carry and disperse the chemical weapons.
As you can clearly see it was truly a very international affair, a sort of United Nations!
It should also be made clear that the US. UK and other countries assisted Iraq in its development into nuclear research which did not reach a successful conclusion.
Part 4 will bring you more details on actual arms shipments and other military support.
Peter Eyre -3/2/2013
Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 2
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 2
In my last article I talked about how blatantly western government are prepared to go to war or create a conflict in order to stop other nations from obtaining what they themselves have designed and incorporated into their respective arsenals.
I find it so hypocritical to learn that many of those countries we have gone to war with were at one time our allies. During those good times our governments not only helped them achieve Nuclear Weapons/Chemical and Biological Warfare but indeed also gave them the ingredients and in many cases funded and helped build the laboratories and testing facilities, as was the case with Iraq prior to the Gulf Wars.
“Can you believe that these guys behind me actually help fund the Chemical and Biological Scuds that Saddam has just fired at us”
So let’s just delve into this area and see who sold what to whom and how much they helped those that later became our enemy and more importantly how they also allowed these programmes to harm our own troops…….two classic examples was when Saddam fired Scud Missiles at US/UK and Coalition bases in Saudi Arabia laden with CBW additives that the western governments had given to him……… also those same governments gave vaccinations to all coalition forces prior too and during the Gulf War’s knowing they could be potentially fatal or create long lasting medical problems to our troops……..this is now referred too as “Gulf War Syndrome”………..add to this the fact that again the governments knew that all troops in the field could succumb to contamination by our own weapons as a direct result of inhalation/absorption of radioactive nano particle from weapons that contained Depleted Uranium…………I might add that most of today’s weapons contain DU in some form!!!
Illegal arms trading between the west and any nation that was prepared to pay for them was rife and in particular money, hardware, nuclear components and chemical and biological ingredients freely flowed between the west and Iraq prior to the attack on the Kurds, the Iraq – Iran War and prior to the Gulf War.
It was the wish of all the major player’s in the west to keep the war going for as long as possible which still stands true to this day.
Italy played an important role in arming Iraq through a US branch of the state owned largest bank in Italy. There were so many complex arrangements that allowed Iraq and its supporters to bypass the embargo. Moving land and sea mines production to Singapore was a typical example. Yugoslavia also sold weapons for the entire duration of the conflict as did Portugal. Spain sold 172 Million Euros of weapons. Spain also sold 4X4 vehicles, BO-105 helicopters, explosives and ammunition’s. It should also be noted that an unexploded chemical Iraqi warhead found in Iran was also manufactured in Spain. Turkey also supplied civilian help during the conflict. Turkey’s export jumped from $200 million in 1981 to $2 billion in 1985, which made up 25% of Turkey’s export. Turkish construction projects in Iraq totaled $2.5 billion between 1974 – 1990.
Iraq’s main financial backers were the oil-rich Persian Gulf states, mainly Saudi Arabia ($30.9 billion) Kuwait ($8.2 billion) and the United Arab Emirates ($8 billion).
The Iraqgate scandal revealed that an Atlanta branch of Italy’s largest bank, Banco Nazionale del Lavoro,relying partially on U.S. taxpayer-guaranteed loans, funneled $5 billion to Iraq from 1985 to 1989. These clandestine and illegal loans to Iraq were used to part fund the purchase of arms and weapons technology.
It also became clear that the US was funding Iraqi chemical and nuclear research programme. It was stated that during the 1980’s Iraq had received around $35 billion in loans from the west and between $30-40 billion from the Persian Gulf states.
In actual fact it was this huge Iraqi deficit that contributed towards the start of the war in the first place when some of the above nations started demanding payback on these huge loans…….. not forgetting the fact that some oil rigs on the Kuwaiti border were taking oil/gas from the Iraq fields by a technique known as diagonal or slant drilling. It was also common knowledge that the then British PM Maggie Thatcher pleaded with Ronald Regan to intervene in Kuwait when Saddam attacked that country.
Many victims in Iran were innocent civilians and it is believed that more than 100,000 were victims of chemical weapons during the length of the war. The final figure is hard to calculate owing to the long term illnesses that followed the war. Reports show that Nerve Gas killed about 20,000 Iranian soldiers and many thousands continue to seek medical treatment on a regular basis with many more critical cases being hospitalised.
What is totally unacceptable to me is the fact that the UN knew of these breaches of the Geneva Convention and did nothing apart from condemning its usage. Needless to say that once again the US was right in there and refused to accept the condemnation. It was not until 1988 that the UN Security Council passed Resolution 612 condemning the use of chemicals. I guess you would ask “Well so what.”
It became apparent that President Reagan was certainly not too concerned as to what Weapons of Mass Destruction were being used as the US were more concerned that the Iraqi’s did not lose the war. Even after the Iraqi had used chemical weapons on the Kurds the US continued its support of Iraq
Maybe it is time to reflect on the bitter pill that Iran has had to swallow both during and after this terrible event. Perhaps we can all see now why Iran could never trust the US, UK and to some degree other EU countries with such a two faced policy. We have to understand that nothing that is done by the west is anything to do with democracy or because of peoples suffering. This is a power game that comes under the title of Geo – Politics. It is “Imperialism” at its best, an urge to take control of the world’s resources, their markets and the transit corridors that deliver them.
What we see is a western foreign policy that is extremely aggressive with the US as the instigator, a world full of almost daily “False Flags” that are well orchestrated in order to justify action or to point fingers at some innocent country they want to rape….such is the world of today. The US uses its relations with other countries like hot and cold taps….they turn them off and on whenever it suits them and certainly when this spoilt child doesn’t get its way it unleashes it so called “Shock and Awe” policy.
As with all wars the human cost was extremely high. The economic cost amounted to around $1.2 trillion and one could ask for what? Iraq achieved absolutely nothing in their failed attempt to take over more territory and Iran’s natural resources.
What I did find out was the fact that the UN did to some extent support Iran when the Secretary – General made the following statement to the UN Security Council:
“Even if before the outbreak of the conflict there had been some encroachment by Iran on Iraqi territory, such encroachment did not justify Iraq’s aggression against Iran—which was followed by Iraq’s continuous occupation of Iranian territory during the conflict—in violation of the prohibition of the use of force, which is regarded as one of the rules of jus cogens (compelling law or of the highest law).” “On one occasion I had to note with deep regret the experts’ conclusion that “chemical weapons had been used against Iranian civilians in an area adjacent to an urban center lacking any protection against that kind of attack”
I will now continue with exactly what was supplied to Iraq during the war with Iran and by whom and to give some insight and meaning to the term “What goes around comes around.”
Firstly one has to look at the money trail and see which countries were propping up Iraq. The main contributors were: US, UK, France, Germany, Russia, Italy, Japan and in the Middle East were Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE and Jordan. Basically it all amounted to more than $130 billion debt for Iraq….the largest portion of this money came from the Gulf States.
As we have already discussed the Iraq’s also took advantage of the competition between the supply of military equipment from both the French and the Russian and tactfully used this to manipulate supply. Russia provided most of the equipment with France running a close second. The French military equipment was considered to be more high tech. Russia was sort of piggy in the middle during this conflict and they proffered Iran over Iraq and yet needed to maintain ties with both, such is the role that Geo-Politics plays in any conflict.
Part 3 and future articles will cover what was actually exported to Iraq and by whom as well as a detailed manifest of Chemical and Biological Weapons (CBW) that were shipped. It will also explain how they were used not only against Iran but also against their own people, the US and Coalition Forces and attempts to strike Israel.
Peter Eyre -28/1/2013
Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations – Part 1
The Hypocrisy of The New World Order and its Assault on Islamic Nations
Part 1
The leading question in today’s many conflicts is “Who Supplied Chemical and Biological Weapons (CBW) to Iraq and many other countries who could have and did use them against those that supplied them” ?
I am sure you would all agree that those that did (and continue to) supply such WMD’s/CBW’s are blatantly guilty of horrendous war crime that has now resulted in the death of thousands upon thousands ( if not millions) of innocent civilians including our own coalition forces.
One must also add to this the death of millions of people worldwide as a direct result of NATO/Coalition Forces usage of depleted uranium, low yield tactical nuclear weapons (such as the US B61 Bomb) and other current high tech “Dirty Bombs.”
Finally we have the military vaccination programmes that were used prior to troops going into battle………this aspect I will cover later in the series to prove that not only did they know the dangers associated with these vaccinations but still continued to give them to our troops. This has now resulted in either death or acute medical problems for the vets of these conflicts!!
The object of this current series of article is to show how hypocritical NATO, US, UK, France, Germany and many other Coalition Members have been in firstly designing and testing CBW and then selling these deadly agents to the highest bidder!!
In many cases the cabal assisted in funding and building of the laboratories in countries with whom we later went to war i.e. Iraq (in which the US and UK were deeply involved ). When one compares all of this with the vaccination programme highlighted above one can see just how “two faced – unethical – immoral”our respective governments have been.
I will now prove to you who supplied what and when and then show how CBW were actually used by Saddam.
My articles will reveal factual reports from troops on the ground with my final article on this topic clearly showing the connection between the weapons used, the vaccination programme and what in my opinion is the major cause of this so called “Gulf War Syndrome……. others may refer to it as being “Battle Fatigue” and some may say it is “Chronic Fatigue Syndrome” what ever term they use it is certainly a cover-up by the government to avoid massive claims by war vets in later years!!’
So let’s start with the story that first revealed the use of WMD/CBW and how it was all connected with the west’s activity and support of illegal arms dealing.:
In September 1980 Iraq carried out an unprovoked attack on Iran (Iraq-Iran War) and lasted for a period of over 7 years.
This war was supported by the US, UK and at least 10 countries with the former actually providing military hardware such as weapons, nuclear components that would allow Iraq to have the ability to build their own nuclear bomb and also Chemical and Biological technology which clearly gave Iraq WMD’s and CBW weapons.
The west (in particular the UK) actually paid for and built the CBW Laboratories for Saddam and provided Iraq with Cyanide, Mustard Gas and the deadly VX Gas which he used against the Kurds and Iran and later used in the Iraqi SCUD Missiles to fire into Israel and Saudi Arabia during the Gulf War and did in actual fact hit US/UK bases etc!!
In order to fully understand all the ins and outs of the terrible wars/conflicts we must first understand how the west manipulated and encourage these war ………..I am sure after reading my current series on this topic you will see that we in the west must surely hang our heads in shame and offer our sincere apologies to all the countries we have invaded and in particular to those that died in Iran and Kurdistan during those western derived, armed and funded wars between Iraq – Iran and the Genocide of the Kurds when Saddam used Chemical and Biological Weapons compliments of the US, UK and many others..
It is broadly known that the west frequently change sides as and when it suits their economic goals or foreign policy. One also has to understand that the build up to such a conflict starts well before the war begins and can be in the planning stages up to around twenty years or so beforehand. The other issue that frequently stops such action going ahead is the justification or the reasons for going to war, which we have all observed prior to the Gulf Wars and the war in Afghanistan…….this is normally fixed with the creation of a false flag event.
The United States and Britain have become experts at this sort of activity as a direct result of their experience at “Empire Building.” Unfortunately it was Saddam Hussain who decided that he should also improve his status in the region and at the same time hopefully acquire more land that was rich in natural resources. His target became Iran and the war had the full support of the west who played a major role in its creation and its longevity. The west, in particular the US,were well aware of the financial returns in keeping the war effort going. So let’s now look into this unnecessary war, how greed played a major role, the aftermath and the heavy loss of life on both sides. The war in actual fact achieved absolutely nothing. Add to this the fact that with our help he also killed many Kurds with the Chemical and Biological Weapons supplied, paid for and built by mainly the US and UK.
The war began on the 22ndof September 1980 when Iraq invaded Iran and carried out an air and land assault. There had, in the past, been many border disputes with additional concern by the Iraq’s of Shia insurgency. It was Saddam Hussain who hoped to replace Iran as the dominant Gulf State. The attack was a failure in many respects as the forward progress was somewhat limited and was repelled by the Iranians within several months, who had regained most of the lost territory by June of 1982. The war continue on until the UN intervened and then stopped on the 20th of August 1988.
One very important aspect of this war was who controlled the Shatt al-Arab waterway which to the Iranians is known as the Arvand Rud. This vital oil export channel in the far north of the Persian Gulf is so important to both countries.
The objectives of Iraq’s invasion of Iran were:
- The control of the Shatt al-Arad waterway by the Iraqis
- The acquisition of the three islands of Abu Musa and the Greater and Lesser Tunbs of behalf of the UAE
- Annexation of Khuzestan to Iraq
- To prevent the spread of the Islamic Revolution in the region in the region
The war cost many lives on both sides amounting to around half a million military personal and many civilians. The economic impact was also heavy on both sides. The Iranians sustained heavy losses, not as a result of conventional fighting, but as a direct result of the deployment of chemical weapons and mustard gas by the Iraqi’s. This included VX Gas one of the most deadly of all. It was ironic that the UN had stated that such weapons had been used but very carefully did not mention Iraq as the instigators.
The above conflict fitted in well with the New World Orders three main objectives:
- To take control of the world’s natural resources
- To control the markets for those resources and
- To control the sea lanes, transit routes, pipeline routes etc for those resources
The world must understand that the provocation and propaganda currently underway (by the New World Orders Military – NATO and the US AFRICOM) is clearly intended to offend and disrupt the entire Middle East and now Africa.
One can clearly see how Geo Politics plays a major role in all conflicts and how governments become greedy in order to place themselves as major players in a given region. This can involve forced regime changes, disputes over borders, attempts to obtain the resources belonging to another country or by creating false flag incidents to encourage conflict etc.
What this war did reveal was the extensive use of chemical weapons including mustard gas against Iranian troops and civilians. We may also recall that Iraq also used chemical weapons on the Kurds. It was ironic that the UN had stated that such weapons had been used but very carefully did not mention Iraq as the instigators.
In July 1988 Iraqi airplanes dropped chemical cyanide bombs on the Iranian Kurdish village of Zardan (as they had done four months earlier on their own Kurdish village of Halabja). Hundreds were killed at once, and the survivors are still suffering from a variety of physical and mental disorders. It has since been proven that the agent used on the Kurds and later on Iran was the deadly VX Gas.
“Take my word for it Saddam……the US and UK will give you WMD’s & CBW’s”
Prior too and during the Iraq – Iran war many illegal arms shipments were made along with some very high profile visits. That notorious villain Donald Rumsfeld was the US special envoy to the Middle East and met with Saddam in December 1983. As we know he later became the US Defense Secretary during the 2003 Iraqi war when everything suddenly turned 180 degrees and the US wanted Saddam out.
The US and the UK in particular considered Iraq as an ally in stopping the Iranians from spreading their revolution. The US and the UK therefore supported Iraq with technology, intelligence and the sale of illegal arms, WMD´s and Chemical and Biological Warfare (CBW), military equipment and satellite support. It was also another powerful man, by the name of Henry Kissinger, who stated “It’s a pity they both can’t lose.” Iraq, in particular, had a complex clandestine procurement network to obtain munitions and critical materials, which, in some transactions, involved 10-12 countries.
Some rather startling news also emerged prior to this war when it was disclosed that the US Secretary of State, Alexander Haig Jnr wrote a secret memo to President Reagan about the Previous President Jimmy Carter approving Saddam Hussein’s attack on Iran with assistance from Saudi Arabia. British support for this war was also paramount, especially when the British allowed the Iraqi’s to purchase a British company to bypass the export control. This company was TMG engineering, later to be called Matrix Churchill who had operations in both the US and UK. The US Company with the same name was also purchased by the Iraqi’s. The Chairman of the group, which consisted of TDG, TMG, and Matrix Churchill was Safa al Habobi. Another member of the board was Fadel Jawad Khadhum. They were described as follows:
The Iraqi members of the boards of directors of companies in the group were in firm control of the companies’ day-to-day activities and sometimes authoritarian in their actions, one statement said.
The British government decided to allow most of Matrix Churchill’s sales to Iraq. As a result, a scandal erupted after the Persian Gulf War about the role of the British government in arming Iraq. Naturally much more had been going on before this event which never reached the public domain to any degree.
Iraq had a very strong tie with the US, UK and France who were major suppliers of WMD’s/CBW’s and their ingredients.
Singapore also supported Iraq during the Iran – Iraq War in discussions for land mines assembled there, as well as chemical warfare precursors shipped from Singapore, possibly by an Iraqi front company.
Part 2 of this series will continue with who supported Iraq financially followed by other articles on exactly what was sold and how it was sold.
The second Greatest Illusion Ever Performed – The Sandy Hook Massacre
No Boeing Commercial Aircraft Hit Any Of The Towers on 9/11 – No Boeing Commercial Aircraft Hit The Pentagon – No Boeing Commercial Aircraft Nose Dived Into The Field In Shanksville
The First Greatest Illusion Ever Performed – 9/11
When is the world going to wake up to this continuous bombardment of Zionist controlled propaganda and misinformation from all the world’s main media outlets such as the NEWS CORPORATION – BBC – CNN – ABC – CBS – NBC – SKY – REUTERS – ASSOCIATED PRESS – FOX – NEW YORK TIMES – WASHINGTON POST – WALL STREET JOURNAL – TIME MAGAZINE – ITV – CHANNEL $ – CHANNEL 5 – THE TELEGRAPH – THE GUARDIAN (the list is endless).
The Icing on the cake has to be CNN – The True Champions At Staging Illusions
Take a look at the two pictures below the one on the left has been made up with the CNN banner overlaid and I am sure that once you see the CNN logo immediately you are convinced that this picture is factual when in actual fact it is not………on the right is the actual shot allegedly taken by CNN of the 9/11 attack and again you believed it but both are illusions
I again repeat that “No Boeing Commercial Aircraft Hit Any Of The Towers on 9/11 – No Boeing Commercial Aircraft Hit The Pentagon – No Boeing Commercial Aircraft No Dived Into The Field In Shanksville.”
If you the public would take the time to become suspicious of any future major incident and carry out your own analysis from start to finish you will, in the main, prove to yourself that what is portrayed by the Zionist media is in actual fact totally fabricated.
When one has spent time working in association with intelligence gathering or reconnaissance (as I have done in the past) you will quickly pick up the error of their ways. It is essential that when such “False Flags” occur you must take note of every fine detail from the initial media reports to the reports that chop and change throughout the next 24 – 48 hours and over time you will see the massive loopholes and inaccuracies as and when they occur!!!
With all of the above in mind lets again revisit the “Sandy Hook False Flag” (in a very basic way) and prove that what CNN and many other media outlets showed you was bogus………….hopefully you will all agree that this massacre fell well within the same criteria as the Australian Port Arthur Massacre and the Norwegian Massacre as being a total fabrication as to what actually occurred!!
The Second Greatest Illusion Ever Performed – The Sandy Hook Massacre
As they say a picture paints a thousand words and so if you see it you believe it….right?
Here is the actual layout of the Sandy Nook Elementary School as shown on Google Earth below:
It is vital for you all to pay particular attention to the layout of the carkpark and the main entrance to the school which is at the top left corner of the building…….it was this entrance which the CNN helicopter filmed when the police swooped in……I have expanded this car park entrance to the school and rotated it to show it more clearly (as per below) and also so that you can compare the actual footage with the entrance to the school.
The police assault is allegedly have taken place via the pedestrian crossing from the car park and then diagonally to the entrance to the school as shown within the black circle above
Now lets just pan out and look at the surrounding district and in particular one other school called the St Rose of Lima School which is shown WSW of Sandy Hook School both are shown in the google image below surround by the black circle…..it is important that you pay particular attention to the detail of the other school and the actual footage as shown by CNN when the police stormed the building…….here is the area again:
Now lets again zoom in on the location where the police stormed the so called Sandy Hook School…….I have again rotated the map so that when you compare the actual CNN image you will see that the actual police assault on the school as portrayed by CNN was not on Sandy Hook but on the other school called St Rose of Lima School.
Below is an exploded shot of the St Rose of Lima pedestrian crossing which clearly shows that the CNN footage was not shot from a helicopter overhead Sandy Nook as we are led to believe but was taken overhead St Rose Of Lima School…….here is a close up of the crossing and the front of the school:
Now that you have both images clearly in mind now take a look at a couple of still shots taken from the CNN video coverage as taken by their helicopter live during the police storming of the apparent Sandy Hook School:
Police storm the school via the pedestrian crossing from the car park
Note the bollards and the layout of the landscaping and trees that Sandy Hook does not have
Police now move from the crossing to transit diagonally across the front of the building to underneath the sun shield at the entrance to the school – Sandy Hook School does not have this shield
The total facade of the front of the School at shown by CNN does not show any resemblance to the front of Sandy Hook
Now you can compare the two schools together and one can clearly see this was yet again another “False Flag” with only one thing in mind…….to create a situation to justify the disarming of the citizens of the US……….just as they did in Port Arthur Australia!!
It will now be almost impossible to initiate yet another inquiry into this massive illusion or the other two false flags in Australia and Norway but one thing for sure is the fact that so many things simply do not add up and you, the sheeples, have accepted what your respective leaders and governments have told you and what your media has led you to believe……….one day maybe someone will wake up and take these evil satanic New World Order criminals to court.
Peter Eyre -28/1/2013
Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis
Do Australian politicians listen or respond to those that put them in office? – Part 2
How do the political parties and their hierarchy respond when facts are put before them?
Part 2
In my last article I discussed the emails sent to Australian political parties and their responses and I have to say that so far their response has been pretty good with the exception of the Greens who have not passed comments on any of the emails sent to date, some of which I must add border on matters dealing with but not isolated too Australian National Security Massive Fraud & Corrupt within Australia, Paedophilia and Matters of National Importance i.e. Who actually owns Australia and Pull the Strings etc.
I am sure you would all agree that with all of the above issues at stake all the above parties should and must respond accordingly. We must all be mindful of the fact that we put them all in office to serve us under the terms and protocol of being “Civil Servants”, to safeguard our constitution and to represent and respect us in all matters concerning our well being and that of the nation.
It is also fact that the other very powerful body known as the Judiciary and in particular Members of the Bar all swear an Oath of Office under Common Law to respect our rights under that most powerful law (Common Law) which to this day still remains above all laws, including Statute Law.
Technically speaking if Statute Law does not compliment or enhance Common Law then it could be deemed illegal!!!!
It is also fact that every person who may be charged or arrested is entitled to an “Open Court – Fair Trial with a Full Jury in attendance and the Media”
In one of my previous articles I covered the Port Arthur Massacre and the sentencing of Martin Bryant ,who in my opinion was not guilty as charged and details of this cover-up were also forwarded to all of the above three parties……….alas still no reply……I wonder why?
The purpose of this article is on a more positive note to show that although the Prime Minister, Julia Gillard did respond she passed it on to the Royal Commission who in-turn replied (as per below) along with the terms and conditions of the inquiry:
— Forwarded Message —–
From: Royal Commission Secretariat <royalcommissionsecretariat@pmc.gov.au>
To: “petereyreoz@yahoo.com” <petereyreoz@yahoo.com>
Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2012 8:56 AM
Subject: RE: Ministerial Correspondence Referral from PM&C. C12/82429 [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED]
Dear Mr Eyre,
Thank you for your email regarding the Royal Commission into Institutional Childhood Sexual Abuse in Australia. The Prime Minister has referred your email to the Secretariat for response.
The Royal Commission is being established because of the overwhelming intensity of the stories that have come to light. Child sexual abuse is a crime that can damage young lives and haunt adults.
The Government has asked all stakeholders, including organisations that represent survivors of child sexual abuse and people formerly in institutional care, community and legal leaders, law enforcement, governments and religious organisations to help shape the development of the Royal Commission.
All suggestions made by these organisations and concerned members of the public are currently being considered by the Government and will help inform the establishment of the Commission. The Commission is expected to begin its public work in early 2013.
The Royal Commission is an important step in ensuring what happened in the past does not happen again and we thank you for your interest.
Yours sincerely
Royal Commission Secretariat
For the latest information on the Royal Commission, you may wish to visit: childabuseroyalcommission.dpmc.gov.au/home or call 1800 099 340
If you require immediate or crisis support, please call Lifeline on 13 11 14
Announcement of the Royal Commission [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED]
Julia Gillard
Prime Minister of Australia
Nicola Roxon
Attorney-General
Jenny Macklin
Minister for Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs
Good afternoon
We are very pleased to announce that on our advice the Governor-General has now appointed six Commissioners for the Royal Commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse. We have also today released the Terms of Reference that will guide their inquiry.
The Commissioners have been selected because of their broad skills, knowledge and expertise.
o The Royal Commission will be led by Justice Peter McClellan AM, a Supreme Court Judge from New South Wales who brings a wealth of experience as a Judge and as an inquirer. Justice McClellan has been the Chief Judge at Common Law of the Supreme Court of New South Wales since 2005. He has also been Chief Judge of the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales, Chairman of the Sydney Water Inquiry and Assistant Commissioner at the Independent Commission Against Corruption.
o Bob Atkinson, the former Queensland Police Commissioner, brings over 40 years of policing experience to the Royal Commission, including 12 years as Police Commissioner.
o Justice Jennifer Coate has served for twenty years as a magistrate and county court judge in Victoria, including five years as President of the Children’s Court and five years as the Victorian Coroner. Justice Coate has also now been appointed to the Family Court of Australia.
o Robert Fitzgerald has served as a Commissioner in the Productivity Commission since 2004. He has experience in commerce, law, public policy and community services, including as Community and Disability Services Commissioner and Deputy Ombudsman in New South Wales.
o Professor Helen Milroy is a Director of the Centre for Aboriginal Medical and Dental Health at the University of Western Australia and a Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist with the Specialist Aboriginal Mental Health Service. She brings extensive experience in child and adolescent mental health and Aboriginal health and mental health.
o Former Senator for Western Australia Andrew Murray brings a tremendous background as a legislator and as a campaigner for those who have spent time in institutional care as children.
We have asked the Commissioners to submit an initial report by June 2014, so that we can start acting on early recommendations as quickly as possible. We have asked the Commissioners to aim to finish their inquiry by the end of 2015, but this date will be subject to advice from the Commissioners in their interim report.
The Commissioners will now work on setting up processes for hearing and collecting evidence, including arrangements for people who have special needs. They will also consider what services are needed to support witnesses to the Commission. And in doing so, they will be informed by the experiences of survivors.
An investigative unit within the Royal Commission will ensure the timely referral and criminal investigation of allegations of child sexual abuse that come before the Commission, should victims seek such action.
We received input from more than 800 individuals and organisations on the terms of reference, which has been invaluable in helping shape the scope of the Royal Commission and in selecting Commissioners.
We also worked closely with the state and territory governments in developing the Terms of Reference, and we are pleased that they all support this inquiry.
The Government is committed to do everything we can to make sure that we fix the system for the future. We also want to help survivors of past abuse receive support and justice.
You will find attached an explanation of the Terms of Reference, a general fact sheet on royal commissions and their powers, and a list of support services.
The full Terms of Reference are contained in Letters Patent, which are the formal instructions from the Governor-General to the Commissioners.
For more information, including a copy of the full Letters Patent go to www.childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au. Or you can call 1800 099 340.
Warm regards
Julia Gillard Nicola Roxon Jenny Macklin
Prime Minister of Australia Attorney-General Minister for Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs
End of email
I thought that it would be a much better idea to publish the term of reference for the Royal Commission so that all those who have fallen victim to paedophilia or those that may have vital evidence can follow the guidelines and report accordingly……here are the attachments they sent me:
Fact sheet
Powers of a Royal Commission
Commonwealth Royal Commissions are public inquiries that are established under Royal Commissions Act1902 (Cth)by appointing Commissioners to conduct an inquiry in accordance with Terms of Reference approved by the Governor-General.In this case the Royal Commission is also expected to be established under relevant State legislation in several jurisdictions. This will allow the Royal Commissioners to act in multiple capacities, performing functions under Commonwealth and State laws.
Hearings
A Royal Commission can take evidence in a number of ways for different purposes, including conducting formal hearings. Hearings may either be open or closed, or restricted to a certain class of persons. Evidence given in a closed hearing will not be made publically available and will be used in a way that protects an individual’s identity.
Royal Commission can refer information about suspected or alleged crimes to relevant law enforcement authorities or share relevant information with other ongoing inquiries.
Information about hearings and how individuals can participate in the Royal Commission will be made available on its websitewww.childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au.
Coercive powers
The Royal Commission has broad powers to gather information and assist with its investigations and inquiries. These are sometimes called coercive powers because they can compel an individual to participate in the inquiry.
The Royal Commission has the power to:
- summons witnesses to appear before it and require them to answer questions under oath or affirmation, and
- summons witnesses to produce a document or other material piece of evidence.
If summoned, there are very few grounds on which a person can refuse to give evidence to a Royal Commission.
Failure to comply with a summons issued by a Royal Commission may result in an individual receiving a fine or in some circumstances imprisonment.
In some circumstances a search warrant and/or arrest warrant might be issued if a person fails to comply with a summons.
It is an offence to intentionally provide false or misleading evidence to a Royal Commission or by intentionally insulting or disturbing it.
—————————-
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse
Explaining theLetters Patent and Terms of Reference
This document explains the Letters Patentand Terms of Reference for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
The ‘Letters Patent’ is the legal document from the Governor-General that gives instructions to the Commissioners about the scope of the inquiry and what the Commissioners should investigate and make recommendations on. The Letters Patent also formally appoint the Commissioners.
The full Letters Patent document is available at www.childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au.
This explanation document should not be taken to in any way replace the Letters Patent document, or to have any legal standing.
Why the Royal Commission has been set up
Child sexual abuse is a crime, and a terrible breach of the right of every child to grow up safe and happy.
Child sexual abuse is oftenassociated with other forms of abuseincluding physical abuse, exploitation, and neglect.
All have long-term effects on survivors and their families. There are also costs to the economy and society as a whole.
Australia has committed at an international level to do everything it can to protect children from all forms of abuse. This includes taking action to help prevent child abuse from happening and, when child abuse does happen, to help ensure that cases are identified, reported, investigated, and followed up.
It is recognised that public, non-government and private organisations provide important services and support to help children and their families.
These include childcare, cultural, educational, religious, sporting and other organisations, which play an important role in helping children to grow up safe and happy.
But it is important that laws, rules and practices are in place toensure organisations protect children against the risk of sexual abuseand that claims of abuse and the impacts of abuse are appropriately responded to.
It is important that this inquiry explore claims of systemic failures by institutions to protect children from sexual abuse and related matters.
The inquiry should identify what can be done in the future to better prevent and respond to child sexual abuse, including holding perpetrators to account and providing justice to victims.
People who have been affected by child sexual abuse will be able to share their experiences with the inquiry if they want to, to assist with healing and to inform the Commissioners’ recommendations.
The Australian and State and Territory Governments have committed at the most recent Council of Australian Governments meeting to support this inquiry, and giving it their full cooperation.
What the Royal Commissionwill investigate
The Commissioners will examine past and current child sexual abuse in organisations and may make findings and recommendations on:
- how organisations with a responsibility for childrenhave managed and responded to claims of sexual abuse and other forms of abuse and neglectassociated with child sexual abuse
- whether organisations have done enough to respond to child sexual abuse when it has happened
- what organisations can do to better protect children under their care
- what organisations should do to identify child sexual abuse and encourage people to report it
- how organisations should respond when they find out information that suggests that sexual abuse of children under their responsibility is happening, or has happened in the past
- what the barriers and failures have been to reporting, investigating and dealing with cases of child sexual abuse in organisations, and how these barriers can be removed in the future
- what organisationsshould do to support survivors where child sexual abuse does occur
- what organisations should do to ensure victims receive justice, including through redress by organisations, and investigation and prosecution of perpetrators.
The Commissioners can make any recommendations that they think will help improve the way things are done in the future or help existing survivors.
This includeslooking at laws, as well as the policies, rules and structure of organisations.
What the Royal Commissionwill cover
The Royal Commission is focused on child sexual abuse within organisations and institutions.
The Commission will also look at matters related to child sexual abuse. This means any unlawful or improper treatment of children that is connected or associated with child sexual abuse generally, or in a particular case.
This recognises that other forms of abuse including physical abuse and neglect often happen with sexual abuse, and if connected they can be examined by the Commission.
The Commissioners can look at any public or private organisation that is, or was in the past, involved with children, including non-government organisations and government agencies (including police and justice), schools, sporting clubs, orphanages, foster care, and religious organisations.
This includes where they consider an organisationcaring for a child is responsible for the abuse or for not responding appropriately, regardless of where or when the abuse took place.
The Commission will not specifically examine child sexual abuse outside organisations, such as in the family. However, any recommendations made by the Commissioners are likely to improve the response to child sexual abuse wherever it happens.
How the Commissioners will conduct their inquiry
To carry out the inquiry, the Commissioners will:
- considerthe experiencesof people affected by child sexual abuse in organisations
- look at archives, records and documentsand consider submissions andstatements from public, non-government and private organisations
- look at the laws, as well as policies and practices of institutions, organisations and governments to prevent and respond to child sexual abuse
- takeinto account the findings, recommendations, and information from past and existing inquiries, where appropriate. This can include drawing on the stories of witnesses from other inquiries (with their consent).
The Commissioners will make sure that people telling their stories have appropriate supportin dealing with any trauma that might come up from discussing their abuse.
The Commissioners will also make sure that people with special needs can participate fully in the inquiry. For example, this could include interpreters for people who speak a language other than English, assistance for people with disabilities, and help preparing submissions for people who need assistance with reading and writing.
The Commission will make sure thatorganisations are given enough time to search and respond to requests for documents and records.
Handling of individual cases
The Royal Commission cannot prosecute individuals.
The Commission can refer individual cases to relevant law enforcement bodies, such as police, for investigation and, where appropriate, prosecution in a timely fashion.
The Commissioners will consider appropriate mechanisms for how the Commission might inquire into and investigate particular cases, including past cases, as appropriate.
Mechanisms might include examining archives and records and working with relevant law enforcement bodies such as police.
This includes establishing investigative units to support their inquiry.
In handling evidence about specific cases, the Commissioners will take care not to do anything that could disrupt a current or future criminal prosecution or compensation case.
Timing and reporting
The Commissioners will begin their inquiry as soon as possible.
The Commission will prepare an interim report by 30 June 2014 so thatgovernments and organisations can start taking action on the Commission’s early findings and recommendations.
In this interim report, the Commissioners will identify when their final report will be completed. The Terms of Reference will set an end date for the Royal Commission of 2015, but this date will be subject to the advice of the Commissioners in their interim report.
The Prime Minister can extend the final reporting date which has happened in previous Commissions.
The Commissioners will also be able to provide other interim reports throughout the life of the Royal Commission as appropriate.
—————————————
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse
The Royal Commission will soon start its work.If you need support or advice, a list of services you can contact is below.
Support services
National help lines
1800 RESPECT (24-hour sexual assault and domestic violence support) 1800 737 732
Mensline (relationship support for men) 1300 789 978
Lifeline (24-hour crisis support and suicide prevention) 13 11 14
Suicide Call Back Service (24-hour crisis support and suicide prevention) 1300 659 467
beyondblue (mental health support) 1300 22 4636
SANE Australia Helpline (mental health support) 1800 187 263
Specialist national counselling services
Adults Surviving Child Abuse (counselling and support for survivors) 1300 657 380
Find and Connect (Forgotten Australians and Former Child Migrants) 1800 161 109
Bravehearts (counselling for survivors and child protection advocacy) 1800 272 831
Care Leavers Australia Network (support and advocacy for Forgotten Australians) 1800 008 774
State and Territory sexual assault services
NSW Rape Crisis Centre 1800 424 017
Victoria Sexual Assault Crisis Line 1800 806 292
South Australia Yarrow Place 1800 817 421
Western Australia Sexual Assault Resource Centre 1800 199 888
Northern Territory Crisis Line 1800 019 116
Brisbane Rape and Incest Survivors Support Centre 1800 010 120
Canberra Rape Crisis Centre (02) 6247 2525
Tasmania Laurel House (03) 6334 2740
Reporting child sexual abuse to authorities
Child abuse is a crime. If you have been a victim of abuse, or are concerned about a child being abused, this should be reported to police. The Royal Commission cannot prosecute individuals.
Getting involved in the Royal Commission
People wanting to provide evidence or find out more information about the Royal Commission can provide their contact details on 1800 099 340. Staff from the Royal Commission will make contact once the Commissioners begin their work.
For more information
For more information on the Royal Commissiongo to www.childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au.
————————————
In closing I would urge anyone who has had their lives changed forever by these mongrels to come forward and take this last opportunity to blow the lid off Paedophilia in Australia. Likewise anyone with credible evidence or information should also do the right think and make the appropriate report.
I know that for many of the victims this is opening up a past they would rather forget but I also know that in doing so will enhance their chances of recovery and at the same time encourage many other victims to come forward and bring those responsible to justice.
I would be more than happy to receive such evidence/information. should you feel so inclined, and can assure you that it will get to those at the top and to the members of the Royal Commission.
You can contact me initially via the comment section and then if required we can exchange communications directly.
Peter Eyre -28/1/2013
Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis
The World Economic Forum – A New World Order Big Boys Club
Many ex and current leaders refer to it but few want to talk about it!!
The World Economic Forum – A New World Order Boys Club
Just like all the other secretive meetings this one bears an uncanny resemblance to those held by Bilderberg and although this meeting is very public in some aspects much of what is going on in Davos this week is being held behind closed doors.
I found the following Guardian article of interest:
Aditya Chakrabortty – Guardian Monday 21 January 2012
The plot runs thus: a bunch of rich white men gather in an Alpine hamlet.
The real action is slowly revealed. The businessmen summon prime ministers and presidents to secret meetings in tiny rooms, where they order the lives of the billions consigned to the plains below – and so make themselves even richer.
More than 2,500 business executives and bankers will converge on the highest town in Europe for the annual World Economic Forum. For the next five days, Davos will, it’s safe to say, boast more millionaires per square foot than anywhere else on the planet. A guest list leaked on to the web this weekend included 680 company chief executives, and a plethora of bankers: seven from Citigroup alone, six each from Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Deutsche Bank. David Cameron is on the list, along with 36 other sitting prime ministers. Naturally, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown are both popping in (the WEF organisers subsequently sent me an updated list, which I am hoping the Guardian will publish online). To record the event, reporters will be allowed partial access and ski-jacketed TV presenters are on hand to conduct interviews.
And this is what makes Davos so fascinating: it is the most perfect case study of how the practitioners of free-market, globalised capitalism give the public one explanation for what they are doing and why, while privately pursuing the complete opposite. On the one hand there is an event attended by Sharon Stone, Bono and a slew of tame academics (14 Nobel laureates this week alone), the message being “we’re open to anyone”. On the other hand, there are those secret meetings, off limits to anyone not in the £100k club. It is both a reputation-laundry service, and the most shadowy backroom-dealing house.
End of Guardian extract.
Two of the most evil mongrels that ever existed – When you earn big bucks and eat like a pig you cannot stay awake!!
David Yanofisky gave a wonderful introduction to this year’s meeting in his article published in Quartz – Sunday January 29th 2013:
CEOs, and big thinkers expected to attend, many of whom pay steep membership fees for the privilege. The “List of Participants” from January 7 was shared with us by a WEF Global Leader who asked to remain anonymous because delegates are instructed not to release the names of fellow attendees.
You can explore who’s on the list of 2,630 participants by sorting and searching the interactive graphic above, or by viewing this spreadsheet we put together.
Of those expected, 680 participants have “chief executive” in their titles. Diageo CEO Paul S. Walsh and Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer can expect to run into NYSE Euronext CEO Duncan Niederauer, and Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat.
Not all of the executives are at the helm of global multinationals. Perry Chen, the CEO and co-founder of the crowd funding website Kickstarter, Drew Houston of file backup and sharing service Dropbox, and Daniel Ek of on-demand music service Spotify, are expected to attend.
From Wall Street, there are seven Citigroup employees participating. JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, and Deutsche Bank are each sending six and UBS, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America and HSBC will each have a delegation of five.
The preliminary Davos Program includes sessions titled “Global Leadership in Transition” (with simultaneous translation in English, Chinese, and Japanese), “De-risking Africa,” and “Connecting Latin America.” Nonetheless, only 4.9% of the participants are coming from China and Japan, 4.8% from Africa and only 3.1% from South America. Two-thirds of the participants come from North America or Europe. Less than 17% of the world’s population lives in those two regions..
Thirty-seven sitting prime ministers and presidents are expected this year, including Shimon Peres of Israel, Mario Monti of Italy, and Dmitry Medvedev of Russia.
From the US, at least three senators, five members of the House of Representatives, and the governors of Maryland, Delaware, and Colorado are expected to attend. The bureaucrats at the top of the Federal Trade Commission, Federal Communications Commission and the Food and Drug Administration are also listed. Most are participating as panelists or speakers during at least one session during the event, according to a copy of the schedule.
These two scumbags should be called to give evidence at the UK Child Sex Abuse inquiry!!
Out of office politicians will also be in attendance. Former US President Bill Clinton and Former UK Prime Ministers Gordon Brown and Tony Blair are listed as participants this year. All three are currently serving as UN representatives. Clinton is the UN Special Envoy to Haiti, Brown the Special Envoy for Global Education and Blair is the UN Middle East Quartet Representative. Eighty-nine-year-old Henry Kissenger, US Secretary of State under Presidents Nixon and Ford, is listed as well.
Listen up folks “Monica Lewinsky may have got to me” – “But how come you didn’t manage to kill the old mare Hilary in that air crash in Iran last December?”
Fifteen more administrators of United Nations programs are listed as participants including Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the executive directors of UNICEF, UNESCO, and the World Food Program.
Another mongrel and major player in the NWO
In all there are more than 300 participants expected to attend who hold positions in governments around the world.
There are at least 14 Nobel Prize winners scheduled to attend and participate in sessions. An “Interactive Dinner Session” titled “The State of the World with Nobel Laureates” has 11 participating laureates on the agenda. The rest of academia is represented by more than 100 professors, with economists Robert Shiller, Ken Rogoff, and Joseph Stiglitz included.
The list that David refers is shown at the bottom of this article as I believe it is so important for everyone to understand not only the fact that this is yet another Bilderberg – New World Order(NWO) get together but also to put names to some of those that form part of NWO.
I was also sent this article:
James Gibney may have lost his job now – but this is a great article
Now deleted from the Bloomberg site
Davos’s Dubious Strategic Partners
By James Gibney Jan 23, 2013 1:27 PM GMT+0000
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-01-23/davos-s-dubious-strategic-partners.html
http://www.911forum.org.uk/board/viewtopic.php?p=163537#163537
The aspirational hypocrisy of the World Economic Forum is enshrined in its motto: “Committed to Improving the State of the World.” Unlike other storied global conspiracies — the Trilateral Commission, for example, or the Bilderberg Group and the Bohemian Club — whose members are presumed to be in it just for the filthy lucre and power-mongering, the WEF makes a big deal of its embrace of rainbow-hued do-gooders. The Forum is forever trumpeting its commitment to transparency and inclusiveness along with a burgeoning list of initiatives to advance the same.
But let’s follow the money — where it comes from and where it goes, starting with the 100-plus strategic partners who, as the forum puts it, “comprise some of the world’s leading corporate citizens and provide essential leadership in support of the Forum’s mission.” In 2012, they contributed slightly more than half the WEF’s revenues (some 178 million Swiss francs, or about $192 million).
Consider one such leading corporate citizen: Axel Weber, co-chairman of this year’s Davos meetings and chairman of UBS, Switzerland’s largest bank. Last year, his company was fined $1.5 billion for its schemes to rig global interest rates. The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission cited more than 2,000 instances of illegal acts involving dozens of UBS employees. And that scandal followed a $780 million U.S. settlement in 2009 over charges that the bank had helped U.S. clients avoid taxes. WEF founder Klaus Schwab’s choice of Mr. Weber as co-chairman perhaps speaks volumes about his own values.
Other strategic partners include Bank of America Corp., which just agreed to pay Fannie Mae $10 billion to settle allegations that it had improperly handled mortgages; Barclays Plc, which also paid nearly a half-billion dollars in a settlement over manipulating interest rates and faces record fines for trying to fiddle energy markets; Citigroup Inc., which last year settled a lawsuit over sub-prime mortgages for $590 million; Credit Suisse, out more than a half-billion dollars for money laundering. I’ll stop at the C’s, leaving out Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, Standard Chartered, and other financial strategic partners that are either under investigation or have collectively paid billions in fines for a variety of bad behaviors. I also won’t go into the various settlements over allegations of bribery and bid-rigging by some of WEF’s non-financial strategic partners, such as ABB and Accenture.
These companies may have skipped all the Davos sessions on transparency, ethics and holding stakeholders in high regard, but they have done wonders for the Forum’s bottom line. From 2002 to 2012, partnership revenue more than quadrupled as overall revenue more than doubled. The Forum’s headcount, meanwhile, has gone from 139 full-time staff members to 371.
Many of these people do good work, putting out interesting reports and holding one heck of a global salon. But the interests they represent are corporate — no more, no less. “Improving the state of the world,” added to the Forum’s logo well into its third decade, comes behind networking and dealmaking.
A recent quote from Sir Martin Sorrell, chairman of WPP — another Forum strategic partner — is instructive. Asked about the right model for corporate taxation, he magnanimously told the BBC: “The right model is you make a contribution. All contributions you make to your stakeholders are a question of judgment. There are the rules,” he said. “If then companies choose… in terms of building their long-term brands to make a contribution to all the stakeholders, all credit to them.” Payment of taxes, in other words, is at the discretion of global corporations.
That’s mighty generous of you, Sir Martin. As Oliver Twist once said, “Please, sir, I want some more.”
I have a modest proposal for the Forum’s strategic partners: If you want to improve the state of the world, start by obeying laws and paying your taxes. Until then, spare us the high-minded, multi-stakeholder palaver.
End of article
So there you have it folks yet another, behind closed door get together of those that wish to control us, or as is the case with UN Agenda 21, “Also to eliminate many of us.”
Peter Eyre – 25/1/2013
Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis
The confidential list of everyone attending Davos 2013
World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2013, List of Participants as of 7 January 2013 : Participants | ||||
. | Read more about this List at | http://qz.com/45509 | ||
. | Name | Title | Organization | |
. | A. Michael Spence | William R. Berkley Professor in Economics and Business | NYU Stern School of Business | |
. | Aart J. de Geus | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Synopsys Inc. | |
. | Abdel Waheb Maatar | Chief of Government of Morocco | Government | |
. | Abdel Waheb Maatar | Minister of Training and Employment of Tunisia | Government | |
. | Abdul Samad Minty | Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative of South Africa | Permanent Mission of South Africa | |
. | Abdulaziz A. Al Sugair | Chairman | Saudi Telecom Group | |
. | Abdulaziz Al Saghyir | Chairman | Etihad Etisalat | |
. | Abdulkareem Asaad Abu Alnasr | Chief Executive Officer | The National Commercial Bank (Alahli) | |
. | Abdulla Bin Ali Al Thani | President, Hamad bin Khalifa University; Vice-President, Education | Qatar Foundation | |
. | Abdulla Saif Al Nuaimi | Vice-Chairman | Abu Dhabi National Energy Company PJSC (TAQA) | |
. | Abdullah M. Saleh | Governor | Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) | |
. | Abdullah Saleh Kamel | Executive President and Chief Executive Officer | Dallah Al Baraka Holding Co. | |
. | Abdulrahman F. Al Wuhaib | Senior Vice-President, Downstream | Saudi Aramco | |
. | Abha Joshi-Ghani | Director, Thematic Knowledge and Learning | The World Bank | |
. | Achim Steiner | Executive Director, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Nairobi | Government | |
. | Aclan Acar | Chairman of the Board of Directors | Dogus Otomotiv AS | |
. | Adam Anderson | Associate Professor of Psychology | Affect and Cognition Laboratory (ACLAB), University of Toronto | |
. | Adam Demark | Partner and Senior Analyst | Mason Capital Management LLC | |
. | Adam S. Posen | President | Peterson Institute for International Economics | |
. | Adam Werbach | Co-Founder | yerdle | |
. | Adar C. Poonawalla | Owner and Chief Executive Officer | Serum Institute of India Ltd | |
. | Adi B. Godrej | Chairman, The Godrej Group | Godrej Industries Ltd | |
. | Adi Ignatius | Editor-in-Chief | Harvard Business Review Group | |
. | Aditya Mittal | Chief Financial Officer | ArcelorMittal | |
. | Adrian Gore | Chief Executive Officer | Discovery Holdings Ltd | |
. | Adrian Monck | Managing Director, Head of Communications and Media, World Economic Forum | Government | |
. | Adrian Turner | President and Chief Executive Officer | Mocana Corporation | |
. | Agah Ugur | Chief Executive Officer | Borusan Holding AS | |
. | Agust’n Coppel Luken | Chief Executive Officer | Coppel SA de CV | |
. | Agustin Carstens | Governor of the Central Bank of Mexico | Government | |
. | Agustin E. Edwards | President of the Board | Empresa Periodistica El Mercurio SAP | |
. | Ahmad Abdulkarim Julfar | Group Chief Executive Officer | Emirates Telecommunications Corporation (Etisalat) | |
. | Ahmad Radhi Nungsari | Executive Director | Khazanah Nasional Berhad | |
. | Ahmed Hafez | Adviser | National Bank of Kuwait | |
. | Ahmed Heikal | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Citadel Capital SAE | |
. | Ahmet C. Bozer | President, Eurasia and Africa Group | The Coca-Cola Company | |
. | Ahmet Davutoglu | Minister of Foreign Affairs of Turkey | Government | |
. | Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede | Managing Director | Access Bank Plc | |
. | Ajay G. Piramal | Chairman | Piramal Healthcare Limited (PHL) | |
. | Ajay Kalsi | Managing Director | Indus Gas Ltd | |
. | Ajay Khanna | President | Jubilant Bhartia Group | |
. | Ajit Gulabchand | Chairman and Managing Director | Hindustan Construction Company Ltd | |
. | Akihiko Tanaka | President, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Japan | Government | |
. | Akinwumi Ayodeji Adesina | Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development of Nigeria | Government | |
. | Akira Amari | Minister of Economic and Fiscal Policy; Minister of Economic Revitalization of Japan | Government | |
. | Akira Kiyota | Honorary Chairman | Daiwa Securities Group | |
. | Alain Berset | Federal Councillor of Home Affairs of the Swiss Confederation | Government | |
. | Alain Dehaze | Country Head; Member of the Group Executive Committee | Adecco Groupe France | |
. | Alain Jeannet | Editor-in-Chief | L’Hebdo | |
. | Alain Pons | Chief Executive Officer | Deloitte | |
. | Alan Buckle | Deputy Chairman | KPMG International | |
. | Alan C. Rusbridger | Editor-in-Chief | The Guardian | |
. | Alan Clark | Chief Operating Officer | SABMiller Plc | |
. | Alan Gershenhorn | Chief Sales, Marketing and Strategy Officer | UPS | |
. | Alan Howard | Founder | Brevan Howard Investment Products Ltd | |
. | Alan Murray | President | Pew Research Center | |
. | Alan Schwartz | Executive Chairman | Guggenheim Partners LLC | |
. | Alastair Hughes | Chief Executive Officer, Asia-Pacific | Jones Lang LaSalle | |
. | Alastair Lukies | Chief Executive Officer | Monitise Plc | |
. | Albert-Laszlo Barabasi | Director | Center for Complex Network Research (CCNR) | |
. | Alberto Weisser | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Bunge Limited | |
. | Alec Hogg | Founder and Editor-in-Chief | Moneyweb Holdings | |
. | Aleh Tsyvinski | Professor of Economics | Yale University | |
. | Alejandro Baillres | Chief Executive Officer | Grupo Nacional Provincial SAB | |
. | Alejandro Ram’rez | Chief Executive Officer | Cinepolis | |
. | Alejandro Valenzuela | Chief Executive Officer | Grupo Financiero Banorte SA de CV | |
. | Alessandra Galloni | Bureau Chief, Southern Europe | The Wall Street Journal | |
. | Alessandro Castellano | Chief Executive Officer | Sace SpA | |
. | Alex Laskey | President and Founder | OPOWER | |
. | Alex Pentland | Toshiba Professor of Media, Arts and Sciences | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) | |
. | Alex Smith | Financial Industry Editor | Thomson Reuters | |
. | Alex Wilmot-Sitwell | President, Europe and Emerging Markets (ex-Asia) | Bank of America Merrill Lynch | |
. | Alexander Bazarov | Vice-President | Sberbank | |
. | Alexander Ljung | Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer | SoundCloud Ltd | |
. | Alexander M. Macintyre | Director, News | Associated Press Television News | |
. | Alexander Semenyaka | Chief Executive Officer | The Agency for Housing Mortgage Lending | |
. | Alexander Stubb | Minister for European Affairs and Foreign Trade of Finland | Government | |
. | Alexander V. Dyukov | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | JSC Gazprom Neft | |
. | Alexandra Fšderl-Schmid | Editor-in-Chief | Der Standard | |
. | Alexandra Louven | Economic Editor | Handelsblatt | |
. | Alexandre Tombini | Governor of the Central Bank of Brazil | Government | |
. | Alexey Kudrin | Professor; Dean, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Saint Petersburg State University, Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Alexey Pertin | Chief Executive Officer | PJSC Smart-Holding | |
. | Alfred R. Berkeley | Vice-Chairman | Gentag Inc. | |
. | Alfredo Capote | Managing Director, Head of Investment Banking, Mexico | Citi | |
. | Ali Abbasov | Minister of Communication and Information Technologies of Azerbaijan | Government | |
. | Ali Bongo Ondimba | President of Gabon | Government | |
. | Ali HamadŽ | Journalist and Editorialist | An-Nahar | |
. | Ali Kibar | Chief Executive Officer and Executive Vice-Chairman | Kibar Holding AS | |
. | Ali Velshi | Anchor and Chief Business Correspondent | CNN | |
. | Ali Zeidan | Prime Minister of Libya | Government | |
. | Aliko Dangote | President and Chief Executive Officer | Dangote Group | |
. | Alisher Burkhanovich Usmanov | Founder and Major Shareholder | USM Holdings Limited | |
. | Alison Martin | Member of the Group Management Board and Head, Life and Health | Swiss Reinsurance Company | |
. | Alison Redford | Premier of Alberta, Canada | Government | |
. | Alison Smale | Executive Editor | International Herald Tribune | |
. | Alistair Mackintosh | Partner, Chief Investment Officer | Actis LLP | |
. | Allen Bruford | Deputy Director, Compliance and Facilitation Directorate | World Customs Organization (WCO) | |
. | Almir Barbassa | Chief Financial Officer and Chief Investor Relations Officer | Petroleo Brasileiro SA – PETROBRAS | |
. | Alois Zwinggi | Managing Director, Resources and Processes, World Economic Forum | Government | |
. | Alok Kshirsagar | Director | McKinsey & Company | |
. | Aloke Lohia | Group Chief Executive Officer | Indorama Ventures Public Company Limited | |
. | Alonso Quintana | Chief Executive Officer | ICA | |
. | Alpha CondŽ | President of Guinea | Government | |
. | Alpo Rusi | Ambassador of Finland | Embassy of Finland | |
. | Amarit Charoenphan | Deputy Managing Director | HUBBA Coworking Spaces | |
. | Amir Elstein | Chairman | Israel Corp. Ltd | |
. | Amish Mehta | Partner | Vector Capital | |
. | Amishi Jha | Associate Professor, Director of Contemplative Neuroscience, Mindfulness Research and Practice Initiative | University of Miami | |
. | Amit Garg | Founder | Start-up | |
. | Amit Kalyani | Executive Director | Bharat Forge Ltd | |
. | Amjad Bseisu | Chief Executive Officer | EnQuest Plc | |
. | Amr A. Al Dabbagh | Chairman | Al Dabbagh Group Holding Co. Ltd | |
. | Amr Khaled | Chairman of the Board of Trustees | Right Start Foundation International | |
. | Amr Moussa | Secretary-General of the League of Arab States (2001-2011) | ||
. | Amy Rosen | President and Chief Executive Officer | Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE) | |
. | Ana Patricia Bot’n | Member of the Board | Banco Santander | |
. | Anabel Gonz‡lez | Minister of Foreign Trade of Costa Rica | Government | |
. | Anand Desai | Senior Managing Director | Eton Park Capital Management LP | |
. | Anand G. Mahindra | Chairman and Managing Director | Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd | |
. | Anand Kanwar Bir Singh | Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer | Asian Paints Limited | |
. | Anand Sankaran | Senior Vice-President; Head, Wipro Infotech; Global Head, Infrastructure Services | Wipro Limited | |
. | Anand Sharma | Minister of Commerce and Industry and Textiles of India | Government | |
. | Anant Agarwal | President | edX | |
. | Anant Bajaj | Joint Managing Director | Bajaj Electricals Limited | |
. | Anant Gupta | President and Chief Operating Officer | HCL Technologies Ltd | |
. | Anant Singh | Film Producer and Distributor | Videovision Entertainment | |
. | Anat Wiess | Vice-President and Spokesperson | Globes Group | |
. | Anatoly B. Chubais | Chief Executive Officer | OJSC RUSNANO | |
. | Anatoly Karachinsky | President and Chief Executive Officer | IBS Group | |
. | Anders Borg | Minister of Finance of Sweden | Government | |
. | Anders NyrŽn | Chairman | Sandvik AB | |
. | Andre Geim | Professor and Director | Manchester Centre for Mesoscience and Nanotechnology, University of Manchester | |
. | Andrea Enria | Chairman, European Banking Authority, United Kingdom | Government | |
. | Andrea Illy | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | illycaff SpA | |
. | Andrea Orcel | Chief Executive Officer, Investment Bank | UBS AG | |
. | Andreas Brodtmann | Managing Partner | Joh. Berenberg, Gossler & Co. KG | |
. | Andreas Dietzel | Regional Managing Partner, Germany | Clifford Chance LLP | |
. | Andreas Renschler | Member of the Board of Management, Daimler and Chief Executive Officer, Daimler Trucks and Daimler Buses | Daimler AG | |
. | Andrew Hamilton | Vice-Chancellor | University of Oxford | |
. | Andrew Komaroff | Chief Operating Officer | Neuberger Berman Group LLC | |
. | Andrew L. Cohen | Chief Executive Officer | JPMorgan Private Bank | |
. | Andrew Lee | Vice-President, Emerging Businesses | Aetna Inc. | |
. | Andrew Likierman | Dean | London Business School | |
. | Andrew N. Liveris | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | The Dow Chemical Company | |
. | Andrew R. Sorkin | Columnist | The New York Times | |
. | Andrew Robertson | President and Chief Executive Officer | BBDO Worldwide | |
. | Andrew S. Weinberg | Chairman, Strategy | Brightstar Corp. | |
. | Andrew Scott | Professor of Economics | London Business School | |
. | Andrew Steer | President and Chief Executive Officer | World Resources Institute | |
. | Andrew Thompson | Chief Executive Officer | Proteus Digital Health Inc. | |
. | Andrew Wales | Senior Vice-President, Sustainable Development | SABMiller Plc | |
. | Andrey Belousov | Minister of Economic Development of the Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Andrey L. Kostin | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | JSC VTB Bank | |
. | Andrey R. Kuzyaev | President | Lukoil Overseas Holding Ltd | |
. | Andries Jacobus Wilkens | Executive Director, Growth and Strategic Development | African Rainbow Minerals Ltd (ARM) | |
. | AndrŽ Esteves | Chief Executive Officer | Banco BTG Pactual SA | |
. | AndrŽ Kudelski | Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer | Kudelski Group | |
. | AndrŽ S. Hoffmann | Chairman | Massellaz SA | |
. | Andrzej Klesyk | Chief Executive Officer | PZU SA | |
. | Andy Serwer | Managing Editor | Fortune Magazine | |
. | Aneel Bhusri | Chief Executive Officer | Workday Inc. | |
. | Angel Gurr’a | Secretary-General, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Paris | Government | |
. | Angela Merkel | Federal Chancellor of Germany | Government | |
. | Angela Strank | Vice-President and Head, Group Chief Executive Office | BP Plc | |
. | Anil Aggarwal | Founder and Chairman | Wickwood Development Limited | |
. | Anil Gupta | Michael Dingman Chair in Global Strategy and Entrepreneurship | University of Maryland | |
. | Anindya Novyan Bakrie | Chairman | PT Bakrie Global Ventura | |
. | Ann Haugh | Group Chief-of-Staff | Zurich Insurance Group | |
. | Ann Lamont | Managing Partner | Oak Investment Partners | |
. | Ann Lewnes | Chief Marketing Officer | Adobe Systems Inc. | |
. | Anna Meloto-Wilk | President | Human Nature | |
. | Anne Hastings | Chief Executive Officer | Fonkoze Financial Services | |
. | Anne Lim O’Brien | Vice-Chairman | Heidrick & Struggles | |
. | Anne Louise HŸbert | Chief Executive Officer | Aid in Action | |
. | Anne M. Finucane | Global Strategy and Marketing Officer | Bank of America | |
. | Anne Seith | Editor | Der Spiegel | |
. | Annika Falkengren | President and Chief Executive Officer | Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken (SEB) | |
. | Anshu Jain | Co-Chairman of the Management Board and the Group Executive Committee | Deutsche Bank AG | |
. | Anthony Lake | Executive Director, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), New York | Government | |
. | Anthony Mason | Correspondent, Economics and Business, CBS Evening News | CBS News | |
. | Anthony Scaramucci | Founder and Managing Partner | Skybridge Capital | |
. | Antoine Gosset-Grainville | Vice-Chairman | Caisse des DŽp™ts et Consignations (CDC) | |
. | Antonio Eduardo Castro | Executive Manager, Corporate Strategy | Petroleo Brasileiro SA – PETROBRAS | |
. | Antonio Fatas | Professor of Economics | INSEAD | |
. | Antonio Simoes | Head, United Kingdom | HSBC Bank Plc | |
. | Antonis C. Samaras | Prime Minister of Greece | Government | |
. | Antony Jenkins | Group Chief Executive | Barclays | |
. | Anu Bradford | Professor of Law | Columbia Law School | |
. | Aparna D. Sharma | Chief Executive Officer | India Brand Equity Foundation | |
. | April Rinne | Director, Water Credit | Water.org | |
. | Arafan KabinŽ Kaba | Acting Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Guinea | Permanent Mission of Guinea | |
. | Archbishop Diarmuid Martin | Archbishop of Dublin, Ireland | Government | |
. | Archibald Cox | Chairman | Foreign Policy Association | |
. | Arianna Huffington | President and Editor-in-Chief | The Huffington Post Media Group | |
. | Arif Dowla | Managing Director | Advanced Chemical Industries Ltd | |
. | Arif M. Naqvi | Founder and Group Chief Executive | The Abraaj Group | |
. | Arjun Dhawan | President, Infrastructure Business | Hindustan Construction Company Ltd | |
. | Arkady Dvorkovich | Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Arkady Volozh | Chief Executive Officer | Yandex LLC | |
. | Armando Garza | Chairman | Alfa S.A.B. de C.V. | |
. | Arnaud Leparmentier | Columnist | Le Monde | |
. | Arne Sorenson | President and Chief Executive Officer | Marriott International Inc. | |
. | Aron Cramer | President and Chief Executive Officer | Business for Social Responsibility (BSR) | |
. | Aroon Purie | Chairman and Editor-in-Chief | The India Today Group | |
. | Arsjad Rasjid P. Mangkuningrat | President Director and Group Co-Chief Executive Officer | PT Indika Energy Tbk | |
. | Arsne Totao Yabre | Manager, External Relations and Fundraising | SecrŽtariat Permanent des Organisations Non Gouvernementales (SPONG) | |
. | Artem Volynets | Chief Executive Officer | En+Group | |
. | Arthur O. Sulzberger | Chairman and Publisher | The New York Times | |
. | Arthur Rutishauser | Editor-in-Chief | Tages-Anzeiger | |
. | Arvind Sodhani | President, Intel Capital and Executive Vice-President | Intel Corporation | |
. | Arzuhan Dogan Yalindag | Chairwoman | Dogan TV Holding | |
. | Asanga Abeyagoonasekera | Executive Director | Lakshman Kadirgamar Institute for International Relations and Strategic Studies | |
. | Ashish J. Thakkar | Founder and Managing Director | Mara Group | |
. | Ashni Mohnot | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Enzi | |
. | Atif R. Bokhari | President and Chief Executive Officer | United Bank Ltd | |
. | Atsushi Seike | President | Keio University | |
. | Atsushi Yoshikawa | Representative Executive Officer | Nomura Holdings Inc. | |
. | Atsutoshi Nishida | Chairman of the Board | Toshiba Corporation | |
. | Atul Punj | Chairman | Punj Lloyd Ltd | |
. | Augie K. Fabela II | Chairman and Co-Founder | VimpelCom Ltd | |
. | Aviad Maizels | President | PrimeSense Ltd | |
. | Aviv Nevo | President | NV Investments | |
. | Avril Halstead | Chief Director, Sectoral Oversight | National Treasury of South Africa | |
. | Axel A. Weber | Chairman of the Board of Directors | UBS AG | |
. | Axel C. Heitmann | Chairman of the Board of Management | LANXESS AG | |
. | Axel P. Lehmann | Member, Group Executive Committee, Group Chief Risk Officer and Regional Chairman, Europe | Zurich Insurance Group | |
. | Ayal Shiran | President, Customer Business Group | Amdocs Management Ltd | |
. | Ayla Gšksel | Chief Executive Officer | ACEV | |
. | Ayman Asfari | Group Chief Executive | Petrofac Services Ltd | |
. | Ayman Maamoun Tamer | Chairman and Managing Partner | Tamer Group | |
. | Azim H. Premji | Chairman | Wipro Limited | |
. | Aziz G. Zapsu | Chairman | Azizler Holding AS | |
. | Azman Mokhtar | Managing Director | Khazanah Nasional Berhad | |
. | B¿rge Brende | Managing Director and Member of the Managing Board, World Economic Forum | Government | |
. | B. G. Srinivas | Member of the Board | Infosys Ltd | |
. | Baba N. Kalyani | Chairman and Managing Director | Bharat Forge Ltd | |
. | Babatunde Osotimehin | Executive Director, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), New York | Government | |
. | Bader M. Al Sa’ad | Managing Director, Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA), Kuwait | Government | |
. | Balkrishan Goenka | Chairman | Welspun Corp. Ltd | |
. | Ban Ki-moon | Secretary-General, United Nations, New York | Government | |
. | Bang Han-Hong | President and Chief Executive Officer | Hanwha Chemical Corporation | |
. | Barbara Kux | Member of the Managing Board | Siemens AG | |
. | Barbara Widmer | Economics Editor | Swiss Radio and Television SRF | |
. | Bark Tae-Ho | Minister for Trade of the Republic of Korea | Government | |
. | Barkha Mossae | Policy Analyst Intern | Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Regional Integration and International Trade of Mauritius | |
. | Baroness Valerie Amos | Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, United Nations, New York | Government | |
. | Barry Eichengreen | Professor of Economics and Political Science | University of California, Berkeley | |
. | Barry M. Gosin | Chief Executive Officer | Newmark Grubb Knight Frank | |
. | Barry Salzberg | Global Chief Executive Officer | Deloitte | |
. | Barry Stowe | Chief Executive | Prudential Corporation Asia | |
. | Bas Burger | President, Global Commerce and Northern, Central and Eastern Europe | BT Group Plc | |
. | Baudelaire Ndong Ella | Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Gabon | Permanent Mission of Gabon | |
. | Baudouin Prot | Chairman | BNP Paribas | |
. | Beatrice Weder di Mauro | Member of the Board of Directors | UBS AG | |
. | Beatrix Morath | Managing Partner | Roland Berger Strategy Consultants | |
. | Beatriz Perez | Chief Sustainability Officer | The Coca-Cola Company | |
. | Begumhan Dogan Faralyali | Chairwoman | Dogan Yayin Holding | |
. | Bekele Geleta | Secretary-General | International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) | |
. | Ben Chu | Economics Editor | The Independent | |
. | Ben Hill | President | Trina Solar Europe | |
. | Ben J. Verwaayen | Chief Executive Officer | Alcatel-Lucent SA | |
. | Benigno Simeon Aquino III | President of the Philippines | Government | |
. | Benjamin Soemartopo | Managing Director and Head of Principal Finance, Indonesia | Standard Chartered | |
. | Bernard Charls | President and Chief Executive Officer | Dassault Systmes SA | |
. | Bernard Fontana | Chief Executive Officer | Holcim Ltd | |
. | Bernard Hoekman | Director, International Trade Department | The World Bank | |
. | Bernard Liautaud | General Partner | Balderton Capital | |
. | Bernard Rappaz | Editor-in-Chief | Swiss Television RTS | |
. | Bernardo Gradin | Chief Executive Officer | Graal Bio Investimentos SA | |
. | Bernd Brunke | Member of the Global Executive Committee | Roland Berger Strategy Consultants | |
. | Bernd Martens | Member of the Board of Management for Procurement | AUDI AG | |
. | Bernhard Jucker | Member of the Executive Committee and Head of Power Products | ABB Ltd | |
. | Bert van der Els | Chairman of the Executive Board | Heijmans NV | |
. | Beth A. Brooke | Global Vice-Chair, Public Policy | Ernst & Young | |
. | Bharat Doshi | Executive Director and Group Chief Financial Officer | Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd | |
. | Bidzina G. Ivanishvili | Prime Minister of Georgia | Government | |
. | Bill Gross | Co-Founder and Chairman | eSolar Inc. | |
. | Bill McDermott | Co-Chief Executive Officer | SAP AG | |
. | Bill Rusitzky | Vice-President, Strategic and Business Development | Adobe Systems Inc. | |
. | Bjšrn Johansson | Chairman | Dr Bjorn Johansson Associates Inc. | |
. | Bjšrn SavŽn | Chairman | IK Investment Partners Ltd | |
. | Blaise Goetschin | Chief Executive Officer | Bank of Geneva (BCGE) | |
. | Bo Risberg | Chief Executive Officer | Hilti Aktiengesellschaft | |
. | Bob Bechek | Worldwide Managing Director | Bain & Company Inc. | |
. | Bob Carr | Minister of Foreign Affairs of Australia | Government | |
. | Bob Corker | Senator from Tennessee (Republican), USA | Government | |
. | Boris Collardi | Chief Executive Officer | Bank Julius Baer & Co. Ltd | |
. | Boris Johnson | Mayor of London, United Kingdom | Government | |
. | Boris Krasnyansky | Chief Executive Officer | Group DF | |
. | Boris Mints | Chairman of the Board of Directors | Otkritie Financial Corporation JSC | |
. | Boris Nikolic | Scientific Adviser | bgc3 | |
. | Bradford L. Smith | Senior Vice-President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary | Microsoft Corporation | |
. | Brady W. Dougan | Chief Executive Officer | Credit Suisse AG | |
. | Brandt C. Louie | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | H. Y. Louie Co. Limited | |
. | Brett D. Begemann | President and Chief Commercial Officer | Monsanto Company | |
. | Brian A. Dames | Chief Executive Officer | Eskom Holdings SOC Limited | |
. | Brian A. Gallagher | President and Chief Executive Officer | United Way Worldwide | |
. | Brian Cornell | Chief Executive Officer, PepsiCo Americas Foods | PepsiCo Inc. | |
. | Brian Herlihy | Chief Executive Officer and Founder | Black Rhino Group | |
. | Brian Molefe | Group Chief Executive | Transnet SOC Ltd | |
. | Brian T. Moynihan | Chief Executive Officer | Bank of America Corporation | |
. | Brian Weeden | Technical Adviser | Secure World Foundation | |
. | Bright Simons | President | MPedigree Network | |
. | Brij Kothari | Director | PlanetRead | |
. | Britt D. Banks | Adjunct Professor, School of Law | University of Colorado | |
. | Bruce E. Aust | Executive Vice-President, Global Corporate Client Group | The NASDAQ OMX Group | |
. | Bruce McNamer | President and Chief Executive Officer | TechnoServe Inc. | |
. | Bruno Lafont | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Lafarge | |
. | Bruno Lescoeur | Chief Executive Officer | Edison SpA | |
. | Bruno Piacenza | Executive Vice-President, Laundry and Home Care | Henkel AG & Co. KGaA | |
. | Bruno Raschle | Chairman | Adveq Holding AG | |
. | Bruno Strigini | President, Europe/Canada, Global Human Health | MSD | |
. | Burak Oymen | Co-Founder | Capital Partners | |
. | Cao Duc Phat | Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development of Vietnam | Government | |
. | Carl Sheldon | Chief Executive Officer | Abu Dhabi National Energy Company PJSC (TAQA) | |
. | Carl-Henric Svanberg | Chairman | BP Plc | |
. | Carla Mar’a Rodriguez Mancia | Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Permanent Representative of Guatemala | Permanent Mission of Guatemala | |
. | Carlo D’Asaro Biondo | Vice-President, SEEMEA | ||
. | Carlos Danel | Co-Chief Executive Officer | Compartamos | |
. | Carlos de Brito | Chief Executive Officer | Anheuser-Busch InBev NV | |
. | Carlos Fadigas | Chief Executive Officer | Braskem SA | |
. | Carlos Ghosn | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Renault-Nissan Alliance | |
. | Carlos Julio Ardila | Chief Executive Officer | Organizacion Ardila Lulle | |
. | Carlos L—pez Blanco | Director, Public Affairs | Telefonica SA | |
. | Carlos Moreira | Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Founder | WISeKey SA | |
. | Carlos Murrieta | Chief Operating Officer | Pemex – Petroleos Mexicanos | |
. | Carlos Piedrahita | Chief Executive Officer | Grupo Nutresa | |
. | Carlos Rodr’guez-Pastor | Chairman | Intercorp | |
. | Carlos Segovia | Economic Correspondent | El Mundo | |
. | Carlos Tavares | Chief Operating Officer | Renault SAS | |
. | Carmen M. Reinhart | Minos A. Zombanakis Professor of the International Financial System | Harvard Kennedy School of Government | |
. | Carol Becker | Dean of Faculty, School of the Arts | Columbia University | |
. | Carol Clark | Vice-President, Beer & Better World | Anheuser-Busch InBev, Inc. | |
. | Carol Keehan | President and Chief Executive Officer | Catholic Health Association | |
. | Carol Williams | Executive Vice-President, Manufacturing and Engineering | The Dow Chemical Company | |
. | Carole Stone | Correspondent | The Spectator | |
. | Carolina Trivelli Avila | Minister of Development and Social Inclusion of Peru | Government | |
. | Caroline Watson | Director and Founder | Hua Dan | |
. | Caroline Wunnerlich | Executive Vice-President, Senior Partner and Regional Director, EMEA | Fleishman-Hillard SA/NV | |
. | Carolyn B. Maloney | Congresswoman from New York (Democrat), 14th District, USA | Government | |
. | Carsten Knop | Senior Business Editor | Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung | |
. | Cary Cooper | Pro Vice-Chancellor for External Relations of Lancaster University and Distinguished Professor of Organizational Psychology and Health | Lancaster University Management School (LUMS) | |
. | Caspar Busse | Business Editor | SŸddeutsche Zeitung GmbH | |
. | Cassie Wong Chui-Ping | Asia-Pacific Regional Tax Leader | PwC | |
. | Catherine May | Director, Corporate Affairs | SABMiller Plc | |
. | Celso Luiz Nunes Amorim | Minister of Defence of Brazil | Government | |
. | Cem …zdemir | Chairman, Alliance 90/The Greens, Germany | Government | |
. | Cesar Conde | President | Univision Networks | |
. | Cesar L. Alvarez | Executive Chairman | Greenberg Traurig LLP | |
. | Cesare Mainardi | Chief Executive Officer | Booz & Company | |
. | Cha Nam-Gyu | President and Chief Executive Officer | Hanwha Life Insurance Co. Ltd | |
. | Chan YuenYing | Director and Professor, Journalism and Media Studies Centre | University of Hong Kong | |
. | Chanda Kochhar | Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer | ICICI Bank Ltd | |
. | Chander Prakash Gurnani | Chief Executive Officer | Mahindra Satyam | |
. | Chandrajit Banerjee | Director-General | Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) | |
. | Chang Dae-Whan | Chairman and Publisher | Maekyung Media Group | |
. | Chantal Gaemperle | Group Executive Vice-President, Human Resources and Synergies | LVMH Mo‘t Hennessy – Louis Vuitton | |
. | Charles E. Carter | Executive Vice-President, Colombia | AngloGold Ashanti Ltd | |
. | Charles Godfray | Director, Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food | Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford | |
. | Charles H. Dallara | Managing Director | Institute of International Finance (IIF) | |
. | Charles Sirois | Chairman of the Board | Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) | |
. | Charles W. Scharf | Chief Executive Officer | Visa Inc. | |
. | Charlize Theron | Actress and Founder | Charlize Theron Africa Outreach Project | |
. | Charlotte Maponya | Chairman of the Board of Trustees | Brand South Africa | |
. | Charlotte Petri Gornitzka | Director-General, Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida), Sweden | Government | |
. | Chartsiri Sophonpanich | President | Bangkok Bank Public Company Limited | |
. | Chedly Ayari | Governor of the Central Bank of Tunisia | Government | |
. | Chen Feng | Chairman | HNA Group Co. Ltd | |
. | Chen Jining | President | Tsinghua University | |
. | Chen Wenchi | President and Chief Executive Officer, VIA Technologies | HTC-VIA | |
. | Cher Wang | Chairman | HTC-VIA | |
. | Cherie Nursalim | Executive Director | Giti Group | |
. | Chey Jae-won | Vice-Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | SK Holdings | |
. | Chey Tae-won | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | SK Holdings | |
. | Chhavi Rajawat | Sarpanch, Elected Head | Village Council of Soda | |
. | Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt | President | Conference of European Rabbis | |
. | Choi Chong-Suk | President and Chief Executive Officer, Chairman of the Board of Directors, Korea Investment Corporation (KIC), Republic of Korea | Government | |
. | Choi Kwang-Chul | President and Chief Executive Officer | SK Engineering and Construction (E&C) | |
. | Chris Ayers | Executive Vice-President and President, Global Primary Products | Alcoa Inc. | |
. | Chris Dedicoat | President, EMEAR | Cisco | |
. | Chris Giles | Economics Editor | The Financial Times | |
. | Chris Johnson | Executive Vice-President | NestlŽ SA | |
. | Chris Luebkeman | Director, Global Foresight and Innovation | Arup Group Ltd | |
. | Chris O’Leary | Executive Vice-President and Chief Operating Officer, General Mills International | General Mills Inc. | |
. | Chris Washburne | Trombonist and Professor | Columbia University | |
. | Christian Angermayer | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Apeiron Investment Group | |
. | Christian Busch | Associate Director | London School of Economics Innovation Lab | |
. | Christian Dorer | Editor-in-Chief | Aargauer Zeitung | |
. | Christian Jacqui | Executive Vice-President | SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. | |
. | Christian Kolbe | Head, Business and Economic News, Tagesschau and SF Bšrse; Producer, WEF live | Swiss Radio and Television SRF | |
. | Christian Lucas | Co-Head, Europe, Middle East and Africa | Silver Lake Europe LLP | |
. | Christian Meissner | Head, Global Corporate and Investment Banking | Bank of America Merrill Lynch | |
. | Christian Morales Collado | Vice-President and General Manager, Europe, Middle East and Africa | Intel Corporation | |
. | Christian Mumenthaler | Chief Executive Officer, Reinsurance | Swiss Reinsurance Company Ltd | |
. | Christian Noyer | Governor of the Banque de France | Government | |
. | Christian Paradis | Minister of Industry and Minister of State (Agriculture) of Canada | Government | |
. | Christian Rynning-T¿nnesen | President and Chief Executive Officer | Statkraft AS | |
. | Christian Ulbrich | Chief Executive Officer, Europe, Middle East and Africa | Jones Lang LaSalle | |
. | Christiana Figueres | Executive Secretary, United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), Bonn | Government | |
. | Christine Harper | Chief Financial Correspondent | Bloomberg LP | |
. | Christine Lagarde | Managing Director, International Monetary Fund (IMF), Washington DC | Government | |
. | Christine Ramon | Executive Director and Chief Financial Officer | Sasol Limited | |
. | Christof Ruehl | Group Chief Economist | BP Plc | |
. | Christoph Franz | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Deutsche Lufthansa AG | |
. | Christoph Sieder | Senior Vice-President, Corporate Communications | LANXESS AG | |
. | Christophe Beck | Executive Vice-President and President, International Regions | Ecolab Inc. | |
. | Christophe de Margerie | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Total | |
. | Christophe Villemin | President, Global Aerospace, Transportation and Industry, and Vice-President, Research and Technology | Constellium Switzerland AG | |
. | Christopher A. Viehbacher | Chief Executive Officer | Sanofi | |
. | Christopher J. Elias | President, Global Development Program | Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation | |
. | Christopher J. Nassetta | President and Chief Executive Officer | Hilton Worldwide | |
. | Christopher Jamison | Director | National Office for Vocation (UK) | |
. | Christopher L. Delong | Portfolio Manager | Taconic Capital Advisors LP | |
. | Christopher Perry | Managing Director, Global Sales and Account Management | Thomson Reuters | |
. | Christopher Pissarides | Professor | London School of Economics and Political Science | |
. | Christopher R. Hyman | Chief Executive Officer | Serco Group Plc | |
. | Christopher Swift | Chief Financial Officer | The Hartford | |
. | Chrystia Freeland | Digital Editor | Thomson Reuters | |
. | Cl—vis Rossi | Columnist | Folha de S‹o Paulo | |
. | Claudia Turbay Quintero | Ambassador of Colombia | Embassy of Colombia | |
. | Clayton Christensen | Professor of Business Administration | Harvard Business School | |
. | Clyde C. Tuggle | Senior Vice-President, Global Public Affairs and Communications | The Coca-Cola Company | |
. | ClŽment Gignac | Chief Economist and Senior Vice-President | Industrial Alliance Insurance and Financial Services Inc. | |
. | Colin Dyer | President and Chief Executive Officer | Jones Lang LaSalle Inc. | |
. | Colin Teichholtz | Partner and Senior Portfolio Manager | Pine River Capital Management LP | |
. | Connie Hedegaard | Commissioner, Climate Action, European Commission, Brussels | Government | |
. | Connie Heng | Head, Capital Markets, Asia | Clifford Chance LLP | |
. | Conrad van Oostrom | Chief Executive Officer | OVG Real Estate | |
. | Corinne Vionnet | Artist | Atelier Vionnet | |
. | Cornelis van Zadelhoff | Founder and Member of the Board | DTZ Zadelhoff | |
. | Corrado Passera | Minister of Economic Development, Infrastructure and Transport of Italy | Government | |
. | Costas Markides | Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship | London Business School | |
. | Courtney Leimkuhler | Executive Vice-President, Head, Strategy and Implementation | NYSE Euronext | |
. | Craig Emerson | Minister for Trade and Competitiveness of Australia | Government | |
. | Craig Mundie | Chief Research and Strategy Officer | Microsoft Corporation | |
. | Curt Rhodes | Founder and International Director | Questscope | |
. | Cvetka Selsek | President of the Board of Directors | SKB d.d. Societe Generale Group | |
. | Cynthia Carroll | Chief Executive | Anglo American Plc | |
. | Cyriac Roeding | Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer | shopkick Inc. | |
. | Cyrus K. Vandrevala | Co-Founder | Hirco Group | |
. | Daisuke Iwase | Co-Founder and Representative Director | Lifenet Insurance Company | |
. | Dale T. Mortensen | Board of Trustees Professor | Northwestern University | |
. | Daljit Singh | President | Fortis Healthcare Limited, India | |
. | Dame Barbara Stocking | Chief Executive | Oxfam GB | |
. | Damian Reece | Head, Business | The Daily Telegraph | |
. | Damien O’Brien | Global Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Egon Zehnder International SA | |
. | Dan Perry | Jerusalem Bureau Chief; Special International Editor | The Associated Press (AP) | |
. | Dan Senor | Senior Adviser | Elliott Management Corporation | |
. | Dan Sten Olsson | Chief Executive Officer | Stena AB | |
. | Dana Gluckstein | Photographer, Tribes in Transition Education Fund, USA | Government | |
. | Daniel Bahr | Federal Minister of Health of Germany | Government | |
. | Daniel Buritic‡ C—rdoba | Founder and President | Colombian Network of Youth “RECOJO” | |
. | Daniel Cruise | Global Vice-President, Corporate Development, Government and Public Affairs | Alcoa Inc. | |
. | Daniel Doctoroff | Chief Executive Officer | Bloomberg LP | |
. | Daniel Ek | Chief Executive Officer and Founder | Spotify Ltd | |
. | Daniel Glaser | President and Chief Executive Officer | Marsh & McLennan Companies (MMC) | |
. | Daniel Gross | Global Business Editor | Newsweek and The Daily Beast | |
. | Daniel Isenberg | Professor of Entrepreneurship Practice, Babson Global | Babson College | |
. | Daniel J. Arbess | Partner and Portfolio Manager | Perella Weinberg Partners Group LP | |
. | Daniel J. Brutto | President, UPS International | UPS | |
. | Daniel Kahneman | Professor Emeritus, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs | Princeton University | |
. | Daniel Mahler | Partner and Member, Global Board of Directors | A.T. Kearney International AG | |
. | Daniel Orson Ybarra | Artist | Atelier Ybarra | |
. | Daniel Pinto | Managing Director and Co-Chief Executive Officer, Investment and Corporate Bank | JPMorgan | |
. | Daniel R. Mintz | Founding Managing Director | Olympus Capital Holdings Asia | |
. | Daniel S. Aegerter | Chairman | Armada Investment Group AG | |
. | Daniel S. Loeb | Chief Executive Officer | Third Point LLC | |
. | Daniel Sachs | Chief Executive Officer | Proventus AB | |
. | Daniel Vasella | Chairman of the Board | Novartis AG | |
. | Daniel Viederman | Chief Executive Officer | VeritŽ | |
. | Daniel Yergin | Chairman | IHS CERA | |
. | Danny Truell | Chief Investment Officer | The Wellcome Trust | |
. | Daphne Koller | Professor, Computer Science Department | Stanford University | |
. | Darius Rochebin | Presenter | Swiss Television RTS | |
. | Dariusz Jacek Krawiec | President and Chief Executive Officer | PKN ORLEN SA | |
. | Dariusz Kryczka | Specialist, Public Relations and Communications | Polskie LNG | |
. | Darrah Brustein | Author | Finance Whiz Kids | |
. | Darrell E. Issa | Congressman from California (Republican), 49th District, USA | Government | |
. | Davaajav Gankhuyag | Minister of Mining of Mongolia | Government | |
. | David Appia | Ambassador of France for International Investment; Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Invest in France Agency, France | Government | |
. | David Arkless | President, Corporate and Government Affairs | ManpowerGroup | |
. | David B. Agus | Professor of Medicine and Engineering | USC Center for Applied Molecular Medicine | |
. | David Boehmer | Regional Managing Partner, Financial Services | Heidrick & Struggles | |
. | David Bonderman | Co-Founder and Managing Partner | TPG Capital LP | |
. | David Calhoun | Chief Executive Officer | Nielsen | |
. | David Childs | Managing Partner | Clifford Chance LLP | |
. | David Craig | President, Financial and Risk | Thomson Reuters | |
. | David E. Bloom | Clarence James Gamble Professor of Economics and Demography | Harvard School of Public Health | |
. | David E. Constable | Chief Executive Officer | Sasol Limited | |
. | David Iakobachvili | Founder and Chairman of the Board of Directors | BioEnCo. Bioenergy Corporation LLC | |
. | David Icke | Chief Executive Officer | MC10 Inc. | |
. | David Ignatius | Associate Editor and Columnist | The Washington Post | |
. | David J. Fear | President | ZBI Europe LLC | |
. | David Jones | Global Chief Executive Officer | Havas | |
. | David Kappos | Undersecretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property; Director, United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), USA | Government | |
. | David Kim Younghoon | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Daesung Group | |
. | David Kirkpatrick | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Techonomy Media | |
. | David Kultgen | General Counsel and Secretary | Saudi Aramco | |
. | David M. Cordani | President and Chief Executive Officer | Cigna Corporation | |
. | David M. Rubenstein | Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer | The Carlyle Group | |
. | David McCormick | Co-President | Bridgewater Associates LP | |
. | David Nabarro | Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Food Security and Nutrition, United Nations, Geneva | Government | |
. | David Novak | Partner | Clayton, Dubilier & Rice LLP | |
. | David Pritchard | Senior Director and Chief of Staff | Microsoft Corporation | |
. | David R. Gergen | Director, Center for Public Leadership | Harvard Kennedy School of Government | |
. | David Rhodes | Chairman, Global Practices | The Boston Consulting Group | |
. | David Roman | Senior Vice-President and Chief Marketing Officer | Lenovo | |
. | David Rosen | Chief Rabbi and International Director, Interreligious Affairs | American Jewish Committee (AJC) | |
. | David Saperstein | Director | The Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism | |
. | David Solomon | Co-Head, Investment Banking Division | Goldman Sachs | |
. | David Spreng | Founder and Managing Partner | Crescendo Ventures | |
. | David Sproul | Chief Executive Officer | Deloitte | |
. | David T. Ellwood | Dean | Harvard Kennedy School of Government | |
. | David T. Seaton | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Fluor Corporation | |
. | David W. Crane | President and Chief Executive Officer | NRG Energy Inc. | |
. | David W. Kenny | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | The Weather Company | |
. | David W. MacLennan | President and Chief Operating Officer | Cargill Incorporated | |
. | David Wighton | Associate Editor, Business and Politics | The Times | |
. | Davide Serra | Founding and Managing Partner | Algebris Investments (UK) LLP | |
. | Davinder Chugh | Member of the Group Management Board | ArcelorMittal | |
. | Dawood Azami | Senior Broadcast Journalist and Desk Editor | BBC World Service | |
. | Debbie Taylor | Co-Founder | Proximity Designs | |
. | Deborah DiSanzo | Executive Vice-President and Chief Executive Officer, Philips Healthcare | Royal Philips Electronics | |
. | Deborah Dunsire | Chief Executive Officer and President | Millennium: The Takeda Oncology Company | |
. | Deepak Puri | Chairman and Managing Director | Moser Baer India Ltd | |
. | Deepak Sarup | Chief Financial Officer | Siam Commercial Bank PLC | |
. | Delfina Zagarzazu | Director, Latin America | Three Squares Inc. | |
. | Delos M. (Toby) Cosgrove | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Cleveland Clinic | |
. | Denis O’Brien | Chairman | Island Capital Ltd | |
. | Dennis Berman | Business/Companies Editor | The Wall Street Journal | |
. | Dennis Nally | Chairman, PricewaterhouseCoopers International | PwC | |
. | Derek Aberle | Executive Vice-President and President, Qualcomm Technology Licensing | Qualcomm | |
. | Dev Sanyal | Executive Vice-President and Member of the Group Executive Committee | BP Plc | |
. | Dhananjayan Sriskandarajah | Secretary-General | Civicus: World Alliance for Citizen Participation | |
. | Dhruv M. Sawhney | Chairman and Managing Director | Triveni Engineering & Industries Ltd | |
. | Diana Verde Nieto | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Positiveluxury.com | |
. | Didier Burkhalter | Federal Councillor of Foreign Affairs of the Swiss Confederation | Government | |
. | Diezani K. Alison-Madueke | Minister of Petroleum Resources of Nigeria | Government | |
. | Dimitri Papalexopoulos | Managing Director | Titan Cement Company SA | |
. | Dina Deliwe Pule | Minister of Communications of South Africa | Government | |
. | Dina H. Powell | President, Goldman Sachs Foundation; Global Head, Corporate Engagement | Goldman Sachs | |
. | Dina Madani | Professional, Muslim Minorities Department, Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Jeddah | Government | |
. | Dinesh Shahra | Managing Director | Ruchi Soya Industries Ltd | |
. | Dipak C. Jain | Dean | INSEAD | |
. | Dirk Niebel | Federal Minister of Economic Cooperation and Development of Germany | Government | |
. | Dirk SchŸtz | Editor-in-Chief | BILANZ | |
. | Ditlev Engel | President and Chief Executive Officer | Vestas Wind Systems A/S | |
. | Dmitri O. Rogozin | Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Dmitriy A. Pumpyanskiy | Chairman of the Board | OAO TMK | |
. | Dmitry Grishin | Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder | LLC Mail.Ru | |
. | Dmitry Kolobov | Director, Corporate Strategy | Sibur LLC | |
. | Dmitry Kononov | Director, Investor Relations and Mergers and Acquisitions | OJSC MegaFon | |
. | Dmitry Konov | Chief Executive Officer | Sibur LLC | |
. | Dmitry Medvedev | Prime Minister of the Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Domenico Siniscalco | Vice-Chairman, Country Head, Italy and Head, Government Coverage, Europe, Middle East and Africa | Morgan Stanley Bank International Ltd | |
. | Dominic Barton | Global Managing Director | McKinsey & Company | |
. | Dominik de Daniel | Chief Financial Officer | Adecco Group | |
. | Dominique Cerutti | President and Deputy Chief Executive Officer | NYSE Euronext | |
. | Dominique Velter | Director, Strategic Marketing | Compagnie Financire Tradition | |
. | Don Lam | Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder | VinaCapital Group | |
. | Don Tapscott | President and Chief Executive Officer | The Tapscott Group | |
. | Donald A. Moore | Chairman, Morgan Stanley Group, Europe | Morgan Stanley | |
. | Donald Baer | Worldwide Chair and Chief Executive Officer | Burson-Marsteller | |
. | Donald Kaberuka | President, African Development Bank (AfDB), Tunis | Government | |
. | Donald Lindsay | President and Chief Executive Officer | Teck Resources Limited | |
. | Donald R. Harkleroad | President | The Bristol Company | |
. | Donald S. Beyer Jr | Ambassador of the United States of America | US Embassy | |
. | Donald Tusk | Prime Minister of Poland | Government | |
. | Doreen Lorenzo | President | frog | |
. | Doris Leuthard | Federal Councillor of Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications of the Swiss Confederation | Government | |
. | Doug McMillon | President and Chief Executive Officer, Wal-Mart International | Wal-Mart Stores Inc. | |
. | Douglas Flint | Group Chairman | HSBC Holdings Plc | |
. | Douglas Frye | Global President and Chief Executive Officer | Colliers International | |
. | Douglas G. Bergeron | Chief Executive Officer | VeriFone Systems Inc. | |
. | Douglas H. Horswill | Senior Vice-President | Teck Resources Limited | |
. | Douglas L. Peterson | President | Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC | |
. | Douglas M. Baker Jr | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Ecolab Inc. | |
. | Dov Seidman | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | LRN Corporation | |
. | Drew Gilpin Faust | President | Harvard University | |
. | Drew Houston | Chief Executive Officer | Dropbox | |
. | Drue Kataoka | Artist | www.Drue.Net | |
. | Duncan Niederauer | Chief Executive Officer | NYSE Euronext | |
. | Dylan E. Taylor | Chief Executive Officer, USA | Colliers International | |
. | Dzhordzh Rizhinashvili | Deputy Chief Executive Officer | JSC RusHydro | |
. | Eben Bayer | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Ecovative Design LLC | |
. | Ebrahim Patel | Minister of Economic Development of South Africa | Government | |
. | Ebru Ozdemir | Chairperson | Limak Holding AS | |
. | Ed Conway | Economics Editor | Sky News | |
. | Ed Fast | Minister of International Trade and Minister for the Asia-Pacific Gateway of Canada | Government | |
. | Ed Miliband | Leader, Labour Party, United Kingdom | Government | |
. | Eddy Bruyninckx | Chief Executive Officer | Port Authority Antwerp | |
. | Eddy K. Sariaatmadja | Founder and Chairman | PT Elang Mahkota Teknologi (Emtek) | |
. | Edith Lederer | Chief Correspondent, United Nations | The Associated Press (AP) | |
. | Edna Molewa | Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs of South Africa | Government | |
. | Eduard Potapov | Chief Executive Officer | Metalloinvest Management Company LLC | |
. | Eduardo Eurnekian | President and Chief Executive Officer | Corporacion America | |
. | Eduardo Leite | Chairman of the Executive Committee | Baker & McKenzie | |
. | Eduardo S. Elsztain | Chairman | IRSA Inversiones y Representaciones SA | |
. | Edward Boyden | Associate Professor, Media Lab and McGovern Institute | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) | |
. | Edward S. Knight | Executive Vice-President, General Counsel and Chief Regulatory Officer | The NASDAQ OMX Group | |
. | Eelco Hoekstra | Chairman of the Executive Board and Chief Executive Officer | Royal Vopak | |
. | Ehud Barak | Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defence of Israel | Government | |
. | Eizo Kobayashi | Chairman | Itochu Corporation | |
. | Ekaterina Kozinchenko | Vice-President | Booz & Company | |
. | Elbegdorj Tsakhia | President of Mongolia | Government | |
. | Elena Martynova | Member of the Board of Directors | CJSC Telecominvest | |
. | Eli Beer | Founder and President | United Hatzalah of Israel | |
. | Eli Gelman | Chief Executive Officer | Amdocs Management Ltd | |
. | Elias A. Selman | Publisher and Editor-in-Chief | AmŽricaEconom’a | |
. | Elif Shafak | Writer | Penguin UK | |
. | Elio Di Rupo | Prime Minister of Belgium | Government | |
. | Elisabeth (Liz) Mohn | Member of the Supervisory Board | Bertelsmann SE & Co. KGaA | |
. | Elizabeth Bradley | Professor of Public Health | Yale University | |
. | Elizabeth Burghout | General Manager, Global Application Technology, SABIC Technology & Innovation | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) | |
. | Elizabeth Buse | Group President, Asia-Pacific, Central Europe, Middle East and Africa | Visa Inc. | |
. | Elizabeth Comstock | Senior Vice-President and Chief Marketing Officer | General Electric Company | |
. | Elizabeth Daley | Dean, School of Cinematic Arts | University of Southern California (USC) | |
. | Elizabeth Dipuo Peters | Minister of Energy of South Africa | Government | |
. | Elizabeth G. Weymouth | Senior Associate Editor | The Washington Post | |
. | Elizabeth Littlefield | President, Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), USA | Government | |
. | Elizabeth Williams | Senior Vice-President, Head of Corporate Strategy | ABB Ltd | |
. | Ellana Lee | Vice-President and Managing Editor, Asia-Pacific | CNN International | |
. | Ellen Kullman | Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer | DuPont | |
. | Ellen Richey | Chief Enterprise Risk Officer | Visa Inc. | |
. | Ellen van der Gulik | Senior Portfolio Manager and Strategist | Moore Capital Management LLC | |
. | Elshad Nassirov | Vice-President, Investment and Marketing | SOCAR (State Oil Company of the Azerbaijan Republic) | |
. | Elvira Nabiullina | Economic Adviser to the President of the Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Emer Timmons | President, Global Services UK | BT Group Plc | |
. | Emilio Ricardo Lozoya Austin | Chief Executive Officer | Pemex – Petroleos Mexicanos | |
. | Emirsyah Satar | President and Chief Executive Officer | PT Garuda Indonesia (Persero) Tbk | |
. | Emmanuel Macron | Deputy Secretary-General of the ElysŽe, Office of the President of the Republic of France, France | Government | |
. | Enda Kenny | Taoiseach of Ireland | Government | |
. | Enderson Guimaraes | Chief Executive Officer | PepsiCo Europe | |
. | Enrico T. Cucchiani | Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer | Intesa Sanpaolo SpA | |
. | Enrique Garc’a Rodr’guez | President and Chief Executive Officer, CAF – Development Bank of Latin America, Caracas | Government | |
. | Enrique M. Pescarmona | President | Corporaci—n IMPSA SA | |
. | Enrique Zambrano Ben’tez | Chief Executive Officer | Proeza SA de CV | |
. | Erdal Karamercan | President and Chief Executive Officer | Eczacibasi Holding | |
. | Erdem Basi | Governor of the Central Bank of Turkey | Government | |
. | Ergun Ozen | President and Chief Executive Officer | Garanti Bank | |
. | Eric Anderson | Chief Executive Officer | Intentional Software Corporation | |
. | Eric Elzvik | Chief Financial Officer, Discrete Automation and Motion Division | ABB Ltd | |
. | Eric I. Cantor | Majority Leader and Congressman from Virginia (Republican), 7th District, USA | Government | |
. | Eric Kacou | Author and Founder | Entrepreneurial Solutions Partners (ESPartners) | |
. | Eric Kandel | Professor | Columbia University | |
. | Eric Mindich | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Eton Park Capital Management LP | |
. | Eric Olson | Global Managing Partner, Leadership Consulting | Heidrick & Struggles | |
. | Eric Parrado | Professor | University Adolfo Iba–ez | |
. | Eric Rudder | Chief Technical Strategy Officer | Microsoft Corporation | |
. | Eric Varvel | Chief Executive Officer, Investment Bank | Credit Suisse AG | |
. | Eric Whitacre | Composer and Conductor | ||
. | Erich Harsch | Chief Executive Officer | dm drogerie markt GmbH + Co. KG | |
. | Erik Brynjolfsson | Professor | MIT – Sloan School of Management | |
. | Erik Schatzker | Anchor and Editor-at-Large | Bloomberg Radio & Television | |
. | Erik Staijen | Founder and Chief Technology Officer | Blue4Green | |
. | Erik van ‘t Hof | Member of the Executive Board | Pon Holdings BV | |
. | Erkan Erkek | Chief Executive Officer | LLC “Capital Partners” | |
. | Erlan Idrissov | Minister of Foreign Affairs of Kazakhstan | Government | |
. | Ernesto Bertarelli | Chairman | Waypoint Capital Holdings Ltd | |
. | Ernesto Occhiello | Executive Vice-President, Technology and Innovation | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) | |
. | Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de Leon | Director | Yale Center for the Study of Globalization | |
. | Ernst Ligteringen | Chief Executive | Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) | |
. | Ertharin Cousin | Executive Director, United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), Rome | Government | |
. | Ertugrul Ozkok | Columnist | HŸrriyet Gazetesi | |
. | Erwann Michel-Kerjan | Managing Director, Wharton Risk Center | The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania | |
. | EsmarŽ Weideman | Chief Executive Officer | Media24 | |
. | Espen Barth Eide | Minister of Foreign Affairs of Norway | Government | |
. | Esra Ozer | Director, Executive Communications; Assistant Corporate Secretary | Alcoa Inc. | |
. | Essa Al Saleh | President and Chief Executive Officer, Global Integrated Logistics | Agility | |
. | Esteban Bullrich | Minister of Education of the City of Buenos Aires, Argentina | Government | |
. | Esther Dyson | Chairman | EDventure Holdings Inc. | |
. | Eugene Hall | Chief Executive Officer | Gartner Inc. | |
. | Eugene Kaspersky | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Kaspersky Lab | |
. | Eugenio Madero | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | San Luis Rassini | |
. | Eva Marie Coll Seck | Minister of Health and Social Action of Senegal | Government | |
. | Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf | Federal Councillor of Finance of the Swiss Confederation | Government | |
. | Evgeny Dod | Chief Executive Officer | JSC RusHydro | |
. | Eviatar Manor | Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative of Israel | Permanent Mission of Israel | |
. | Ewan Birney | Associate Director | European Bioinformatics Institute | |
. | Eyal Ofer | Chairman | Zodiac Maritime Agencies Ltd | |
. | Fabrice BrŽgier | President and Chief Executive Officer | Airbus SAS | |
. | Fabrizio Di Amato | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Maire Tecnimont | |
. | Fadi Chehade | Chief Executive Officer | Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) | |
. | Fadi Farra | Adviser to the Prime Minister of Kazakhstan | Office of the Prime Minister of Kazakhstan | |
. | Fadi Hassan | Co-Founder and Editor | Quattrogatti.info | |
. | Fady Mohammed Abdul Latif Jameel | Vice-Chairman | Abdul Latif Jameel International Group | |
. | Fahad Bin Abdulrahman Bin Sulaiman Balghunaim | Minister of Agriculture of Saudi Arabia | Government | |
. | Fahd Al Rasheed | Chief Executive Officer and Member of the Board | King Abdullah Economic City | |
. | Faisal Islam | Economics Editor | Channel 4 News | |
. | Faisal J. Abbas | Editor-in-Chief | Al Arabiya News Channel, English Service | |
. | Fan Gang | Director, National Economic Research Institute | China Reform Foundation | |
. | Fang Xinghai | Director-General, Office for Financial Services, Shanghai Municipal Government, People’s Republic of China | Government | |
. | Fareed Zakaria | Anchor, Fareed Zakaria – GPS | CNN | |
. | Farhad Moshiri | Chairman | USM Holdings Limited | |
. | Farouq Hussain Al Zanki | Chief Executive Officer | Kuwait Petroleum Corporation | |
. | Fatih Birol | Chief Economist, International Energy Agency, Paris | Government | |
. | Fatma Sahin | Minister of Family and Social Policies of Turkey | Government | |
. | Federico Fubini | Economics Correspondent | Corriere Della Sera | |
. | Feike Sijbesma | Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Managing Board | Royal DSM NV | |
. | Felicitas von Peter | Founder and Managing Partner | Forum for Active Philanthropy | |
. | Felipe Aldunate | Senior Finance and Economics Editor | El Mercurio | |
. | Felipe Calder—n | Angelopoulos Global Public Leaders Fellow, Harvard Kennedy School of Government, Mexico | Government | |
. | Felipe Larra’n Bascu–‡n | Minister of Finance of Chile | Government | |
. | Felipe Vergara | Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Lumni | |
. | Felix E. MŸller | Editor-in-Chief | NZZ am Sonntag | |
. | Felix Ehrat | Group General Counsel | Novartis International AG | |
. | Felix Salmon | Blogger | Thomson Reuters | |
. | Ferdinand K. Pi‘ch | Chairman of the Supervisory Board | Volkswagen AG | |
. | Ferit F. Sahenk | Chairman | Dogus Group | |
. | Fernando Zavala | Chief Executive Officer | Cerveceria Nacional SA | |
. | Fernando Zobel de Ayala | Chairman | Ayala Land Inc. | |
. | Fiona Bull | Professor of Physical Activity and Public Health | The University of Western Australia | |
. | Fiona Song Liangbing | Office Vice-Director | Pudong Social Work Committee | |
. | Flemming Besenbacher | Chairman of the Supervisory Board | Carlsberg A/S | |
. | Fleur Pellerin | Minister for SMEs, Innovation and Digital Economy of France | Government | |
. | Florian Eder | Correspondent | Die Welt | |
. | Frances Arnold | Dick and Barbara Dickinson Professor of Chemical Engineering and Biochemistry | California Institute of Technology (CALTECH) | |
. | Francesca Colombo | General Director | Florence Opera House Ð Maggio Musicale Fiorentino | |
. | Francesca Cornelli | Professor of Finance | London Business School | |
. | Francesco P. Guerrera | Money and Investing Editor | The Wall Street Journal | |
. | Francine Lacqua | Editor-at-large and Presenter | Bloomberg Television | |
. | Francis Gurry | Director-General, World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), Geneva | Government | |
. | Francis S. Collins | Director | National Institutes of Health | |
. | Francis Yeoh Sock Ping | Managing Director | YTL Corporation Berhard | |
. | Francisco D’Souza | Chief Executive Officer | Cognizant Technology Solutions | |
. | Francisco Gonz‡lez | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA | |
. | Franck Petitgas | Global Co-Head, Investment Banking | Morgan Stanley | |
. | Frank Appel | Chief Executive Officer | Deutsche Post DHL | |
. | Frank De Lima | Minister of Economy and Finance of Panama | Government | |
. | Frank Jimenez | General Counsel, Secretary and Managing Director, Government Affairs | Bunge Limited | |
. | Frank Mattern | Director, Germany | McKinsey & Company | |
. | Frank Morich | Chief Commercial Officer and Executive Vice-President, International Operations | Takeda Pharmaceuticals International Inc. | |
. | Frank R. Martire | President and Chief Executive Officer | FIS | |
. | Frank Tang | Managing Partner and Chief Executive Officer | FountainVest Partners (Asia) Limited | |
. | Frank van Veenendaal | Vice-Chairman | Salesforce.com | |
. | Frans Blom | Senior Partner and Managing Director | The Boston Consulting Group | |
. | Frans van Houten | Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Management and the Executive Committee | Royal Philips Electronics | |
. | Frans W. H. Muller | Member of the Management Board | METRO AG | |
. | Franz Fehrenbach | Chairman of the Supervisory Board | Robert Bosch GmbH | |
. | Fred Kaiser | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Alpha Technologies Inc. | |
. | Fred Kindle | Partner | Clayton, Dubilier & Rice LLP | |
. | Fred Krupp | President | Environmental Defense Fund | |
. | Fred van Leeuwen | General Secretary | Education International | |
. | Frederick Kempe | President and Chief Executive Officer | The Atlantic Council of the United States | |
. | Frederico Curado | President and Chief Executive Officer | EMBRAER SA | |
. | Fredrik Reinfeldt | Prime Minister of Sweden | Government | |
. | Friede Springer | Deputy Chairperson | Axel Springer AG | |
. | Frits D. van Paasschen | Chief Executive Officer and President | Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. | |
. | Fritz Kaiser | Executive Chairman | Kaiser Partner | |
. | FrŽdŽric Lemoine | Chairman of the Executive Board | Wendel | |
. | FrŽdŽric OudŽa | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | SociŽtŽ GŽnŽrale | |
. | Fu Jun | Executive Dean and Professor, School of Government | Peking University | |
. | G. P. Bud Peterson | President | Georgia Institute of Technology | |
. | Gabriela Frias | Anchor | CNN en Espa–ol | |
. | Gabriela Montero | Pianist | ||
. | Gabrielle Fitzgerald | Director, Program Advocacy | Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation | |
. | Gail Kelly | Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director | Westpac Banking Corporation | |
. | Gary Cohen | Executive Vice-President | Becton, Dickinson and Company | |
. | Gary D. Cohn | President and Chief Operating Officer | The Goldman Sachs Group Inc. | |
. | Gary Kovacs | Chief Executive Officer | Mozilla Corporation | |
. | Gatot Mudiantoro Suwondo | President Director and Chief Executive Officer | PT Bank Negara Indonesia (Persero) Tbk | |
. | Gaurang Shetty | Senior Vice-President, Commercial | Jet Airways (India) Limited | |
. | Gavin E.R. Wilson | Chief Executive Officer | IFC Asset Management Company LLC | |
. | Gazmend Haxhia | President | A.S.G. Company | |
. | Ge Jianxiong | Professor of Historical Geography and History | Fudan University | |
. | Gene Frieda | Global Strategist | Moore Capital Management LLC | |
. | Gene Huang | Chief Economist | FedEx Corporation | |
. | Geoff Cutmore | Anchor | CNBC | |
. | Geoff Martha | Senior Vice-President, Strategy and Business Development | Medtronic Inc. | |
. | Geoff Riddell | Member, Group Executive Committee and Regional Chairman, Asia-Pacific, Middle East and Africa | Zurich Insurance Group | |
. | Geoffrey B. West | Distinguished Professor | Santa Fe Institute | |
. | Geoffrey Cape | Chief Executive Officer and Founder | Evergreen | |
. | Geoffrey Qhena | Chief Executive Officer | Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Ltd (IDC) | |
. | Georg Kell | Executive Director, Global Compact Office, United Nations, New York | Government | |
. | Georg Meck | Business Editor | Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung | |
. | George C. Halvorson | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Kaiser Foundation Health Plan Inc. | |
. | George F. Colony | Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer | Forrester Research Inc. | |
. | George Hu | Chief Operating Officer | Salesforce.com | |
. | George Kvirikashvili | Minister of Economy and Sustainable Development of Georgia | Government | |
. | George M. Logothetis | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Libra Group | |
. | George Osborne | Chancellor of the Exchequer of the United Kingdom | Government | |
. | George Soros | Chairman | Soros Fund Management LLC | |
. | George Walker | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Neuberger Berman Group LLC | |
. | George Yeo | Visiting Scholar | Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore | |
. | Gerald Lawless | President and Group Chief Executive Officer | Jumeirah Group | |
. | Geraldine Chin Moody | Member of the Board | UN Women Australia | |
. | Geralyn S. Ritter | Senior Vice-President, Global Public Policy and Corporate Responsibility, Secretary and Assistant General Counsel | MSD | |
. | Gerard Baker | Managing Editor, The Wall Street Journal; Editor-in-Chief | Dow Jones & Company Inc. | |
. | Gerhard Cromme | Chairman of the Supervisory Board | ThyssenKrupp AG | |
. | Gerhard N. Mayr | Chairman of the Board | UCB S.A. | |
. | Gianfranco Carlo Lanci | Senior Vice-President and President, Europe, Middle East and Asia | Lenovo (Italy) Srl | |
. | Gianpiero Petriglieri | Associate Professor of Organizational Behaviour | INSEAD | |
. | Gideon Rachman | Associate Editor, Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator | The Financial Times | |
. | Gideon Rose | Editor | Foreign Affairs | |
. | Gilbert J. B. Probst | Managing Director and Dean, Leadership Office and Academic Affairs, World Economic Forum | Government | |
. | Gillian R. Tett | Assistant Editor | The Financial Times | |
. | Gina Badenoch | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Ojos que Sienten AC | |
. | Gina Qiao | Senior Vice-President, Human Resources | Lenovo | |
. | Giorgio Squinzi | President | Confederation of Italian Industries (Confindustria) | |
. | Giovanni Bossi | Chief Executive Officer | Banca IFIS SpA | |
. | Gisbert RŸhl | Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Management Board | Klšckner & Co SE | |
. | Gita Wirjawan | Minister of Trade of Indonesia | Government | |
. | Giuseppe Recchi | Chairman | Eni SpA | |
. | Giuseppe Sarcina | Senior Correspondent | Corriere Della Sera | |
. | Glenn H. Hutchins | Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive | Silver Lake | |
. | Godfrey Mutizwa | Chief Editor | CNBC Africa | |
. | Goodluck Ebele Jonathan | President of Nigeria | Government | |
. | Gopichand P. Hinduja | Chairman | Hinduja Automotive Ltd | |
. | Gordon Brown | UN Special Envoy for Global Education; Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (2007-2010) | Government | |
. | Gordon de Brouwer | Associate Secretary, Domestic Policy Group, Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet of Australia | Government | |
. | Gottfried Leibbrandt | Chief Executive Officer | SWIFT SCRL | |
. | Grace Aneiza Ali | Founder and Editorial Director | Of Note Magazine | |
. | Graham Mackay | Chairman | SABMiller Plc | |
. | Grant Wattman | President and Chief Executive Officer, Agility Project Logistics | Agility | |
. | Greg Lucier | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Life Technologies Corp. | |
. | Greg Scheu | Head, Marketing and Customer Solutions and Member of the Executive Committee | ABB Ltd | |
. | Gregory R. Page | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Cargill Incorporated | |
. | Gren Manuel | Senior Editor EMEA | Dow Jones Newswires | |
. | Guido Westerwelle | Federal Minister of Foreign Affairs of Germany | Government | |
. | Guillermo Ortiz | Chairman | Grupo Financiero Banorte SA de CV | |
. | Guler Sabanci | Chairman and Managing Director | Haci …mer Sabanci Holding AS | |
. | Gunilla Carlsson | Minister for International Development Cooperation of Sweden | Government | |
. | Gunilla Herlitz | Editor-in-Chief and Managing Director | Dagens Nyheter | |
. | Guo Ping | Deputy Chairman of the Board | Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd | |
. | Guo Zhenxi | Director, Business Channel | China Central Television CCTV-2 | |
. | Gustavo Barbosa | Executive Manager, Corporate Finance | Petroleo Brasileiro SA – PETROBRAS | |
. | Guy Ryder | Director-General, International Labour Organization (ILO), Geneva | Government | |
. | GŸnther H. Oettinger | Commissioner, Energy, European Commission, Brussels | Government | |
. | H. Cuneyd Zapsu | Chairman | Cuneyd Zapsu Danismanlik AS | |
. | H. Raymond Bingham | Chairman of the Board | Flextronics International Ltd | |
. | H. S. Cho | President, Industrial Materials Performance Group | Hyosung Group | |
. | H.E. Sheikh Abdullah Bin Mohammed Al Thani | Chairman | Qtel Group | |
. | H.E. Sheikh Hamad Bin Jassim Bin Jabr Al Thani | Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Qatar | Government | |
. | H.H. Prince Bin Abdullah Bin Thenayan Al-Saud Al-Saud | Chairman, Royal Commission for Jubail & Yanbu; Chairman of the Board | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) | |
. | H.H. Sheikh Al Khalifa | Honorary Chairman | The Bahrain Petroleum Company BSC | |
. | H.H. Sheikh Dr Mohammed Sabah Al Salem Al Sabah | Deputy Prime Minister of Kuwait (2003-2011) | ||
. | H.M. King Abdullah II Ibn Al Hussein | King of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan | Government | |
. | H.M. King Molotlegi of the Royal Bafokeng Nation | Executive Chairman | Royal Bafokeng Administration | |
. | H.M. Queen Rania Al Abdullah of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan | Member of the Foundation Board of the World Economic Forum | Government | |
. | H.R.H. Crown Prince Haakon of Norway | Crown Prince of Norway | Government | |
. | H.R.H. Crown Princess Mary Elizabeth of Denmark | Founder and Chairman, The Mary Foundation, Denmark | Government | |
. | H.R.H. Crown Princess Mette-Marit of Norway | Crown Princess of Norway | Government | |
. | H.R.H. Prince Al Saud | Adviser, Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources of Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia | Government | |
. | H.R.H. Prince Philippe of Belgium | Crown Prince of Belgium | Government | |
. | H.R.H. Prince Turki Al Faisal Al Saud | Prince of Saudi Royal Family; Chairman, King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies, Saudi Arabia | Government | |
. | H.R.H. Princess Mathilde of Belgium | Crown Princess of Belgium | Government | |
. | H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco | Prince of Monaco | Government | |
. | Habib Haddad | Chief Executive Officer | Wamda | |
. | Habil F. Khorakiwala | Chairman | Wockhardt Limited | |
. | Hailemariam Desalegn | Prime Minister of Ethiopia | Government | |
. | Hakan Binbasgil | Chief Executive Officer and Board Member | Akbank TAS | |
. | Hal B. Gregersen | The Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank Chaired Professor of Innovation and Leadership | INSEAD | |
. | Hamadoun I. TourŽ | Secretary-General, International Telecommunication Union (ITU), Geneva | Government | |
. | Hamish Tyrwhitt | Chief Executive Officer | Leighton Holdings Ltd | |
. | Hammadi Jebali | Prime Minister of Tunisia | Government | |
. | Hamza B. Alkholi | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Hamza Alkholi Group | |
. | Han Duck-Soo | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Korea International Trade Association (KITA) | |
. | Han Jian | Associate Professor of Management | China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) | |
. | Hani Lazkani | Head of Investments | Olayan Europe Ltd | |
. | Hannelore Kraft | Minister-President of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany | Government | |
. | Hannes van Rensburg | Head, Fundamo and Group Country Manager, Sub-Sahara Africa | Visa Inc. | |
. | Hans E. Vestberg | President and Chief Executive Officer | Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson | |
. | Hans Klingenberg | Ambassador of Denmark | Embassy of Denmark | |
. | Hans Leentjes | President, Northern Europe | ManpowerGroup | |
. | Hans-Ole Jochumsen | President NASDAQ OMX Nordic and Executive Vice-President NASDAQ OMX Group | NASDAQ OMX | |
. | Hans-Paul BŸrkner | Chairman | The Boston Consulting Group | |
. | Hans-Ulrich Meister | Head, Private Banking, Private Banking and Wealth Management Division | Credit Suisse AG | |
. | Hany El Banna | Founder and President | The Humanitarian Forum | |
. | Harald Sommerer | Chairman of the Executive Board and Chief Executive Officer | Zumtobel AG | |
. | Hari S. Bhartia | Co-Chairman and Founder | Jubilant Bhartia Group | |
. | Hariolf Kottmann | Chief Executive Officer | Clariant International Ltd | |
. | Harish Manwani | Chief Operating Officer | Unilever | |
. | Harold McGraw III | Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer | McGraw-Hill Companies | |
. | Harry Hendriks | Global Head, Government and Public Affairs | Philips International BV | |
. | Harry Hohmeister | Chief Executive Officer | Swiss International Air Lines Ltd | |
. | Haruhiko Kuroda | President, Asian Development Bank, Manila | Government | |
. | Hassan El Houry | Chief Executive Officer | National Aviation Services | |
. | Heather Fleming | Chief Executive Officer | Catapult Design | |
. | Heather Stewart | Business Editor | The Observer | |
. | Heiko Hutmacher | Member of the Management Board | METRO AG | |
. | Heinrich Hiesinger | Chairman of the Executive Board | ThyssenKrupp AG | |
. | Heinz Haller | Chief Executive Officer, Dow Europe and Chief Commercial Officer | The Dow Chemical Company | |
. | Heizo Takenaka | Director, Global Security Research Institute | Keio University | |
. | Helen E. Clark | Administrator, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), New York | Government | |
. | Helene D. Gayle | President and Chief Executive Officer | CARE USA | |
. | Helga Nowotny | President | European Research Council | |
. | Helle Thorning-Schmidt | Prime Minister of Denmark | Government | |
. | Hellmut SchŸtte | Vice-President and Dean | China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) | |
. | Helmut Aurenz | Member of the Supervisory Board | AUDI AG | |
. | Henning Mankell | Author | Leopard Fšrlag | |
. | Henrique De Castro | Chief Operating Officer | Yahoo! Inc. | |
. | Henry A. Kissinger | Chairman, Kissinger Associates, USA | Government | |
. | Henry Blodget | Chief Executive Officer and Editor-in-Chief | Business Insider Inc. | |
. | Henry J. Faarup | Ambassador | Embassy of Panama | |
. | Henry Lin Yu | Chairman and Co-Chief Executive Officer | NQ Mobile Inc. | |
. | Henry Ross Perot Jr | Chairman of the Board | The Perot Companies | |
. | Herbert J. Scheidt | Chairman of the Board | Vontobel Holding AG | |
. | Herbert Moos | Deputy Chairman | JSC VTB Bank | |
. | Herbert Oberhaensli | Vice-President, Economics and International Relations | NestlŽ SA | |
. | Herbert-Michael Zapf | President and Chief Executive | International Post Corporation (IPC) | |
. | Herman Daems | Chairman of the Board | Barco NV | |
. | Herman Gref | Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer | Sberbank | |
. | Hermann Parzinger | President | Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz | |
. | Herminia Ibarra | The Cora Chaired Professor of Leadership and Learning and Professor of Organizational Behaviour | INSEAD | |
. | Hideto Nakahara | Member of the Board, Senior Executive Vice-President, Global Strategy and Business Development | Mitsubishi Corporation | |
. | Hidetoshi Fujisawa | Executive Commentator | NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation) | |
. | Hikmet Ersek | President and Chief Executive Officer | The Western Union Company | |
. | Hilarie Koplow-McAdams | President | Salesforce.com | |
. | Hilary Krane | Executive Vice-President, General Counsel and Corporate Affairs | Nike Inc. | |
. | Hilda Ochoa-Brillembourg | Founding Partner, President and Chief Executive Officer | Strategic Investment Group | |
. | Hilde Schwab | Chairperson and Co-Founder | Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship | |
. | Hiroaki Nakanishi | President | Hitachi Ltd | |
. | Hiroko Kuniya | Anchor and Presenter, Today’s Close-Up | NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation) | |
. | Hiromasa Yonekura | Chairman | Sumitomo Chemical Co. Ltd | |
. | Hiromichi Toya | Executive Adviser | All Nippon Airways Co. Ltd | |
. | Hiroo Ichikawa | Executive Director, Institute of Urban Strategies, Mori Memorial Foundation | Mori Building Co. Ltd | |
. | Hiroshi Ozaki | President and Chief Executive Officer | Osaka Gas Co. Ltd | |
. | Hirotaka Takeuchi | Professor | Harvard Business School | |
. | Hiroto Saikawa | Representative Director and Executive Vice-President | Nissan Motor Co. Limited | |
. | Hirotsugu Aida | Chief Editorial Writer | Kyodo News | |
. | Hiroyuki Ishige | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO) | |
. | Hisham Mahmoud | Group President | AMEC Plc | |
. | Ho May Yong | Ambassador of Malaysia | Embassy of Malaysia | |
. | HŒkon Mageli | Executive Vice-President, Corporate Communications and Corporate Affairs | Orkla ASA | |
. | Holger Eckstein | Chief Financial Officer | Burda Media | |
. | Hong Ki-Joon | Vice-Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Hanwha Chemical Corporation | |
. | Horst Seehofer | Minister-President of the State of Bavaria, Germany | Government | |
. | Howard Bornstein | Senior Associate | Bain Capital | |
. | Howard Cox | Advisory Partner | Greylock | |
. | Howard Davies | Professor of Practice | Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques (Sciences Po) | |
. | Howard Kunreuther | James G. Dinan Professor; Professor of Decision Sciences and Public Policy | The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania | |
. | Howard Meyers | Chairman | Quexco Inc. | |
. | Howard W. Lutnick | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Cantor Fitzgerald LP | |
. | Htay Aung | Minister of Hotels and Tourism of Myanmar | Government | |
. | Hu Shuli | Editor-in-Chief | Caixin Media | |
. | Hubert Burda | Chairman | Burda Media | |
. | Huda Al-Ghoson | Executive Director, Employee Relations and Training | Saudi Aramco | |
. | Hugh Grant | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Monsanto Company | |
. | Hugh Johnston | Executive Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer | PepsiCo Inc. | |
. | Hugh Verrier | Chairman | White & Case LLP | |
. | Huguette Labelle | Chair | Transparency International | |
. | Hunter Hunt | President and Chief Executive Officer, Hunt Consolidated Energy | Hunt Oil Company | |
. | Husodo Angkosubroto | Chairman | PT Gunung Sewu Kencana | |
. | Hussain Dawood | Chairman | Dawood Hercules Corporation Limited | |
. | Hussain J. Al Nowais | Chairman | Al Nowais Investments | |
. | Hutham S. Olayan | President and Chief Executive Officer | Olayan America | |
. | HŽlne Rey | Professor of Economics | London Business School | |
. | Iain Conn | Managing Director and Chief Executive, Refining and Marketing | BP Plc | |
. | Ian Bremmer | President | Eurasia Group | |
. | Ian Cheshire | Group Chief Executive | Kingfisher Plc | |
. | Ian Goldin | Director and Professor | Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford | |
. | Ian Hudson | President, Europe, Middle East and Africa | DuPont De Nemours International SA | |
. | Ian Livingston | Chief Executive Officer | BT Group Plc | |
. | Ian Powell | Senior Partner | PwC | |
. | Ian Wright | Corporate Relations Director | Diageo Plc | |
. | Ibrahim Abdul Aziz Al Assaf | Minister of Finance of Saudi Arabia | Government | |
. | Ibrahim S. Dabdoub | Group Chief Executive Officer | National Bank of Kuwait | |
. | Ida Auken | Minister of the Environment of Denmark | Government | |
. | Idan Ofer | Owner and Principal | Quantum Pacific Group | |
. | Idil Yigitbasi | Chairperson | Yasar Holding AS | |
. | Ignacio Garcia Alves | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Arthur D. Little Global | |
. | Ignacio S‡nchez G‡lan | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Iberdrola SA | |
. | Ignazio Visco | Governor of the Bank of Italy | Government | |
. | Igor Shuvalov | First Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Igor Syry | Chief Executive Officer | Metinvest Holding LLC | |
. | Igor Vayn | Chief Executive Officer | Renaissance Capital | |
. | Ikram ul-Majeed Sehgal | Chairman | Pathfinder Group | |
. | Ilene S. Gordon | Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer | Ingredion Incorporated | |
. | Ilham Aliyev | President of Azerbaijan | Government | |
. | Imran Khan | Chairman, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, Pakistan | Government | |
. | Indra Nooyi | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | PepsiCo Inc. | |
. | Iqbal SurvŽ | Executive Chairman | Sekunjalo Investments Ltd | |
. | Irene B. Rosenfeld | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Mondelez International Inc. | |
. | Irina Gueorguieva Bokova | Director-General, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Paris | Government | |
. | Isaac Lee | President, Univision News | Univision Communications Inc. | |
. | Isabelle Allen | Global Head of Sales and Markets | KPMG | |
. | Ishrat Husain | Dean and Director | The Institute of Business Administration (IBA) | |
. | Ismail Serageldin | Director | Bibliotheca Alexandrina | |
. | Issa Abdul Salam Abu Issa | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Salam International Investment Ltd | |
. | Ivan Glasenberg | Chief Executive Officer | Glencore International AG | |
. | Ivan Streshinskiy | Chairman of the Board of Directors | CJSC Telecominvest | |
. | Ivan Tavrin | Chief Executive Officer | OJSC MegaFon | |
. | Ivonne A-Baki | Minister for the Yasun’-ITT Initiative, Ecuador | Government | |
. | Iyad Malas | Chief Executive Officer | Majid Al Futtaim Group | |
. | Izabella Teixeira | Minister of the Environment of Brazil | Government | |
. | J¿rgen Buhl Rasmussen | Chief Executive Officer and President | Carlsberg A/S | |
. | J¿rgen Ole Haslestad | President and Chief Executive Officer | Yara International ASA | |
. | J. Frank Brown | Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer | General Atlantic LLC | |
. | J. Michael Cline | Managing Partner | Accretive LLC | |
. | Jaafar Hassan | Minister of Planning and International Cooperation of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan | Government | |
. | Jabu A. Mabuza | Chairman | Telkom Group Limited | |
. | Jabulani Moleketi | Chairman | Development Bank of Southern Africa | |
. | Jace Johnson | Vice-President, Worldwide Government Affairs and Public Policy | Adobe Systems Inc. | |
. | Jacek Rostowski | Minister of Finance of Poland | Government | |
. | Jacek Szwajcowski | Chief Executive Officer | Pelion Healthcare Group SA | |
. | Jack B. Dunn | President and Chief Executive Officer | FTI Consulting Inc. | |
. | Jack Ewing | European Economics Correspondent | International Herald Tribune | |
. | Jack Markell | Governor of Delaware, USA | Government | |
. | Jackson Schneider | Executive Vice-President, People, Institutional Relations and Sustainability | EMBRAER SA | |
. | Jacob A. Frenkel | Chairman, JPMorgan Chase International | JPMorgan Chase & Co. | |
. | Jacob G. Zuma | President of South Africa | Government | |
. | Jacob Leschly | Chief Executive Officer and Director | Ingenuity Systems Inc. | |
. | Jacob Wallenberg | Chairman | Investor AB | |
. | Jacob Weisberg | Chairman and Editor-in-Chief | The Slate Group | |
. | Jacqueline Korhonen | Senior Vice-President and Geo Head, Australia & New Zealand | Infosys | |
. | Jacqueline Reses | Executive Vice-President, People and Development | Yahoo! Inc. | |
. | Jacques Attali | President | PlaNet Finance | |
. | Jacques Daoust | President and Chief Executive Officer | Investissement QuŽbec | |
. | Jahangir Hajiyev | Chairman of the Board | International Bank of Azerbaijan | |
. | Jaidev R. Shroff | Chief Executive Officer | United Phosphorus Ltd (UPL) | |
. | Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala II | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Ayala Corporation | |
. | Jaime Caruana | General Manager, Bank for International Settlements (BIS), Basel | Government | |
. | Jaime de Althaus | Director, La Hora N | Canal N | |
. | Jakaya M. Kikwete | President of Tanzania | Government | |
. | Jake Seid | President, Online and C2C Operations | Auction.com | |
. | Jamal Akl | Senior Group Vice-President, Sales, Proposals and Support | Consolidated Contractors Company (CCC) | |
. | James A. Forese | Chief Executive Officer, Securities and Banking, Institutional Clients Group | Citi | |
. | James A. Hendler | Tetherless World Professor of Computer Science, Department Head, Department of Computer Science | Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) | |
. | James Bacchus | Honorary Professor of Law | University of International Business and Economics | |
. | James C. Borel | Executive Vice-President | DuPont de Nemours and Company | |
. | James C. Smith | President and Chief Executive Officer | Thomson Reuters | |
. | James Cuno | President and Chief Executive Officer | The J. Paul Getty Trust | |
. | James Dimon | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | JPMorgan Chase & Co. | |
. | James E. Rogers | Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer | Duke Energy Corporation | |
. | James Fitterling | Executive Vice-President | The Dow Chemical Company | |
. | James G. Stavridis | Supreme Allied Commander Europe, North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), Brussels | Government | |
. | James Harding | Editor | The Times | |
. | James M. Flaherty | Minister of Finance of Canada | Government | |
. | James O’Rourke | Executive Vice-President, Operations and Chief Operating Officer | The Mosaic Company | |
. | James P. Gorman | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Morgan Stanley | |
. | James R. Lee | Chairman and Founder | Lee & Partners | |
. | James Rosenfield | Senior Vice-President, IHS and Co-Founder | IHS CERA | |
. | James S. Turley | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Ernst & Young | |
. | James T. Riady | Chief Executive Officer | Lippo Group | |
. | Jamie C. Sokalsky | President and Chief Executive Officer | Barrick Gold Corporation | |
. | Jamie Cooper-Hohn | President and Chief Executive Officer | The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) | |
. | Jamie McAuliffe | President and Chief Executive Officer | Education For Employment (EFE) | |
. | Jamil El Hage | Head, Business News | Al Arabiya | |
. | Jamil El Khazen | Chief Executive Officer | Jamyco Holding Luxembourg SA | |
. | Jamshyd N. Godrej | Chairman and Managing Director | Godrej & Boyce Mfg Co. Ltd | |
. | Jan Hommen | Chief Executive Officer | ING Group | |
. | Jan Luykx | Ambassador of Belgium | Embassy of Belgium | |
. | Jan-Eric Sundgren | Executive Vice-President, Public and Environmental Affairs | AB Volvo | |
. | Jane Fraser | Head, Citi Private Bank | Citi | |
. | Jane Okun-Bomba | Senior Vice-President and Chief Sustainability, Investor Relations and Corporate Communication Officer | IHS | |
. | Janice Marturano | Founder and Executive Director | Institute for Mindful Leadership | |
. | Janine di Giovanni | Conflict Reporter and Analyst | Vanity Fair | |
. | Janmejaya Sinha | Chairman, Asia-Pacific | The Boston Consulting Group | |
. | Jared Cohon | President | Carnegie Mellon University | |
. | Jaroslaw Starzyk | Ambassador of Poland | Embassy of Poland | |
. | Jasandra Nyker | Chief Executive Officer | BioTherm Energy (Pty) Ltd | |
. | Jasmine Whitbread | Chief Executive Officer | Save the Children International | |
. | Jason Li Yat-Sen | Director | The George Institute for Global Health | |
. | Jason Sadler | President, Cigna International | Cigna Corporation | |
. | Jaspal S. Bindra | Group Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer, Asia | Standard Chartered | |
. | Javed Sayed | Resident Editor | The Economic Times | |
. | Javier L—pez Madrid | Chief Executive Officer | Grupo Villar Mir | |
. | Javier Solana | President, Center for Global Economy and Geopolitics | ESADE | |
. | Jay Pryor | Vice-President, Corporate Business Development | Chevron Corporation | |
. | Jayne Plunkett | Division Head, Casualty and Member of the Group Management Board | Swiss Reinsurance Company Ltd | |
. | Jayoung Koo | President and Chief Executive Officer | SK Innovation | |
. | Jean du Rusquec | Senior Adviser | Total | |
. | Jean Lemierre | Senior Adviser to the Chairman | BNP Paribas | |
. | Jean Louis Chaussade | Chief Executive Officer | Suez Environnement | |
. | Jean-Charles Decaux | Chairman and Co-Chief Executive Officer | JCDecaux SA | |
. | Jean-Dominique Vassalli | Rector | University of Geneva | |
. | Jean-Franois Cirelli | Vice-Chairman and President | GDF SUEZ | |
. | Jean-Franois Demole | Managing Partner | Pictet & Cie Private Bankers | |
. | Jean-Franois van Boxmeer | Chairman of the Executive Board and Chief Executive Officer | HEINEKEN | |
. | Jean-Marc Delpon de Vaux | President, Consumer Products Division | Olayan Financing Company | |
. | Jean-Marc Vittori | Editor | Les Echos | |
. | Jean-Pascal Duvieusart | Member of the Board | PPF Group | |
. | Jean-Paul Chapel | Editor | France 2 | |
. | Jean-Paul Chifflet | Chief Executive Officer | CrŽdit Agricole SA | |
. | Jean-Paul Herteman | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Safran Group | |
. | Jean-Philippe Courtois | President | Microsoft International | |
. | Jean-Pierre Clamadieu | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Solvay SA | |
. | Jean-Pierre Cojan | Executive Vice-President, Strategy and Development | Safran Group | |
. | Jean-Pierre Cuoni | Chairman | EFG International | |
. | Jean-Pierre Robin | Columnist Editor | Le Figaro | |
. | Jean-Pierre Rosso | Chairman, World Economic Forum USA | Government | |
. | Jean-Yves Naouri | Chief Operating Officer | Publicis Groupe SA | |
. | Jeanne Bourgault | President | Internews | |
. | Jeannette M. Wing | President’s Professor of Computer Science and Department Head, Computer Science Department | Carnegie Mellon University | |
. | Jeff Fortenberry | Congressman from Nebraska (Republican), 1st District, USA | Government | |
. | Jeff Greene | Chief Executive Officer | Florida Sunshine Investments | |
. | Jeff Jarvis | Professor | City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism | |
. | Jeff Shell | President | NBCUniversal International | |
. | Jeffrey A. Rosen | Deputy Chairman | Lazard Group LLC | |
. | Jeffrey D. Sachs | Director | The Earth Institute at Columbia University | |
. | Jeffrey Deitch | Director | The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) | |
. | Jeffrey Dubin | Head, News and Events | European Broadcasting Union (EBU) | |
. | Jeffrey M. Drazen | Editor-in-Chief | The New England Journal of Medicine | |
. | Jennifer Elisseeff | Professor of Biomedical Engineering | Johns Hopkins University | |
. | Jens Martin Skibsted | Founding Partner | KiBiSi / Skibsted Ideation A/S | |
. | Jens O. Floe | Senior Vice-President and Regional Chief Executive Officer | International Container Terminal Services (ICTSI) | |
. | Jens Stoltenberg | Prime Minister of Norway | Government | |
. | Jens Ulltveit-Moe | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Umoe AS | |
. | Jeremy Heimans | Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Purpose | |
. | Jeremy Warner | Assistant Editor and Columnist | The Daily Telegraph | |
. | Jeroen van der Veer | Executive Member of the Governing Board | European Institute of Innovation and Technology | |
. | Jerome Peribere | President and Chief Operations Officer | Sealed Air Corp. | |
. | Jeromin Zettelmeyer | Deputy Chief Economist and Director, Research | European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) | |
. | Jerry Buhlmann | Chief Executive Officer | Aegis Group Plc | |
. | Ji Bin | Senior Editor | Xinhua News Agency | |
. | Jihad B. Khazen | Director | Al Hayat | |
. | Jill Ader | Board Member | Egon Zehnder International | |
. | Jill Otto | Associate Investor | JP Morgan | |
. | Jim Andrew | Executive Vice-President; Chief Strategy and Innovation Officer; Chairman, Sustainability Board; Member, Executive Committee | Royal Philips Electronics | |
. | Jim Frederick | Editor | Time International | |
. | Jim Hagemann Snabe | Co-Chief Executive Officer | SAP AG | |
. | Jim Leape | Director-General | WWF – World Wide Fund for Nature | |
. | Jim Leech | President and Chief Executive Officer | Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan | |
. | Jim Prokopanko | President and Chief Executive Officer | The Mosaic Company | |
. | Jim Roth | Co-Founder and Partner | LeapFrog Investments Ltd | |
. | Jim Wallis | President and Chief Executive Officer | Sojourners | |
. | Jim Yong Kim | President, The World Bank, Washington | Government | |
. | Jimmy Wales | Founder and Trustee | Wikimedia Foundation | |
. | Jin Liqun | Chairman of the Board of Supervisors, China Investment Corporation (CIC), People’s Republic of China | Government | |
. | Jin-Yong Cai | Executive Vice-President and Chief Executive Officer, International Finance Corporation (IFC), Washington DC | Government | |
. | Jiri Smejc | Chairman of the Supervisory Board | PPF Group | |
. | Jitesh Gadhia | Senior Managing Director | The Blackstone Group | |
. | Jo Lunder | Chief Executive Officer | VimpelCom Ltd | |
. | Joachim Faber | Chairman | Deutsche Bšrse AG | |
. | Joachim MŸller | Chief Finance Officer | Bilfinger SE | |
. | Joaqu’n Almunia | Vice-President and Commissioner in Charge of Competition, European Commission, Brussels | Government | |
. | Jochen R. Wermuth | Managing Partner | Wermuth Asset Management GmbH | |
. | Jock Mendoza-Wilson | Director, International and Investor Relations | System Capital Management | |
. | Joe Cerrell | Director, European Office | Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation | |
. | Joe Harlan | Executive Vice-President, Chemicals, Energy and Performance Materials | The Dow Chemical Company | |
. | Joe Saddi | Chairman of the Board | Booz & Company | |
. | Joe Schoendorf | Partner | Accel Partners | |
. | Joerg Wolle | President and Chief Executive Officer | DKSH Holding Ltd | |
. | Johan C. Aurik | Managing Partner and Chairman of the Board | A.T. Kearney SA NV | |
. | Johan Eliasch | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Head NV | |
. | Johan H. Andresen Jr | Owner and Chief Executive Officer | Ferd | |
. | Johan Karlstršm | President and Chief Executive Officer | Skanska AB | |
. | Johan Rockstršm | Executive Director | Stockholm Resilience Centre | |
. | Johann N. Schneider-Ammann | Federal Councillor of Economic Affairs, Education and Research EAER of Switzerland | Government | |
. | Johannes Gawaxab | Managing Director, Africa Operations | Old Mutual Namibia | |
. | John A. Quelch | Dean | China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) | |
. | John A. Smith | Partner, Global Head of Industrial Goods and Services Practice | Bain & Company Inc. | |
. | John B. Veihmeyer | Chairman | KPMG Americas | |
. | John Baird | Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada | Government | |
. | John Beard | Director, Department of Ageing and Life Course, World Health Organization (WHO), Geneva | Government | |
. | John Casey | Vice-President, International News and Programming | CNBC | |
. | John Chipman | Director-General and Chief Executive | The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) | |
. | John D. Wren | President and Chief Executive Officer | Omnicom Group Inc. | |
. | John Davies | Vice-President, Sales and Marketing and General Manager, World Ahead | Intel Corporation | |
. | John Dineen | President and Chief Executive Officer | GE Healthcare | |
. | John Ehara | Partner | Unison Capital Inc. | |
. | John Evans | General Secretary | Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD | |
. | John F. Ferraro | Global Chief Operating Officer | Ernst & Young | |
. | John Frater | Professor | University of Oxford | |
. | John Gapper | Columnist | The Financial Times | |
. | John Grotzinger | Fletcher Jones Professor of Geology | California Institute of Technology (CALTECH) | |
. | John H. McCall MacBain | Founder | Pamoja Capital SA | |
. | John Hering | Chief Executive Officer | Lookout Mobile Security Inc | |
. | John Hewko | General Secretary and Chief Executive Officer | Rotary International | |
. | John Hourican | Chief Executive Officer, Markets and International Banking | Royal Bank of Scotland | |
. | John J. DeGioia | President | Georgetown University | |
. | John J. Haley | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Towers Watson | |
. | John J. Studzinski | Senior Managing Director and Global Head, Blackstone Advisory Partners | The Blackstone Group | |
. | John K. Defterios | Anchor and Emerging Markets Editor | CNN International | |
. | John Knight | Executive Vice-President, Global Strategy and Business Development | Statoil (UK) Limited | |
. | John L. Hopkins | Group Executive, Corporate Development and New Ventures | Fluor Corporation | |
. | John Lipsky | Distinguished Visiting Scholar | The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) | |
. | John M. Beck | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Aecon Group Inc. | |
. | John M. Neill | Group Chief Executive | Unipart Group of Companies | |
. | John Maeda | President | Rhode Island School of Design | |
. | John Manley | President and Chief Executive Officer | Canadian Council of Chief Executives | |
. | John McArthur | Senior Fellow | United Nations Foundation | |
. | John McCain | Senator from Arizona (Republican), USA | Government | |
. | John McDonald | Vice-President and Chief Technology Officer | Chevron Corporation | |
. | John Micklethwait | Editor-in-Chief | The Economist | |
. | John Murray | Group Communications Director | Prudential Plc | |
. | John Nelson | Chairman | Lloyd’s | |
. | John Noseworthy | President and Chief Executive Officer | Mayo Clinic | |
. | John O. Onaiyekan | Cardinal and Roman Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, Catholic Archdiocese of Abuja, Nigeria | Government | |
. | John Owen | Chief Executive Officer, International Banking | Royal Bank of Scotland | |
. | John P. Drzik | President and Chief Executive Officer | Oliver Wyman Group (MMC) | |
. | John Paul Macdonald | Senior Vice-President, Human Resources and Public Affairs | Bombardier Inc. | |
. | John R. Kasich | Governor of the State of Ohio, USA | Government | |
. | John Rice | Vice-Chairman | GE | |
. | John Ridding | Chief Executive Officer | The Financial Times | |
. | John Rosanvallon | President and Chief Executive Officer | Dassault Falcon | |
. | John T. Chambers | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Cisco | |
. | John W. Hickenlooper | Governor of Colorado, USA | Government | |
. | John Walecka | Founding Partner | Redpoint Ventures | |
. | John Zhao | Chief Executive Officer | Hony Capital Ltd | |
. | Joichi Ito | Director, Media Lab | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) | |
. | Jon Fredrik Baksaas | President and Chief Executive Officer | Telenor ASA | |
. | Jon Leibowitz | Chairman, Federal Trade Commission, USA | Government | |
. | Jon Wellinghoff | Chairman, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, USA | Government | |
. | Jon Zehner | Global Head, Capital Markets | Jones Lang LaSalle | |
. | Jonas Neihardt | Senior Vice-President, Government Affairs | Hilton Worldwide | |
. | Jonas Prising | President | ManpowerGroup | |
. | Jonathan Haidt | Thomas Cooley Professor of Ethical Leadership, Business and Society Program | Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University | |
. | Jonathan Hsu | Chief Executive Officer | RecycleBank | |
. | Jonathan Korngold | Managing Director, Global Head of Financial Services and Co-Head of Healthcare | General Atlantic LLC | |
. | Jonathan Levin | Professor of Economics | Stanford University | |
. | Jonathan M. Rothberg | Founder; Chief Executive Officer, Ion Torrent | Life Technologies Corp. | |
. | Jonathan Reckford | Chief Executive Officer | Habitat for Humanity International (HFH) | |
. | Jonathan Symonds | Chief Financial Officer | Novartis International AG | |
. | Jonathan Teklu | Co-Founder and Managing Partner | Springstar GmbH | |
. | Jorge Humberto Merino Tafur | Minister of Energy and Mining of Peru | Government | |
. | Jorma Ollila | Chairman | Royal Dutch Shell plc | |
. | Jorn Madslien | Business and Economics Features Editor, Online | BBC News | |
. | Jose Carlos Vidal | Senior Adviser | Petroleo Brasileiro SA – PETROBRAS | |
. | Jose Luis Silva Martinot | Minister of Foreign Trade and Tourism of Peru | Government | |
. | Jose Soares dos Santos | Chairman | Unilever Jer—nimo Martins Lda | |
. | Josef Ackermann | Vice-Chairman of the Foundation Board of the World Economic Forum; Chairman of the Board | Zurich Insurance Group | |
. | Josef Joffe | Publisher-Editor | Die Zeit | |
. | Joseph Chernesky | Senior Vice-President, Intellectual Property | Kudelski Group | |
. | Joseph E. Stiglitz | Professor | Columbia University | |
. | Joseph Echevarria | Chief Executive Officer | Deloitte | |
. | Joseph Jimenez | Chief Executive Officer | Novartis AG | |
. | Joseph M. Hogan | Chief Executive Officer | ABB Ltd | |
. | Joseph M. Tucci | Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer | EMC Corporation | |
. | Joseph Peter | Executive Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer | Nissan Motor Co. Limited | |
. | Joseph S. Nye Jr | Distinguished Service Professor | Harvard Kennedy School of Government | |
. | Josette Sheeran | Vice-Chairman and Member of the Managing Board, World Economic Forum | Government | |
. | Josh Lerner | Jacob H. Schiff Professor of Investment Banking | Harvard Business School | |
. | Joshua Fink | Chief Executive Officer | Enso Capital Management LLC | |
. | Joshua G. James | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Domo | |
. | JosŽ AndrŽs | Chef and Owner | ThinkFoodGroup | |
. | JosŽ Antonio Fern‡ndez Carbajal | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | FEMSA | |
. | JosŽ Graziano da Silva | Director-General, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Rome | Government | |
. | JosŽ Manuel Entrecanales Domecq | President and Chief Executive Officer | Acciona SA | |
. | JosŽ Mar’a çlvarez Pallete | Chief Operating Officer | Telefonica SA | |
. | Joyce Russell | President | Adecco Staffing US | |
. | JP Rangaswami | Chief Scientist | Salesforce.com | |
. | Jšrg Asmussen | Member of the Executive Board, European Central Bank, Frankfurt am Main | Government | |
. | Jšrg Eigendorf | Chief Reporter and Member of the Editorial Board | Die Welt | |
. | Juan Carlos Castilla-Rubio | Chief Executive Officer | Planetary Skin Institute | |
. | Juan Carlos Ortiz | President, US Hispanic, Latin America and Spain | DDB Latina | |
. | Juan Carlos Pinz—n Bueno | Minister of National Defence of Colombia | Government | |
. | Juan Gilberto Marin Quintero | President and Chief Executive Officer | Grupo Productos Internacionales Mabe SA de CV | |
. | Juan JosŽ Daboub | Founding Chief Executive Officer | Global Adaptation Institute (GAIN) | |
. | Juan Luis Cebrian Echarri | Executive Chairman | Grupo Prisa | |
. | Juan Manuel Santos | President of the Republic of Colombia | Government | |
. | Jubril Adewale Tinubu | Group Chief Executive | Oando Plc | |
. | Judith Rodin | President | The Rockefeller Foundation | |
. | Judy Cheng-Hopkins | Assistant Secretary-General for Peacebuilding Support | United Nations Peacekeeping (UNDPKO) | |
. | Juergen Griesbeck | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | streetfootballworld | |
. | Juergen Tinggren | Chief Executive Officer | Schindler Holding Ltd | |
. | Jules A. Hoffmann | Professor, Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology | University of Strasbourg | |
. | Julia Marton-Lefvre | Director-General | International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) | |
. | Julia R. Greer | Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Mechanics | California Institute of Technology (CALTECH) | |
. | Julian Roberts | Group Chief Executive | Old Mutual Plc | |
. | Juliana Rotich | Co-Founder and Executive Director | Ushahidi Inc. | |
. | Julie Hamilton | Chief of Staff | The Coca-Cola Company | |
. | Julie Louise Gerberding | President, Merck Vaccines | MSD | |
. | Julien Anfruns | Director-General | International Council of Museums | |
. | Julien De Wilde | Chairman | Nyrstar | |
. | Julien Hawari | Co-Chief Executive Officer and Editor-in-Chief | Trends | |
. | Julio Portalatin | President and Chief Executive Officer | Mercer (MMC) | |
. | Julius Genachowski | Chairman, Federal Communications Commission (FCC), USA | Government | |
. | Jun Arai | President and Representative Director | Showa Shell Sekiyu KK | |
. | Junichi Hamada | President | The University of Tokyo | |
. | Justine Cassell | Charles M. Geschke Director, Human Computer Interaction Institute | Carnegie Mellon University | |
. | Jutta Urpilainen | Minister of Finance of Finland | Government | |
. | Jyotiraditya Madhavrao Scindia | Minister of State (IC) for Power of India | Government | |
. | JŸrg Zeltner | Chief Executive Officer, Wealth Management | UBS AG | |
. | JŸrgen Dunsch | Senior Economics Editor | Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung | |
. | JŸrgen Fitschen | Co-Chairman of the Management Board and Group Executive Committee | Deutsche Bank AG | |
. | JŸrgen R. Grossmann | Owner | GeorgsmarienhŸtte Holding GmbH | |
. | Jyrki Raina | General Secretary | IndustriAll Global Union | |
. | JŽrome Contamine | Executive Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer | Sanofi | |
. | JŽr™me Schurink | Chief Financial Officer | Gunvor Group | |
. | Kairat Kelimbetov | Deputy Prime Minister of Kazakhstan | Government | |
. | Kala Mulqueeny | Principal Counsel | Asian Development Bank | |
. | Kamahl Santamaria | Presenter | Al Jazeera English | |
. | Kamal Ahmed | Business Editor | The Sunday Telegraph | |
. | Kamal Bin Ahmed Mohammed | Minister of Transportation and Acting Chief Executive | Bahrain Economic Development Board | |
. | Kamal Nath | Minister of Urban Development and Minsiter of Parliamentary Affairs of India | Government | |
. | Kanayo Nwanze | President, International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), Rome | Government | |
. | Kandeh Yumkella | Director-General, United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), Vienna | Government | |
. | Kapil Wadhawan | Chairman | Wadhawan Group | |
. | Karan Bhatia | Vice-President and Senior Counsel, Global Government Affairs and Policy | General Electric Company | |
. | Karim El Chiaty | Deputy Chairman | Travco Group International Holding SAE | |
. | Karim Massimov | Head of Presidential Administration, Office of the President of Kazakhstan | Government | |
. | Karin Johansson | State Secretary, Ministry of Health and Social Affairs of Sweden | Government | |
. | Karl Hofmann | President and Chief Executive Officer | Population Services International (PSI) | |
. | Kasper Rorsted | Chief Executive Officer | Henkel AG & Co. KGaA | |
. | Kate Robertson | UK Group Chairman | Havas Worldwide UK Group | |
. | Katharina Norden | Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder | Three Coins GmbH | |
. | Katherine Garrett-Cox | Chief Executive Officer and Chief Investment Officer | Alliance Trust Plc | |
. | Katherine Klein | Edward H. Bowman Professor of Management | The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania | |
. | Kathie Koo | Consultant | The Boston Consulting Group | |
. | Kathy Bloomgarden | Chief Executive Officer | Ruder Finn Inc. | |
. | Kathy Calvin | Chief Executive Officer | United Nations Foundation | |
. | Katinka Barysch | Deputy Director | Centre for European Reform (CER) | |
. | Katy Bšrner | Victor H. Yngve Professor and Director | The Cyberinfrastructure for Network Science (CNS) Center, Indiana University | |
. | Katy Yung | Associate Director | RS Group | |
. | Kavita N. Ramdas | Representative | Ford Foundation | |
. | Kay Granger | Congresswoman from Texas (Republican), 12th District, USA | Government | |
. | Kazuo Inamori | Director, Chairman Emeritus | Japan Airlines Co. Ltd | |
. | Keisuke Nishimura | Managing Director | Kirin Holdings Company Limited | |
. | Keith Trent | Chief Operating Officer | Duke Energy Corporation | |
. | Keith Weed | Chief Marketing and Communications Officer | Unilever | |
. | Keld Louie Pedersen | International Economics Editor | Morgenavisen Jyllands-Posten | |
. | Kelly Hampaul | Partner | Taconic Capital Advisors | |
. | Kelvin Dushnisky | Senior Executive Vice-President | Barrick Gold Corporation | |
. | Kemi Lala Akindoju | Facilitator | Lufodo Academy of Performing Arts (LAPA) | |
. | Ken Choi | Political News Editor | TV Chosun | |
. | Ken Howery | Co-Founder and Partner | Founders Fund | |
. | Ken Hu | Deputy Chairman | Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd | |
. | Kenneth A. Hersh | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | NGP Energy Capital Management | |
. | Kenneth C. Frazier | Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer | MSD | |
. | Kenneth D. Tuchman | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | TeleTech Holdings Inc. | |
. | Kenneth Goldman | Chief Financial Officer | Yahoo! Inc. | |
. | Kenneth M. Jacobs | Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer | Lazard Group LLC | |
. | Kenneth Rogoff | Thomas D. Cabot Professor of Public Policy and Professor of Economics | Harvard University | |
. | Kenneth Roth | Executive Director | Human Rights Watch | |
. | Kerfalla YansanŽ | Minister of Economy and Finance of Guinea | Government | |
. | Kevin Ali | President, Emerging Markets | MSD | |
. | Kevin J. Jenkins | President and Chief Executive Officer | World Vision International | |
. | Kevin Kelly | Chief Executive Officer | Heidrick & Struggles | |
. | Kevin Lu | Regional Director, Asia-Pacific MIGA | MIGA – World Bank Group | |
. | Kevin Lynch | Chief Technology Officer | Adobe Systems Inc. | |
. | Kevin Lynch | Vice-Chair | BMO Financial Group | |
. | Kevin Reinhart | Interim President and Chief Executive Officer | Nexen Inc. | |
. | Kevin Rudd | Member of Parliament, Australia | Government | |
. | Kevin Steinberg | Chief Operating Officer, World Economic Forum USA | Government | |
. | Khaled A. Al Qahtani | Vice-Chairman | Abdulhadi A. Al Qahtani Group | |
. | Khaled A. Juffali | Member of the Executive Committee and Managing Partner | E. A. Juffali and Brothers | |
. | Khalid A. Al Falih | President and Chief Executive Officer | Saudi Aramco | |
. | Khalid A. Alireza | Executive Director | Xenel Group | |
. | Khalid Abdulla-Janahi | Honorary Chairman | Vision 3 | |
. | Kia Behnia | Senior Vice-President and Chief Technology Officer | BMC Software Inc. | |
. | Kim Choong-Soo | Governor of the Bank of Korea | Government | |
. | Kim Dong Kwan | Chief Strategy Officer | Hanwha SolarOne | |
. | Kim Fejfer | Chief Executive Officer, APM Terminals | A.P. M¿ller-Maersk A/S | |
. | Kim Jae-Youl | President | Samsung Engineering Co. Ltd | |
. | Kim Kyoung-Eun | Vice-President | Hanwha Biologics, Hanwha Chemical Corporation | |
. | Kim Nelson | Senior Vice-President, External Relations | General Mills Inc. | |
. | Kim Samuel-Johnson | Director | Samuel Group of Companies | |
. | Kiran Kumar Grandhi | Chairman, Urban Infrastructure, Highways and Sports | GMR Group | |
. | Kirill Dmitriev | Chief Executive Officer | RDIF Management Company LLC | |
. | Kirill Roubinski | Chief Executive Officer | EastOne Group | |
. | Kirk D. Grimes | Group Executive, Operations | Fluor Corporation | |
. | Kishore Mahbubani | Dean | Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore | |
. | Kittiratt Na-Ranong | Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance of Thailand | Government | |
. | Kiyoshi Kurokawa | Professor | National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS) | |
. | Klaas Knot | Governor of the Central Bank of Netherlands (DNB) | Government | |
. | Klaus Engel | Chief Executive Officer | Evonik Industries AG | |
. | Klaus Kleinfeld | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Alcoa Inc. | |
. | Klaus P. Regling | Managing Director, European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), Luxembourg | Government | |
. | Klaus Schwab | Founder and Executive Chairman, World Economic Forum | Government | |
. | Knut Engelmann | Managing Editor | The Wall Street Journal Deutschland | |
. | Kofi Annan | Chairman, Kofi Annan Foundation, Switzerland; Secretary-General, United Nations (1997-2006) | Government | |
. | Koji Sekimizu | Secretary-General, International Maritime Organization (IMO), London | Government | |
. | Kolapo Lawson | Chairman | Ecobank Transnational Inc. | |
. | Kommer Damen | Chairman | Damen Shipyards Group | |
. | Korhan Kurdoglu | Chairman | Ata Holding | |
. | Kris Gopalakrishnan | Executive Co-Chairman | Infosys Ltd | |
. | Kris Peeters | Minister-President of the Government of Flanders, Belgium | Government | |
. | Krishan Kumar Modi | Chairman | Modi Enterprises | |
. | Krishnan Rajagopalan | Global Managing Partner, Technology and Services Practice | Heidrick & Struggles | |
. | Kristin D. Rechberger | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Dynamic Planet | |
. | Ksenia Yudaeva | Head, Economics Expert Department, G20 Sherpa, Office of the President of the Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Kumar M. Birla | Group Chairman | The Aditya Birla Group | |
. | Kumi Naidoo | Executive Director | Greenpeace International | |
. | Kunio Mikuriya | Secretary-General, World Customs Organization (WCO), Brussels | Government | |
. | Kurt Bock | Chairman of the Board of Executive Directors | BASF SE | |
. | Kwang-Woo Jun | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, National Pension Service (NPS), Republic of Korea | Government | |
. | L. Markus Karlsson | Business Editor | France 24 | |
. | L. Rafael Reif | President | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
. | L‡szl— Andor | Commissioner for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion, European Commission, Brussels | Government | |
. | Lakshmi N. Mittal | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | ArcelorMittal | |
. | Lance Uggla | Chief Executive Officer | Markit Group Limited | |
. | Larissa Herda | Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President | tw telecom | |
. | Larry D. Thompson | Executive Vice-President, Government Affairs, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary | PepsiCo Inc. | |
. | Lars Christian Bacher | Executive Vice-President, International Development and Production | Statoil ASA | |
. | Lars G. Nordstršm | Chairman of the Board | Vattenfall AB | |
. | Lars L¿kke Rasmussen | Chair of the Council, Global Green Growth Institute | Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI) | |
. | Lars Rebien Sorensen | President and Chief Executive Officer | Novo Nordisk A/S | |
. | Laura Chinchilla | President of Costa Rica | Government | |
. | Laura D’Andrea Tyson | S. K. and Angela Chan Professor of Global Management | Haas School of Business | |
. | Laura Desmond | Global Chief Executive Officer | Starcom Mediavest Group | |
. | Laura Liswood | Secretary-General | Council of Women World Leaders | |
. | Laura Mirachian | Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Italy | Permanent Mission of Italy | |
. | Laurence Parisot | President | MEDEF | |
. | Laurent Salvador Lamothe | Prime Minister of Haiti | Government | |
. | Laurent Troger | President, Division Services and United Kingdom | Bombardier Transportation GmbH | |
. | Laurent Vigier | Director, European and International Affairs and Member of the Executive Committee | Caisse des DŽp™ts et Consignations (CDC) | |
. | Laurie Hays | Executive Editor, Company News | Bloomberg News | |
. | Laurie L. Dippenaar | Chairman | FirstRand Ltd | |
. | Lawrence Elliott | Economics Editor | The Guardian | |
. | Lawrence H. Summers | Charles W. Eliot University Professor | Harvard University | |
. | Lawrence M. Krauss | Professor, School of Earth and Space Exploration | Arizona State University | |
. | Lawrence Rosen | Chief Financial Officer | Deutsche Post DHL | |
. | Le Thi Thu Thuy | Vice-Chairwoman and Chief Executive Officer | Vingroup Joint Stock Company | |
. | Lee A. McIntire | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | CH2M HILL Companies Ltd | |
. | Lee C. Bollinger | President | Columbia University | |
. | Lee Geun | Professor of International Relations, Graduate School of International Studies | Seoul National University | |
. | Lee Sang Yup | Distinguished Professor, Director and Dean | Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) | |
. | Leif Oestling | Member of the Board of Management | Volkswagen AG | |
. | Leo Schlesinger | Chief Executive Officer and Country Head | Masisa Mexico Organization | |
. | Leon Semenenko | Senior Executive Adviser to the Chief Executive Officer | Metalloinvest Management Company LLC | |
. | Leonhard Birnbaum | Chief Commercial Officer | RWE AG | |
. | Leonhard H. Fischer | Chief Executive Officer | RHJ International SA | |
. | Leonid Kozhara | Minister of Foreign Affairs | Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine | |
. | Leonid V. Mikhelson | Chairman of the Executive Board and General Director | OAO Novatek | |
. | Leslie J. Baja | Ambassador of the Philippines | Embassy of the Philippines | |
. | Leticia Jauregui Casanueva | Founder and Executive Director | Crea Comunidades De Emprendedores Sociales | |
. | Li Daokui | Director | Center for China in the World Economy (CCWE) | |
. | Li Jie | Executive Director of the Board | Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd | |
. | Li Jingtian | Senior Vice-President, Central Party School of the Communist Party of China, People’s Republic of China | Government | |
. | Liam Condon | Chief Executive Officer | Bayer CropScience AG | |
. | Liam E. McGee | Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer | The Hartford | |
. | Lily Zondo | Member of the Board | Eskom Holdings SOC Limited | |
. | Lim Siong-Guan | Group President, Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC), Singapore | Government | |
. | Lin Boqiang | Director | China Center for Energy Economics Research, Xiamen University | |
. | Lina Lee Nakyung | Vice-President, Strategic Relations Officer | SK Holdings | |
. | Linda Brice–o | Musician | Fundaci—n Musical Sim—n Bol’var | |
. | Linda Lorimer | Vice-President | Yale University | |
. | Linda P. Fried | Dean and DeLamar Professor of Public Health | Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University | |
. | Linda Rottenberg | Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Endeavor | |
. | Linda Woodhead | Professor of Sociology of Religion, Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion | Lancaster University | |
. | Lionel Barber | Editor | The Financial Times | |
. | Lisa Jucca | Chief Financial Correspondent, Italy | Thomson Reuters | |
. | Lisa MacCallum Carter | Vice-President, Access to Sport | Nike Inc. | |
. | Lisa Robins | Head, Global Transaction Banking, Asia-Pacific | Deutsche Bank AG | |
. | Lisa Witter | Partner and Chief Change Officer | Fenton | |
. | Lise Kingo | Executive Vice-President and Chief-of-Staff | Novo Nordisk A/S | |
. | Liu Guijin | Dean, China-Africa International Business School | Zhejiang Normal University | |
. | Liu Jiren | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Neusoft Corporation | |
. | Liu Zhenmin | Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative of the People’s Republic of China | Permanent Mission of the People’s Republic of China | |
. | Liz Alderman | Chief Business Correspondent | International Herald Tribune | |
. | Liz Claman | Anchor | Fox Business Network | |
. | Lloyd C. Blankfein | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | The Goldman Sachs Group Inc. | |
. | Lluis Bassets | Op-Ed Editor | El Pa’s | |
. | Lo•c Le Meur | Chief Executive Officer | LeWeb | |
. | Lonny Reisman | Chief Medical Officer | Aetna Inc. | |
. | Lord Leitch | Chairman | BUPA | |
. | Lord Malloch-Brown | Chairman, Europe, Middle East and Africa | FTI Consulting | |
. | Lord Rothermere | Chairman | Daily Mail & General Trust Plc (DMGT) | |
. | Lord Stern | Chair | The Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment | |
. | Lorenzo A. Mendoza | Chief Executive Officer | Empresas Polar | |
. | Loretta Minghella | Chief Executive Officer | Christian Aid | |
. | Lori Harnick | General Manager, Citizenship and Public Affairs | Microsoft Corporation | |
. | Louise Arbour | President and Chief Executive Officer | International Crisis Group (ICG) | |
. | Lubna S. Olayan | Deputy Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer | Olayan Financing Company | |
. | Luc Bertrand | Chairman of the Executive Committee and Chief Executive Officer | Ackermans & Van Haaren NV | |
. | Luc Coene | Governor of the National Bank of Belgium | Government | |
. | Luc Oursel | President and Chief Executive Officer | AREVA | |
. | Luc Oyoubi | Minister of Economy, Employment and Sustainable Development of Gabon | Government | |
. | Luca de Meo | Member of the Board of Management, Sales and Marketing | AUDI AG | |
. | Luciano Coutinho | President, Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES), Brazil | Government | |
. | Luella Chavez D’Angelo | Chief Communications Officer | The Western Union Company | |
. | Luis A. Moreno | President, Inter-American Development Bank, Washington DC | Government | |
. | Luis Alvarez Satorre | Chief Executive Officer, Global Services | BT Group Plc | |
. | Luis Conceicao do Amaral | President of the Management Board | Eurocash SA | |
. | Luis de Guindos Jurado | Minister of Economic Affairs and Competitiveness of Spain | Government | |
. | Luis Felipe Castellanos | Chief Executive Officer | Interbank | |
. | Luis Miguel Castilla Rubio | Minister of Economy and Finance of Peru | Government | |
. | Luis Videgaray Caso | Secretary of Finance and Public Credit of Mexico | Government | |
. | Lutfey Siddiqi | Adjunct Professor and Banker | National University of Singapore, RMI | |
. | Lutz Knappmann | Deputy Editor-in-Chief | SŸddeutsche Zeitung GmbH | |
. | Luvsantseren Orgil | Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative of Mongolia | Permanent Mission of Mongolia | |
. | Lynda Gratton | Professor of Management Practice | London Business School | |
. | Lynn St Amour | President and Chief Executive Officer | The Internet Society (ISOC) | |
. | M. Shafik Gabr | Chairman and Managing Director | ARTOC Group for Investment and Development | |
. | Ma Jun | Director | Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs | |
. | Ma Weihua | President and Chief Executive Officer | China Merchants Bank | |
. | Ma Yansong | Founder and Principal Architect | MAD Architects | |
. | Mabel van Oranje | Chair | Girls Not Brides | |
. | Macky Sall | President of Senegal | Government | |
. | Madeleine Brot | Head of International News | Swiss Television RTS | |
. | Madhu Kannan | Group Head, Business Development | Tata Sons Ltd | |
. | Madhu Koneru | Group Executive Director | Trimex International FZE | |
. | Magid Abraham | Co-Founder, President and Chief Executive Officer | comScore Inc. | |
. | Mahmood Al Kooheji | Chief Executive Officer | Bahrain Mumtalakat Holding Company | |
. | Mairead Lavery | Vice-President, Finance | Bombardier Aerospace | |
. | Majid Jafar | Managing Director of the Board | Dana Gas PJSC | |
. | Majid S. Al Ghurair | Chief Executive Officer | Al-Ghurair Group of Companies | |
. | Malcolm Sweeting | Senior Partner | Clifford Chance LLP | |
. | Malvinder Mohan Singh | Executive Chairman | Fortis Healthcare Ltd | |
. | Manfredi Lefebvre dÔOvidio di Balsorano | Chairman | Silversea Cruises Group | |
. | Manish Kejriwal | Founding Partner | Kedaara Capital Advisors LLP | |
. | Manoj Kohli | Chief Executive Officer (International) and Joint Managing Director | Bharti Airtel Limited | |
. | Manuel Kohnstamm | Senior Vice-President and Chief Policy Officer | Liberty Global Inc. | |
. | Manuela Kasper-Claridge | Head, Business Department | Deutsche Welle TV | |
. | Manvinder S. Banga | Operating Partner | Clayton, Dubilier & Rice LLP | |
. | Mar’a Claudia Lacouture | President | Proexport Colombia | |
. | Mara Swan | Executive Vice-President, Global Strategy and Talent | ManpowerGroup | |
. | Marc Bolland | Chief Executive | Marks & Spencer Plc | |
. | Marc Holtzman | Chairman | Meridian Capital Asia Limited | |
. | Marc Kielburger | Co-Founder | Free the Children | |
. | Marc N. Casper | President and Chief Executive Officer | Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. | |
. | Marc R. Benioff | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Salesforce.com | |
. | Marc Spiegler | Director | Art Basel | |
. | Marc Van Ameringen | Executive Director | GAIN (Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition) | |
. | Marc van Gelder | Chief Executive Officer | Mediq NV | |
. | Marc Walder | Chief Executive Officer | Ringier AG | |
. | Marcelino Fern‡ndez Verdes | Chief Executive Officer | Hochtief Aktiengesellschaft | |
. | Marcello Sala | Executive Vice-Chairman of the Management Board | Intesa Sanpaolo SpA | |
. | Marcelo Claure | President, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer | Brightstar Corp. | |
. | Marco Comastri | President and General Manager, Europe, Middle East and Africa | CA Technologies | |
. | Marco Dunand | Co-Founder and Chairman | Mercuria Energy Group Ltd | |
. | Marco Panara | Chief Editor, Business and Finance | La Repubblica | |
. | Marcos Bulgheroni | Executive Vice-Chairman and Board Member | Bridas Corporation | |
. | Margaret A. Hamburg | Commissioner, US Food and Drug Administration, USA | Government | |
. | Margarita Louis-Dreyfus | Chairman | Louis Dreyfus Group | |
. | Margery Kraus | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | APCO Worldwide Inc. | |
. | Margo Georgiadis | President, Americas Operations | Google Inc. | |
. | Mari Elka Pangestu | Minister of Tourism and Creative Economy of Indonesia | Government | |
. | Maria Bartiromo | Anchor, Closing Bell, Anchor and Managing Editor, Wall Street Journal Report | CNBC | |
. | Maria Cristina Frias | Member of the Board and Columnist | Folha de S‹o Paulo | |
. | Maria das Graas Silva Foster | Chief Executive Officer | Petroleo Brasileiro SA – PETROBRAS | |
. | Maria Ramos | Chief Executive, Africa, Barclays; Group Chief Executive | Absa Group Ltd | |
. | Maria van der Hoeven | Executive Director, International Energy Agency, Paris | Government | |
. | Marie-Gabrielle Ineichen-Fleisch | State Secretary for Economic Affairs of Switzerland | Government | |
. | Mariette DiChristina | Editor-in-Chief | Scientific American | |
. | Marijn E. Dekkers | Chairman of the Board of Management | Bayer AG | |
. | Marina Giori-Lhota | Chairman of the Supervisory Board | Daniel Swarovski Corporation | |
. | Mario Diaz-Balart | Congressman from Florida (Republican), 21st District, USA | Government | |
. | Mario Draghi | President, European Central Bank, Frankfurt | Government | |
. | Mario Greco | Group Chief Executive Officer | Generali | |
. | Mario I. Blejer | Vice-Chairman | Banco Hipotecario SA | |
. | Mario Monti | Prime Minister of Italy | Government | |
. | Mario Moretti Polegato | Chairman | Geox SpA | |
. | Marissa Mayer | Chief Executive Officer | Yahoo! Inc. | |
. | Mark Bertolini | Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President | Aetna Inc. | |
. | Mark D. Otty | Area Managing Partner, EMEIA | Ernst & Young | |
. | Mark Hoffman | President and Chief Executive Officer | CNBC | |
. | Mark Hyman | Chairman of the Board | The Institute for Functional Medicine | |
. | Mark J. Carney | Governor of the Bank of Canada | Government | |
. | Mark MacGann | Senior Vice-President | NYSE Euronext | |
. | Mark Pagel | Evolutionary Theorist | University of Reading | |
. | Mark Pieth | Professor of Criminal Law and Criminology | University of Basel | |
. | Mark R. Dybul | Executive Director | The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM) | |
. | Mark Read | Chief Executive Officer, WPP Digital | WPP Plc | |
. | Mark Ruiz | Co-Founder and President | MicroVentures | |
. | Mark Rutte | Prime Minister and Minister of General Affairs of the Netherlands | Government | |
. | Mark Spelman | Global Head of Strategy | Accenture | |
. | Mark Suzman | Managing Director, International Policy and Programs | Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation | |
. | Mark Tercek | President and Chief Executive Officer | The Nature Conservancy | |
. | Mark Vergnano | Executive Vice-President | DuPont de Nemours and Company | |
. | Mark Weinberger | Global Chairman and Chief Executive Officer-elect | Ernst & Young | |
. | Mark Williams | Professor of Clinical Psychology | University of Oxford | |
. | Mark Wiseman | President and Chief Executive Officer | Canada Pension Plan Investment Board | |
. | Markus Spillmann | Editor-in-Chief | Neue ZŸrcher Zeitung | |
. | Marne Levine | Vice-President, Global Public Policy | Facebook Inc. | |
. | Martin Blessing | Chairman of the Board of Managing Directors | Commerzbank AG | |
. | Martin Burke | Ambassador of Ireland | Embassy of Ireland | |
. | Martin Burt | Minister, Secretary-General and Chief of Cabinet, Office of the President of Paraguay | Government | |
. | Martin C. Halusa | Chief Executive Officer | Apax Partners LLP | |
. | Martin Dahinden | Director-General, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), Switzerland | Government | |
. | Martin Francisco Antranik Eurnekian | President and Chief Executive Officer | America International LLC | |
. | Martin Hesse | Economy Editor | Der Spiegel | |
. | Martin J. O’Malley | Governor of Maryland, USA | Government | |
. | Martin Reitz | General Partner; Member, Global Management Committee | Rothschild GmbH | |
. | Martin Richenhagen | Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer | AGCO Corporation | |
. | Martin Schulz | President, European Parliament, Brussels | Government | |
. | Martin Senn | Group Chief Executive Officer | Zurich Insurance Group | |
. | Martin Spieler | Editor-in-Chief | SonntagsZeitung | |
. | Martin Sutherland | Managing Director | BAE Systems Detica | |
. | Martin W. Morgan | Chief Executive Officer | Daily Mail & General Trust Plc (DMGT) | |
. | Martin Winterkorn | Chairman of the Board of Management | Volkswagen AG | |
. | Martin Wittig | Chief Executive Officer | Roland Berger Strategy Consultants | |
. | Martin Wolf | Associate Editor and Chief Economics Commentator | The Financial Times | |
. | Martyn Parker | Chairman, Global Partnerships | Swiss Reinsurance Company | |
. | Marwan Shakarchi | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | MKS (Switzerland) SA | |
. | Mary A. Tolan | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Accretive Health Inc. | |
. | Mary Callahan Erdoes | Chief Executive Officer, Asset Management | JPMorgan Chase & Co. | |
. | Mary Jordan | Chief of Content, Forums and Political Debates, and Editor, Special Reports | The Washington Post | |
. | Mary Robinson | President | Mary Robinson Foundation-Climate Justice | |
. | Masoud Barzani | President of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq | Government | |
. | Mathias Dšpfner | Chief Executive Officer | Axel Springer AG | |
. | Matt Brittin | Vice-President, Northern and Central Europe | ||
. | Matt Mullenweg | Founder | WordPress | |
. | Matthew A. Winkler | Editor-in-Chief | Bloomberg News | |
. | Matthew Freud | Chairman | Freud Communications | |
. | Matthew Grob | Executive Vice-President and Chief Technology Officer | Qualcomm | |
. | Matthew J. Harrington | Global Chief Operating Officer | Edelman | |
. | Matthew Layton | Global Head, Corporate Practice and Partner | Clifford Chance LLP | |
. | Matthew Miller | Billionaires Editor | Bloomberg News | |
. | Matthew Murray | Deputy Editor-in-Chief | The Wall Street Journal | |
. | Matthew Prince | Chief Executive Officer | CloudFlare | |
. | Matthieu Ricard | Director | Karuna-Shechen | |
. | Maurice A. Amon | Executive Vice-Chairman | SICPA Holding SA | |
. | Maurice Brenninkmeijer | Chairman of the Supervisory Board | COFRA Holding AG | |
. | Maurice LŽvy | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Publicis Groupe SA | |
. | Mauricio Borges | President | APEX-Brasil (Trade and Investment Promotion Agency) | |
. | Mauricio C‡rdenas | Minister of Finance and Public Credit of Colombia | Government | |
. | Mauro Saladini | Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice-President | Kudelski Group | |
. | Max Levchin | Adviser | Founders Fund | |
. | Max Price | Vice-Chancellor | University of Cape Town | |
. | Max von Bismarck | Partner and Chief Executive Officer, Europe | Skybridge Capital | |
. | Maxim Timchenko | Chief Executive Officer | DTEK | |
. | Maximilian Zimmerer | Member of the Board of Management | Allianz SE | |
. | Maximus Johnity Ongkili | Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation of Malaysia | Government | |
. | Mazen S. Darwazeh | Chairman, MENA | Hikma Pharmaceuticals Plc | |
. | Meg McCarthy | Executive Vice-President, Innovation, Technology and Service Operations | Aetna Inc. | |
. | Meghann Gunderman | Executive Director | The Foundation For Tomorrow | |
. | Mehmet Simsek | Minister of Finance of Turkey | Government | |
. | Mehmet Zafer Caglayan | Minister of Economy of Turkey | Government | |
. | Melanie Walker | Deputy Director, Special Initiatives | Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation | |
. | Melchior de Muralt | Managing Partner | De Pury Pictet Turrettini & Cie SA | |
. | Merval Pereira | Columnist | Infoglobo Comunica›es e Participa›es SA | |
. | Mhammed Abbad Andaloussi | Founder | Al Jisr | |
. | Michael AmbŸhl | State Secretary for International Financial Matters of Switzerland | Government | |
. | Michael Andrew | Global Chairman | KPMG International | |
. | Michael B. McCallister | Chairman of the Board | Humana Inc. | |
. | Michael Buscher | Chief Executive Officer | OC Oerlikon Management AG | |
. | Michael C. Bodson | President and Chief Executive Officer | The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) | |
. | Michael Corbat | Chief Executive Officer | Citi | |
. | Michael D. Granoff | Chief Executive Officer | Pomona Capital | |
. | Michael Diekmann | Chief Executive Officer | Allianz SE | |
. | Michael E. Haefliger | Executive and Artistic Director | Lucerne Festival | |
. | Michael E. Hansen | Chief Executive Officer | Cengage Learning | |
. | Michael E. Martino | Founding Partner | Mason Capital Management LLC | |
. | Michael F. Neidorff | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Centene Corporation | |
. | Michael Froman | Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for International Economics, USA | Government | |
. | Michael G. Jacobides | Sir Donald Gordon Chair of Entrepreneurship and Innovation | London Business School | |
. | Michael H. McCain | President and Chief Executive Officer | Maple Leaf Foods Inc. | |
. | Michael I. Roth | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Interpublic Group | |
. | Michael Izza | Chief Executive Officer | ICAEW | |
. | Michael J. Elliott | President and Chief Executive Officer | ONE | |
. | Michael J. Sabia | President and Chief Executive Officer | Caisse de dŽp™t et placement du QuŽbec | |
. | Michael Kerner | Member, Group Executive Committee and Chief Executive Officer, General Insurance | Zurich Insurance Group | |
. | Michael Macht | Member of the Board of Management, Group Production | Volkswagen AG | |
. | Michael Mack | Chief Executive Officer | Syngenta International AG | |
. | Michael McKelvy | President, Government, Environmental and Infrastructure Division | CH2M HILL Companies Ltd | |
. | Michael Noonan | Minister of Finance of Ireland | Government | |
. | Michael Oreskes | Vice-President and Senior Managing Editor | The Associated Press (AP) | |
. | Michael Ryan | Chief Executive Officer | Qatar Financial Centre Regulatory Authority | |
. | Michael S. Dell | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Dell Inc. | |
. | Michael Smith | Chief Executive Officer | Mind Candy Ltd | |
. | Michael Suess | Member of the Managing Board and Chief Executive Officer, Energy Sector | Siemens AG | |
. | Michael T. Fries | President and Chief Executive Officer | Liberty Global Inc. | |
. | Michael Useem | Professor of Management and Director, Center for Leadership and Change | The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania | |
. | Michael Woelk | Chief Executive Officer | Picarro Inc. | |
. | Michael Wolf | Member of the Board of Directors | Yahoo! Inc. | |
. | Michel Barnier | Commissioner, Internal Market and Services, European Commission, Brussels | Government | |
. | Michel M. Lis | Group Chief Executive Officer | Swiss Reinsurance Company Ltd | |
. | Michele Scannavini | Chief Executive Officer | Coty Inc. | |
. | Michele Wucker | President | World Policy Institute | |
. | Miguel çngel Mancera Espinosa | Mayor-elect of Mexico City, Mexico | Government | |
. | Miguel Forbes | President, Worldwide Development | Forbes Media LLC | |
. | Miguel Martin Bermundo | Director | Dream Big Pilipinas | |
. | Mikael Hagstršm | President, Europe, Middle East, Africa and Asia-Pacific | SAS Institute Inc. | |
. | Mike Brown | Chief Executive Officer | Nedbank Group | |
. | Mike Butcher | European Editor | TechCrunch | |
. | Mike Duke | President and Chief Executive Officer | Wal-Mart Stores Inc. | |
. | Mike Muller | Commissioner | National Planning Commission | |
. | Mike Perlis | President and Chief Executive Officer | Forbes Media LLC | |
. | Mike Rees | Group Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer, Wholesale Banking | Standard Chartered | |
. | Mikhail Gerchuk | Chief Commercial and Strategy Officer | VimpelCom Ltd | |
. | Mikhail Kuzovlev | President | Bank of Moscow | |
. | Mikhail Piotrovsky | General Director | State Hermitage Museum | |
. | Miki Tsusaka | Senior Partner, Managing Director and Global Leader, Marketing and Sales Practice | The Boston Consulting Group | |
. | Min Zhu | Deputy Managing Director, International Monetary Fund (IMF), Washington DC | Government | |
. | Mina Al Oraibi | Assistant Editor-in-Chief | Asharq Al-Awsat Newspaper | |
. | Mina Guli | Chief Executive Officer | THIRST | |
. | Minelik Alemu Getahun | Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative of Ethiopia | Permanent Mission of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia | |
. | Miriam Warren | Managing Director | DCI Group | |
. | Moayyed Al Qurtas | Vice-Chairman and Chief Executive | Tasnee | |
. | Mohamed Ashmawey | Chief Executive Officer | Islamic Relief Worldwide | |
. | Mohamed Bin Dhaen Al Hamli | Minister of Energy of the United Arab Emirates | Government | |
. | Mohamed El Dahshan | Senior Research Fellow | Center for International Development, Harvard University | |
. | Mohamed Elkeiy | Liaison Officer, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), New York | Government | |
. | Mohamed Husnee Jazeel | Chief Executive Officer | Al Dabbagh Group Holding Co. Ltd | |
. | Mohamed Lamine Fofana | Minister of Mines and Geology of Guinea | Government | |
. | Mohamed Najib Boulif | Minister of General Affairs and Governance of Morocco | Government | |
. | Mohamed Wefati | Managing Director | Libyan Development Policy Center (LDPC) | |
. | Mohammad Abdullah Al Gergawi | Minister of Cabinet Affairs of the Federal Government of the United Arab Emirates | Government | |
. | Mohammad Nibras | Co-Founder and Lead Trainer | Academia For Research in Communication (AFRC) | |
. | Mohammed Al Naki | Chairman | Kuwait Industries Co. Holding | |
. | Mohammed Al Shatti | Manager, Office of the Chief Executive Officer | Kuwait Petroleum Corporation | |
. | Mohammed Alshaya | Executive Chairman | Alshaya Group | |
. | Mohammed F. Alghanim | Vice-Chairman | Fouad Alghanim & Sons Group of Companies | |
. | Mohammed H. Al Mady | Vice-Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) | |
. | Mohd Najib Bin Tun Abdul Razak | Prime Minister and Minister of Finance of Malaysia | Government | |
. | Mohd Razali Abdul Rahman | Chairman | Peremba Group of Companies | |
. | MoisŽs Na’m | Senior Associate, International Economics | Carnegie Endowment for International Peace | |
. | Moncef Baati | Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Tunisia | Permanent Mission of Tunisia | |
. | Moncef Mzabi | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Mzabi Group | |
. | Monique F. Leroux | Chair of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer | Desjardins Group | |
. | Moon Chung-In | Professor of Political Science | Yonsei University | |
. | Moritz Lehmkuhl | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | ClimatePartner | |
. | Morten Albaek | Group Senior Vice-President, Global MarCom and Corporate Relations | Vestas Wind Systems A/S | |
. | Mosaed S. Al Ohali | Executive Vice-President, Manufacturing | Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) | |
. | Mostafa Karam | Senior Vice-President, Customer Affairs and Service Audit | Emirates Group | |
. | Motassim A. Al Ma’ashouq | Vice-President, New Business Development | Saudi Aramco | |
. | Mouhtaz El Sawaf | Chief Executive Officer | Construction Products Holding Company (CPC) | |
. | Mouna Sepehri | Executive Vice-President | Renault | |
. | Mounir Husseini | Member of the Executive Committee | The Abraaj Group | |
. | Mthuli Ncube | Chief Economist and Vice-President, African Development Bank (AfDB), Tunis | Government | |
. | Muhamad Chatib Basri | Chairman | Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) | |
. | Muhammad Ali Pate | Minister of State for Health of Nigeria | Government | |
. | Muhammad Yunus | Chairman | Yunus Centre | |
. | Muhtar A. Kent | Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer | The Coca-Cola Company | |
. | Mukesh D. Ambani | Chairman and Managing Director | Reliance Industries Limited | |
. | Mukhtar Tileuberdi | Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative of Kazakhstan | Permanent Mission of Kazakhstan | |
. | Munib Islam | Head, Equities Research | Third Point LLC | |
. | Murat Sonmez | Executive Vice-President, Global Field Operations | TIBCO Software Inc. | |
. | Musallam Musallam | Chairman | Skab Group of Companies | |
. | Mustafa Abdel-Wadood | Chairman of the Executive Committee | The Abraaj Group | |
. | Mustapa Mohamed | Minister of International Trade and Industry of Malaysia | Government | |
. | Mustapha Kamel Nabli | Economist | ||
. | Mustaque Ahamad | Professor of Computer Science | Georgia Institute of Technology | |
. | Mykola Maimeskul | Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative of Ukraine | Permanent Mission of Ukraine | |
. | N. K. Singh | Member of Parliament, India | Government | |
. | Nadia Akil | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | United Projects for Aviation Services Company | |
. | Nadim Tabbara | Chief Financial Officer | The Olayan Group | |
. | Nadya Saib | Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Wangsa Jelita | |
. | Nafez Al Dakkak | Strategic Planning and Research Officer | Queen Rania Foundation for Education and Development | |
. | Naheed Nenshi | Mayor of Calgary | City of Calgary | |
. | Nailesh Khimji | Director | Khimji Ramdas LLC | |
. | Naina Lal Kidwai | Group General Manager, Country Head, India and Director | HSBC Asia Pacific | |
. | Najat Vallaud-Belkacem | Minister of Women’s Rights of France and Spokesperson of the French Government | Government | |
. | Najib Mikati | Prime Minister of Lebanon | Government | |
. | Nakhle El Hage | Director, News and Current Affairs | Al Arabiya | |
. | Nami Matsuko | Head, Corporate Citizenship Department | Nomura Holdings Inc. | |
. | Nancy Hopkins | Amgen, Inc. Professor of Biology | MIT – Department of Biology | |
. | Nancy Kete | Managing Director, Resilience | The Rockefeller Foundation | |
. | Nancy Killefer | Director | McKinsey & Company | |
. | Nancy Koehn | James E. Robison Professor of Business Administration | Harvard Business School | |
. | Nandu Nandkishore | Executive Vice-President, Asia, Oceania, Africa and Middle East | NestlŽ SA | |
. | Naoaki Okuzumi | General Manager | Toshiba Corporation | |
. | Naoko Ishii | Chief Executive Officer and Chair | Global Environment Facility | |
. | Naresh K. Goyal | Chairman | Jet Airways (India) Limited | |
. | Nariman Behravesh | Chief Economist | IHS | |
. | Narinder Singh | Co-Founder and Chief Strategy Officer | Appirio | |
. | Narkis Alon | Co-Founder | Ze-ze | |
. | Nasser Marafih | Group Chief Executive Officer | Qtel Group | |
. | Nasser Sami Judeh | Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan | Government | |
. | Natalia Germanova | Managing Director, Marketing Department | Sberbank | |
. | Natalia Izosimova | Managing Director | Foundation for Effective Governance | |
. | Natarajan Chandrasekaran | Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director | Tata Consultancy Services Ltd | |
. | Nathalie Rastoin | Managing Director | Ogilvy France | |
. | Natsuko Shiraki | Chief Executive Officer and Chief Designer | HASUNA Co. Ltd | |
. | Navi Pillay | UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Geneva | Government | |
. | Navin Chaddha | Managing Director | Mayfield Fund | |
. | Navinchandra Ramgoolam | Prime Minister of Mauritius | Government | |
. | Nduka Obaigbena | Chairman and Editor-in-Chief | THISDAY Newspapers | |
. | Neal Keny-Guyer | Chief Executive Officer | Mercy Corps | |
. | Neal Lipschutz | Senior Vice-President and Managing Editor | Dow Jones Newswires | |
. | Neel C. Raheja | Group President | K Raheja Corp. | |
. | Neelam Chhiber | Managing Director | Industree/Mother Earth | |
. | Neelie Kroes | Vice-President and Commissioner for the Digital Agenda, European Commission, Brussels and Co-Chair of the Governors Meeting for Information and Communication Technologies Industries 2013 | Government | |
. | Neeraj Kanwar | Vice-Chairman and Managing Director | Apollo Tyres Ltd | |
. | Neil MacGregor | Director | The British Museum | |
. | Neil Rimer | General Partner and Co-Founder | Index Ventures | |
. | Neil Shen Nanpeng | Founding and Managing Partner | Sequoia Capital China | |
. | Neill A. Currie | President and Chief Executive Officer | RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd | |
. | Neill Coleman | Vice-President, Global Communications | The Rockefeller Foundation | |
. | Nelisiwe Mildred Oliphant | Minister of Labour of South Africa | Government | |
. | Nelson W. Cunningham | Managing Partner | McLarty Associates | |
. | Nerio Alessandri | Founder and Chairman | Technogym SPA | |
. | Ngaire Woods | Dean, Blavatnik School of Government | University of Oxford | |
. | Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala | Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance of Nigeria | Government | |
. | Niall Dunne | Chief Sustainability Officer | BT Group Plc | |
. | Nicholas A. Curtis | Executive Chairman | Lynas Corporation Limited | |
. | Nicholas Archer | Vice-President, Head of Global Public Relations and International Government Affairs | Suzlon Group | |
. | Nicholas D. Kristof | Columnist | The New York Times | |
. | Nicholas J. Ashooh | Vice-President, Global Corporate Affairs | Alcoa Inc. | |
. | Nicholas Khaw | Associate | Khazanah Nasional Berhad | |
. | Nick Fanandakis | Executive Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer | DuPont | |
. | Nicky Newton-King | Chief Executive Officer | JSE Ltd | |
. | Nicolas BarrŽ | Deputy Managing Editor | Les Echos | |
. | Nicolas Berggruen | Chairman | Nicolas Berggruen Institute | |
. | Nicolas Mariscal Torroella | Chairman of the Board | Grupo Marhnos SA de CV | |
. | Nicolas Mirzayantz | Group President, Fragrances | International Flavors & Fragrances Inc. (IFF) | |
. | Nicole Bastian | Finance Correspondent | Handelsblatt | |
. | Niels B. Christiansen | President and Chief Executive Officer | Danfoss A/S | |
. | Nigel Chapman | Chief Executive Officer | Plan International | |
. | Nigel Morris | Chief Executive Officer | Aegis Media Americas & EMEA | |
. | Nihal G. Kulkarni | Managing Director | Kirloskar Oil Engines Ltd | |
. | Nik Gowing | Main Presenter | BBC World News | |
. | Nikesh Arora | Senior Vice-President and Chief Business Officer | Google Inc. | |
. | Nikhil Meswani | Executive Director | Reliance Industries Limited | |
. | Nikolai Dobrinov | Vice-President | ICT Group of Companies | |
. | Nikolaus von Bomhard | Chairman of the Board of Management | Munich Re | |
. | Nikolay Nikiforov | Minister of Communications and Mass Media of the Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Nilmini Rubin | Director, Government Relations | Information Technology Industry Council | |
. | Nils Smedegaard Andersen | Group Chief Executive Officer | A.P. M¿ller-Maersk A/S | |
. | Nina Easton | Senior Editor and Columnist | Fortune Magazine | |
. | Nirmit Parikh | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Cruxbot | |
. | Nitin Nohria | Dean | Harvard Business School | |
. | Nizan Guanaes | Chairman | Grupo ABC | |
. | Nkosana D. Moyo | Founder and Executive Chair | Mandela Institute for Development Studies (MINDS) | |
. | Nobuaki Koga | President | Japanese Trade Union Confederation (Jtuc-Rengo) | |
. | Nomkhita Nqweni | Chief Executive, Wealth Management, Absa; Head, Wealth Management, Barclays | Absa Wealth and Barclays Wealth Africa | |
. | Norbert Winkeljohann | Senior Partner | PwC | |
. | Noriaki Hashimoto | Corporate Representative, EMEA | Toshiba Corporation | |
. | Nosizwe Nocawe Nokwe | President and Chief Executive Officer | PetroSA | |
. | Noubar Afeyan | Founder and Chairman | Joule Unlimited Inc. | |
. | Nouriel Roubini | Professor of Economics and International Business, Leonard N. Stern School of Business | New York University | |
. | Nursultan A. Nazarbayev | President of Kazakhstan | Government | |
. | Nyan Tun | Vice-President of Myanmar | Government | |
. | O. Andreas Halvorsen | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Viking Global Investors LP | |
. | Ola Borten Moe | Minister of Petroleum and Energy of Norway | Government | |
. | Ola Henrikson | Director-General, Ministry of Justice, Sweden | Government | |
. | Olaf Gersemann | Business Editor | Welt am Sonntag | |
. | Olafur Eliasson | Artist | Studio Olafur Eliasson | |
. | Olafur Ragnar Grimsson | President of Iceland | Government | |
. | Olav Fjell | Chair of the Board of Directors | Statkraft AS | |
. | Ole Robert Reitan | Chief Executive Officer | The Reitan Group | |
. | Oleg Anikin | Director, Strategy and Investments | ICT Group of Companies | |
. | Oleg Popov | Chief Executive Officer | System Capital Management | |
. | Oleg V. Deripaska | President | En+Group | |
. | Olga Turischeva | Vice-President, Marketing and Business Development | OJSC VimpelCom | |
. | Oliver Niedermaier | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Tau Investment Management | |
. | Oliver Samwer | Co-Founder | Rocket Internet GmbH | |
. | Olivier Baube | Editor-in-Chief, Economy | Agence France Presse (AFP) | |
. | Olivier Fleurot | Chief Executive Officer | MSLGROUP | |
. | Olivier Jarrault | Executive Vice-President, Alcoa, and Group President, Engineered Products and Solutions | Alcoa Inc. | |
. | Olivier Marchal | Regional Managing Director, EMEA | Bain & Company Inc. | |
. | Olivier Steimer | Chairman of the Board | Banque Cantonale Vaudoise | |
. | Olli Rehn | Vice-President, Economic and Monetary Affairs, European Commission, Brussels | Government | |
. | Olof Faxander | President and Chief Executive Officer | Sandvik AB | |
. | Olof Persson | President and Chief Executive Officer | AB Volvo | |
. | Olusegun Aganga | Minister of Trade and Investment of Nigeria | Government | |
. | Omar A. Al Futtaim | Vice-Chairman | Al Futtaim Trading Group | |
. | Omar Ishrak | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Medtronic Inc. | |
. | Omar K. Alghanim | Chief Executive Officer | Alghanim Industries | |
. | Omobola Johnson | Minister of Communication Technology of Nigeria | Government | |
. | Onkar S. Kanwar | Chairman | Apollo Tyres Ltd | |
. | Orit Gadiesh | Chairman | Bain & Company Inc. | |
. | Ornella Barra | Chief Executive, Pharmaceutical Wholesale Division | Alliance Boots GmbH | |
. | Oscar Onyema | Chief Executive Officer | The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) | |
. | Osman Ulagay | Editor and Senior Columnist | Milliyet Gazetesi | |
. | Otto Perez Molina | President of Guatemala | Government | |
. | Øystein Løseth | President and Chief Executive Officer | Vattenfall AB | |
. | Ozlem Denizmen | Executive Vice-President, Dogus Strategy | Dogus Group | |
. | Paco Fernandez De Ybarra | Global Head, Markets | Citi | |
. | Padmasree Warrior | Chief Technology and Strategy Officer | Cisco | |
. | Pailin Chuchottaworn | President and Chief Executive Officer | PTT Public Company Limited | |
. | Pamela J. Craig | Chief Financial Officer | Accenture | |
. | Pamela Thomas-Graham | Chief Talent, Branding and Communications Officer | Credit Suisse AG | |
. | Paola Antonelli | Senior Curator, Department of Architecture and Design | Museum of Modern Art | |
. | Paolo Merloni | Executive Chairman | Ariston Thermo | |
. | Park Hong-Jae | President | Korea Automotive Research Institute (KARI) | |
. | Pascal Gentinetta | Chairman of the Executive Board | Economiesuisse | |
. | Pascal Lamy | Director-General, World Trade Organization (WTO), Geneva | Government | |
. | Pascale-Marie Deschamps | Editor-in-Chief | Enjeux Les Echos | |
. | Pasha Bakhtiar | Managing Partner | Willow Impact Investors | |
. | Pasquale Salzano | Vice-President, International Public Affairs | Eni SpA | |
. | Patrice T. Motsepe | Founder and Executive Chairman | African Rainbow Minerals Ltd (ARM) | |
. | Patricia A. Milligan | President, Talent, Rewards and Communication | Mercer (MMC) | |
. | Patricia Barbizet | Chief Executive Officer | Groupe ArtŽmis | |
. | Patricia Menendez-Cambo | Chair, Global Practice Group | Greenberg Traurig LLP | |
. | Patrick Aebischer | President | Ecole Polytechnique FŽdŽrale de Lausanne (EPFL) | |
. | Patrick Brothers | Executive General Manager, Corporate Strategy | Leighton Holdings Ltd | |
. | Patrick Combes | Chairman | Compagnie Financire Tradition | |
. | Patrick G. De Maeseneire | Chief Executive Officer | Adecco Group | |
. | Patrick J. Leahy | Senator from Vermont (Democrat), USA | Government | |
. | Patrick Jenkins | Banking Editor | The Financial Times | |
. | Patrick Khulekani Dlamini | Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director | Development Bank of Southern Africa | |
. | Patrick Kron | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Alstom | |
. | Patrick Nussbaum | Editor-in-Chief | Radio TŽlŽvision Suisse (RTS) | |
. | Patrick Odier | Senior Partner | Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch & Cie | |
. | Patrick Sayer | Chief Executive Officer | Eurazeo | |
. | Patrick Thomson | Managing Director | Highbridge Capital Management LLC | |
. | Patrik MŸller | Editor-in-Chief | Der Sonntag | |
. | Paul A. Laudicina | Chairman, Global Business Policy Council | A.T. Kearney Inc. | |
. | Paul Achleitner | Chairman of the Supervisory Board | Deutsche Bank AG | |
. | Paul Bulcke | Chief Executive Officer | NestlŽ SA | |
. | Paul Collier | Professor of Economics, Department of Economics | University of Oxford | |
. | Paul E. Jacobs | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Qualcomm | |
. | Paul Fletcher | Senior Partner | Actis LLP | |
. | Paul Hanratty | Chief Executive Officer, Long Term Savings, and Chairman | Old Mutual Life Assurance Company Limited | |
. | Paul Heritage | Professor of Drama and Performance and Director, People’s Palace Projects | Queen Mary, University of London | |
. | Paul Kagame | President of Rwanda | Government | |
. | Paul Li Jin | Co-Founder | JoyActive Technologies | |
. | Paul Meehan | Regional Managing Director, Asia-Pacific | Bain & Company Inc. | |
. | Paul N. Eckley | Senior Vice-President, Investments | State Farm Insurance Companies | |
. | Paul Nahi | President and Chief Executive Officer | Enphase Energy Inc. | |
. | Paul Polman | Chief Executive Officer | Unilever | |
. | Paul R. Hogan | Chairman and Founder | Home Instead Inc. | |
. | Paul S. Walsh | Chief Executive | Diageo Plc | |
. | Paul Sagan | Chief Executive Officer | Akamai Technologies Inc. | |
. | Paul Scott Matthew | Director, Africa | North Star Alliance | |
. | Paul Singer | Principal | Elliott Management Corporation | |
. | Paul Sobey | President and Chief Executive Officer | Empire Company Limited | |
. | Paul Stoffels | Chief Scientific Officer and Worldwide Chairman, Pharmaceuticals | Johnson & Johnson | |
. | Paul Taylor | European Affairs Editor | Thomson Reuters | |
. | Pauline Marois | Premier of Quebec, Canada | Government | |
. | Paulo Azevedo | Chief Executive Officer | Sonae SA | |
. | Paulo Coelho | Author | Sant Jordi Asociados | |
. | Pawan Munjal | Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer | Hero Group | |
. | Pedro Padilla | Chief Executive Officer | Grupo Salinas | |
. | Pedro Soares dos Santos | Chief Executive Officer | Jer—nimo Martins SGPS SA | |
. | Peer M. Schatz | Chief Executive Officer | QIAGEN GmbH | |
. | Peggy Johnson | Executive Vice-President and President, Global Market Development | Qualcomm | |
. | Peggy Liu | Chairperson | JUCCCE | |
. | Penny Pritzker | Chairwoman | TransUnion Corporation | |
. | Per-Ola Karlsson | Senior Vice-President | Booz & Company | |
. | Perry Chen | Chief Executive Officer | Kickstarter Inc. | |
. | Peter A. Fischer | Economics Editor and Head, Economics Department | Neue ZŸrcher Zeitung | |
. | Peter A. Ruzicka | Chief Executive Officer | Canica AS | |
. | Peter A. Thiel | Partner | Founders Fund | |
. | Peter A. Weinberg | Founding Partner | Perella Weinberg Partners Group LP | |
. | Peter Bakker | President | World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) | |
. | Peter Baumgartner | Chief Commercial Officer | Etihad Airways | |
. | Peter Beshar | Executive Vice-President and General Counsel | Marsh & McLennan Companies (MMC) | |
. | Peter Brabeck-Letmathe | Chairman of the Board | NestlŽ SA | |
. | Peter Cappelli | George W. Taylor Professor of Management | The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania | |
. | Peter Corbett | Chief Executive Officer | iStrategyLabs | |
. | Peter Coy | Economics Editor | Bloomberg Businessweek | |
. | Peter D. Sutherland | Chairman | Goldman Sachs International | |
. | Peter Fellman | Editor-in-Chief | Dagens Industri | |
. | Peter Fitch | Head of Communications | Lloyd’s | |
. | Peter Friedli | President | Friedli Corporate Finance | |
. | Peter Gomez | Chairman of the Board of Directors | SIX Group AG | |
. | Peter Gottwald | Ambassador of Germany | Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany | |
. | Peter H. Staude | Chief Executive Officer | Tongaat Hulett Limited | |
. | Peter Hossli | Senior Writer | Ringier AG | |
. | Peter Lacy | Managing Director; Senior Executive | Accenture | |
. | Peter Liu | Founder and Chairman | WI Harper Group Inc. | |
. | Peter Lšscher | President and Chief Executive Officer | Siemens AG | |
. | Peter Mackie | Group President, Pallets, Americas and Global Supply Chain | Brambles Limited | |
. | Peter Maurer | President, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Geneva | Government | |
. | Peter Mensing | Senior Vice-President | Booz & Company | |
. | Peter Porrino | Chief Financial Officer | XL America Inc. | |
. | Peter Prove | Executive Director | Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance | |
. | Peter Sands | Group Chief Executive | Standard Chartered | |
. | Peter T. Grauer | Chairman | Bloomberg LP | |
. | Peter Terium | Chief Executive Officer | RWE AG | |
. | Peter Voser | Chief Executive Officer | Royal Dutch Shell plc | |
. | Peter Wallin | Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice-President | Skanska AB | |
. | Peter Zemsky | Deputy Dean | INSEAD | |
. | Petr Fradkov | Member of the Board | State Corporation Bank for Development and Foreign Economic Affairs (Vnesheconombank) | |
. | Petra Laux | Head, Global Public and Government Affairs | Novartis International AG | |
. | Phaneesh Murthy | Chief Executive Officer | iGATE | |
. | Phil Coffey | Chief Financial Officer | Westpac Banking Corporation | |
. | Philip Aldrick | Economics Editor | The Daily Telegraph | |
. | Philip Campbell | Editor-in-Chief | Nature | |
. | Philip Dilley | Chairman | Arup Group Ltd | |
. | Philip J. Jennings | General Secretary | UNI Global Union | |
. | Philip Mallinckrodt | Director | Schroders Plc | |
. | Philip Wilson | Executive Director | Ecofiltro | |
. | Philipp Freise | Partner | Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. Ltd | |
. | Philipp Ršsler | Vice-Chancellor and Federal Minister of Economics and Technology of Germany | Government | |
. | Philipp Schindler | Vice-President, Global Sales and Operations | Google Inc. | |
. | Philipp Welte | Member of the Executive Board | Burda Media | |
. | Philippe Amon | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | SICPA Holding SA | |
. | Philippe Mabille | Deputy Managing Editor | La Tribune | |
. | Phillip Harrington | Executive Vice-President, Risk, and Chief Administrative Officer | CA Technologies | |
. | Phillips Oduoza | Group Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer | UBA Group | |
. | Pier Luigi Sigismondi | Chief Supply Chain Officer | Unilever | |
. | Pierre Alary | Chief Financial Officer and Senior Vice-President | Bombardier Inc. | |
. | Pierre Beaudoin | President and Chief Executive Officer | Bombardier Inc. | |
. | Pierre GodŽ | Vice-Chairman | LVMH Mo‘t Hennessy – Louis Vuitton | |
. | Pierre Moscovici | Minister of Economy and Finance of France | Government | |
. | Pierre Nanterme | Chief Executive Officer | Accenture | |
. | Pierre Olivier BouŽe | Managing Director, Director, Prudential Corporation Asia | Prudential Plc | |
. | Pierre Roy | Chief Operating Officer, Digital TV and Executive Vice-President | Kudelski Group | |
. | Pierre Ruetschi | Editor-in-Chief | Tribune de Genve | |
. | Pierre Veya | Editor-in-Chief | Le Temps | |
. | Pierre-Franois Unger | State Councillor, Department of Regional Affairs, Economy and Health of Geneva, Switzerland | Government | |
. | Piet Moerland | Chairman of the Executive Board | Rabobank Group | |
. | Pieter Nota | Executive Vice-President and Chief Executive Officer, Consumer Lifestyle | Royal Philips Electronics | |
. | Pooja Jain | Executive Director | Luxor Writing Instruments Pvt. Ltd | |
. | Praful Patel | Minister of Heavy Industries and Public Enterprises of India | Government | |
. | Prakash P. Hinduja | Chairman, Europe | Hinduja Group of Companies | |
. | Pramod Bhasin | Vice-Chairman | Genpact Ltd | |
. | Prannoy Roy | Executive Co-Chairperson | New Delhi Television (NDTV) | |
. | Prashant Ruia | Group Chief Executive | Essar Group | |
. | Pravin Gordhan | Minister of Finance of South Africa | Government | |
. | Predee Daochai | Senior Executive Vice-President | Kasikornbank Public Company Limited | |
. | Prince Andrew | H.R.H. Duke of York | Government | |
. | Priya Hiranandani-Vandrevala | Co-Founder and Chairman | Hirco Group | |
. | Professor Sir David King | Director | Cambridge Kaspakas Ltd | |
. | Qu Xiaofei | Vice-Mayor of Dalian, People’s Republic of China | Government | |
. | R. M. Marty M. Natalegawa | Minister for Foreign Affairs of Indonesia | Government | |
. | Rachel Kyte | Vice-President, Sustainable Development, World Bank, Washington DC | Government | |
. | Rafael del Pino | Chairman | Ferrovial SA | |
. | Rafik Ben Abdessalem | Minister of Foreign Affairs of Tunisia | Government | |
. | Raghida Dergham | Senior Diplomatic Correspondent and Columnist | Al Hayat | |
. | Rahul Bajaj | Chairman | Bajaj Auto Ltd | |
. | Rahul Singh | President, Financial Services and Business Services | HCL Technologies Ltd | |
. | Raila Amolo Odinga | Prime Minister of Kenya | Government | |
. | Raimonds Jansons | Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative of Latvia | Permanent Mission of Latvia | |
. | Rainer-Marc Frey | Chairman of the Board of Directors | Horizon21 AG | |
. | Rajeeb Dey | Chief Executive Officer | Enternships.com | |
. | Rajendra Singh Pawar | Chairman | NIIT Group | |
. | Rajesh V. Shah | Co-Chairman and Managing Director | Mukand Limited | |
. | Rajiv J. Shah | Administrator, US Agency for International Development (USAID), USA | Government | |
. | Rajiv Lall | Vice-Chairman and Managing Director | IDFC Ltd | |
. | Rajiv Memani | Country Managing Partner, India | Ernst & Young Pvt. Ltd | |
. | Rajkumar N. Dhoot | Chairman and Managing Director | Videocon Telecommunication Ltd | |
. | Rakefet Russak-Aminoach | Chief Executive Officer | Bank Leumi Le-Israel BM | |
. | Ralph Eichler | President | ETH Zurich | |
. | Ralph Mupita | Chief Executive, Emerging Markets | Old Mutual | |
. | Rana Foroohar | Assistant Managing Editor, Business and Economics and Economic Columnist | Time Magazine | |
. | Rana Kapoor | Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer | YES BANK Limited | |
. | Randall Kroszner | Norman R. Bobins Professor of Economics | University of Chicago | |
. | Rani Raad | Senior Vice-President and Managing Director | CNN International | |
. | Raphael Amit | Robert B. Goergen Professor of Entrepreneurial Management | The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania | |
. | Raphael Schoentgen | President | GDF SUEZ China | |
. | Rashad R. Kaldany | Vice-President, Global Industries, International Finance Corporation (IFC), Washington DC | Government | |
. | Rasheed Al Maraj | Governor of the Central Bank of Bahrain | Government | |
. | Rashid Saif Al Jarwan | Acting Chief Executive Officer | Dana Gas PJSC | |
. | Ray Dalio | Founder and Chief Investment Officer | Bridgewater Associates LP | |
. | Ray Johnson | Senior Vice-President and Chief Technology Officer | Lockheed Martin Corporation | |
. | Ray Suarez | Senior Correspondent, NewsHour with Jim Lehrer | Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) | |
. | Raymond Debbane | President and Chief Executive Officer | The Invus Group LLC | |
. | Raymond J. Baxter | President, Kaiser Permanente International and Senior Vice-President, Community Benefit, Research and Health Policy | Kaiser Permanente | |
. | Raymond McGuire | Head, Global Banking | Citi | |
. | Raymond Svider | Co-Chairman and Managing Partner | BC Partners | |
. | Razeen Sally | Visiting Associate Professor | Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore | |
. | Reem Al Hashimy | Minister of State of the United Arab Emirates | Government | |
. | Regine Sixt | Senior Executive Vice-President, International Marketing | Sixt AG | |
. | Reinhard Schlieker | Economics Editor and Presenter | Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (ZDF) | |
. | Ren Xuefeng | Vice-Mayor of Tianjin, People’s Republic of China | Government | |
. | Renat Heuberger | Chief Executive Officer and Deputy Chairman | South Pole Carbon | |
. | RenŽ Hooft Graafland | Member of the Executive Board and Chief Financial Officer | HEINEKEN | |
. | RenŽ Mehrmann | Deputy Editor-in-Chief | SŸdostschweiz Medien AG | |
. | Reto Francioni | Chief Executive Officer | Deutsche Bšrse AG | |
. | Reto Lipp | Presenter | Swiss Television SF | |
. | Reuben Abraham | Executive Director, Centre for Emerging Markets Solutions | Indian School of Business | |
. | Reuben Jeffery | Chief Executive Officer | Rockefeller & Co. | |
. | Rhonda I. Zygocki | Executive Vice-President, Policy and Planning | Chevron Corporation | |
. | Ricardo B. Salinas Pliego | Chairman | Grupo Salinas | |
. | Ricardo Hausmann | Director, Center for International Development | Harvard Kennedy School of Government | |
. | Ricardo Kirschbaum | Executive Editor | Clarin | |
. | Ricardo Martinelli | President of Panama | Government | |
. | Ricardo Quijano JimŽnez | Minister of Trade and Industry of Panama | Government | |
. | Ricardo Villela Marino | Chief Executive Officer, Latin America | Banco Itaœ Unibanco SA | |
. | Rich Lesser | Global Chief Executive Officer and President | The Boston Consulting Group | |
. | Rich Ricci | Chief Executive, Corporate and Investment Banking | Barclays | |
. | Richard Baldwin | Professor of International Economics | The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies | |
. | Richard Blewitt | Chief Executive | HelpAge International | |
. | Richard C. Levin | President | Yale University | |
. | Richard Carter | Senior Economic Editor | Agence France Presse (AFP) | |
. | Richard Edgar | Economics Editor | ITV News | |
. | Richard Fontaine | President | Center for a New American Security (CNAS) | |
. | Richard Goyder | Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director | Wesfarmers Limited | |
. | Richard H. Anderson | Chief Executive Officer | Delta Air Lines Inc. | |
. | Richard Haythornthwaite | Chairman | MasterCard International Incorporated | |
. | Richard J. Gnodde | Co-Chief Executive Officer and Co-Head, Investment Banking Division (IBD) | Goldman Sachs International | |
. | Richard L. Gelfond | Chief Executive Officer | Imax Corporation | |
. | Richard N. Haass | President | Council on Foreign Relations | |
. | Richard O’Brien | President and Chief Executive Officer | Newmont Mining Corporation | |
. | Richard Olver | Chairman | BAE Systems Plc | |
. | Richard Quest | Anchor, Quest Means Business | CNN International | |
. | Richard Robbins | Director | 10×10 Educate Girls | |
. | Richard S. Gillies | Director, Plan A, CSR, Energy and Sustainable Business | Marks & Spencer Plc | |
. | Richard Samans | Director-General | Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI) | |
. | Richard Stengel | Managing Editor | Time Magazine | |
. | Richard T. Pascale | Associate Fellow | Sa•d Business School, University of Oxford | |
. | Richard W. Edelman | President and Chief Executive Officer | Edelman | |
. | Rick Goings | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Tupperware Brands Corporation | |
. | Rick Pudner | Chief Executive Officer | Emirates NBD Bank | |
. | Rima Maktabi | Senior Anchor and Roving Correspondent | Al Arabiya | |
. | Rob Conway | Chief International Affairs Officer | VimpelCom Ltd | |
. | Rob Davies | Minister of Trade and Industry of South Africa | Government | |
. | Rob Heyvaert | Corporate Executive Vice-President | FIS | |
. | Rob Markey | Partner, Global Head of Customer Strategy and Marketing | Bain & Company Inc. | |
. | Rob Wainwright | Director, Europol (European Police), The Hague | Government | |
. | Robert A. Johnson | Executive Director | The Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) | |
. | Robert Berendes | Head, Business Development | Syngenta International AG | |
. | Robert Cox | Editor-in-Chief | Thomson Reuters Breakingviews.com | |
. | Robert D. Hormats | US Undersecretary of State for Economic, Energy and Agricultural Affairs | Government | |
. | Robert Druskin | Executive Chairman | The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) | |
. | Robert E. Beauchamp | Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer | BMC Software Inc. | |
. | Robert E. Moritz | Senior Partner | PwC | |
. | Robert Edwards | Managing Director and Executive Vice-President | NGP Energy Capital Management | |
. | Robert Elliott | Chairman and Senior Partner | Linklaters LLP | |
. | Robert Engle | Professor of Finance, Leonard N. Stern School of Business | New York University | |
. | Robert Flaherty | Chief Executive Officer | Ketchum Inc. | |
. | Robert G. Card | President and Chief Executive Officer | SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. | |
. | Robert Greenhill | Managing Director and Chief Business Officer, World Economic Forum | Government | |
. | Robert Greifeld | Chief Executive Officer | The NASDAQ OMX Group | |
. | Robert J. Shiller | Arthur M. Okun Professor of Economics | Yale University | |
. | Robert L. Dilenschneider | President and Chief Executive Officer | The Dilenschneider Group Inc. | |
. | Robert Lloyd | President, Development and Sales | Cisco | |
. | Robert M. Kimmitt | Adviser to the Management Committee | Bridgewater Associates LP | |
. | Robert Rankin | Co-Head, Corporate Banking and Securities and Member of the Group Executive Committee | Deutsche Bank AG | |
. | Robert S. Harrison | Chief Executive Officer | Clinton Global Initiative | |
. | Robert S. Miller | Non-Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors | American International Group Inc. (AIG) | |
. | Robert Salzl | Member of the Foundation Board | Schšrghuber Stiftung & Co. Holding KG | |
. | Robert Shetler-Jones | Member of the Group Board | Group DF | |
. | Robert Steele | Secretary-General | International Organization for Standardization (ISO) | |
. | Robert Thomson | Chief Executive Officer | News Corporation | |
. | Robert W. Bailey | President, Water Business Group | CH2M HILL (Halcrow Group Ltd) | |
. | Robert Zimmer | President | University of Chicago | |
. | Roberta Santi | Ambassador of Canada | Embassy of Canada | |
. | Roberto Egydio Setubal | Chief Executive Officer and Vice-Chairman of the Board of Directors | Banco Itaœ Unibanco SA | |
. | Roberto Kikawa | President and Founder | Projeto Cies | |
. | Roberto Quarta | Chairman of the Supervisory Board | Rexel SA | |
. | Roberto R. Roy | Minister for Canal Affairs, Office of the President of Panama | Government | |
. | Robin Niblett | Director | Chatham House | |
. | Roderick van Schreven | Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative of the Netherlands | Permanent Mission of the Netherlands | |
. | Rodrigo HŸbner Mendes | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Instituto Rodrigo Mendes | |
. | Rodrigo Medina de la Cruz | Governor of Nuevo Le—n, Mexico | Government | |
. | Rodrigo PŽrez Mackenna | Minister of Housing and Urbanism and Minister of National Patrimony of Chile | Government | |
. | Rodrigo Vergara Montes | Governor, Central Bank of Chile | Government | |
. | Roger Barnett | Managing Partner | Activated Holdings LLC | |
. | Roger C. Altman | Chairman | Evercore Partners | |
. | Roger Crook | Chief Executive Officer, DHL Global Forwarding, Freight | Deutsche Post DHL | |
. | Roger de Weck | Director-General | SRG SSR | |
. | Roger J. Wood | President and Chief Executive Officer | Dana Holding Corporation | |
. | Roger Kšppel | Publisher | Die Weltwoche | |
. | Roger Martin | Dean | Joseph L. Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto | |
. | Roger Y. Tsien | Professor | University of California, San Diego (UCSD) | |
. | Roland Berger | Honorary Chairman | Roland Berger Strategy Consultants Holding GmbH | |
. | Roland Busch | Member of the Managing Board and Chief Executive Officer, Sector Infrastructure and Cities | Siemens AG | |
. | Roland Junck | Chief Executive Officer | Nyrstar | |
. | Roland Koch | Chairman of the Executive Board | Bilfinger SE | |
. | Roland Rudd | Chairman | RLM Finsbury | |
. | Roland Tichy | Editor-in-Chief | WirtschaftsWoche | |
. | Rolando Balsinde | Director | McKinsey & Company | |
. | Rolf Dšrig | Chairman | Adecco Group | |
. | Rolf Kuntz | Editorialist and Special Correspondent | O Estado de S‹o Paulo | |
. | Rolf Nonnenmacher | Chairman, KPMG EMA and KPMG Europe LLP | KPMG | |
. | Rolf-Dieter Heuer | Director-General, European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN), Switzerland | Government | |
. | Rolly Van Rappard | Managing Partner | CVC Capital Partners (Luxembourg) Sˆrl | |
. | Romero Britto | Artist and President | Britto Central | |
. | Romulo de Mello Dias | Chief Executive Officer | Cielo SA | |
. | Romulo Roux | Minister of Foreign Relations of Panama | Government | |
. | Ronald Hafner | Chief Executive Officer | Infosys Lodestone | |
. | Ronald N. Mannix | Chairman | Coril Holdings Ltd | |
. | Ronald Saborio Soto | Ambassador of Costa Rica to the WTO, Geneva | Government | |
. | Roque Benavides | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Compa–ia de Minas de Buenaventura | |
. | Rosemary O’Brien | Vice-President, Public Affairs | CF Industries Holdings Inc. | |
. | Ross Westgate | Anchor | CNBC | |
. | Rossana Fuentes-Berain | Vice-President | Grupo Expansion | |
. | Rossanna Figuera | Co-Founder and Ambassador of Good Things | Wafels & Dinges | |
. | Roustam Tariko | Founder and Chairman | Russian Standard Corporation | |
. | Rovnag Abdullayev | President | SOCAR (State Oil Company of the Azerbaijan Republic) | |
. | Ruben K. Vardanian | Co-Head, Corporate Investment Unit and Head, Wealth Management | Sberbank | |
. | Rudi Pauwels | Founder | Biocartis SA | |
. | Rui Chenggang | Director and Anchor | China Central Television (CCTV) | |
. | Rumen Hranov M. Sc. | Chairman | Finman AG | |
. | Rune Bjerke | President and Chief Executive Officer | DNB ASA | |
. | Rupert Duchesne | Group Chief Executive | Aimia | |
. | Rupert Stadler | Chairman of the Management Board | AUDI AG | |
. | Rustam Minnikhanov | President of the Republic of Tatarstan, Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Ruth Porat | Chief Financial Officer | Morgan Stanley | |
. | Ryan Howard | Chief Executive Officer and Founder | Practice Fusion Inc. | |
. | S. D. Shibulal | Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director | Infosys Ltd | |
. | S. Iswaran | Minister, Prime Minister’s Office; Second Minister for Home Affairs; Second Minister for Trade and Industry of Singapore | Government | |
. | Sabri bin Ahmad | Group President and Chief Executive Officer | Felda Global Ventures Holdings | |
. | Sadako Ogata | Chairperson, World Economic Forum Japan | Government | |
. | Sadie Creese | Professor of Cybersecurity | University of Oxford | |
. | Safwan Masri | Vice-President for Global Centers | Columbia University | |
. | Sajjan Jindal | Chairman and Managing Director | JSW Group | |
. | Salah A. Al-Qahtani | Deputy Chairman of the Board | Abdel Hadi Abdullah Al-Qahtani & Sons Group of Companies | |
. | Salam Fayyad | Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority | Government | |
. | Salem Obaidalla | Senior Vice-President, Far East and Australasia | Emirates Group | |
. | Salil Shetty | Secretary-General | Amnesty International | |
. | Salvador Alva G—mez | President | Sistema Tecnol—gico de Monterrey | |
. | Salvador Paiz | President | FunSEPA | |
. | Sam Fleming | Economics Editor | The Times | |
. | Sam Laidlaw | Chief Executive Officer | Centrica Plc | |
. | Sam Muller | Director | Hague Institute for the Internationalisation of Law | |
. | Sam White | Co-Founder | Promethean Power Systems | |
. | Samer S. Khoury | President, Engineering and Construction | Consolidated Contractors Company (CCC) | |
. | Sami Khoreibi | Chief Executive Officer | Enviromena Power Systems | |
. | Sami Sagol | Chairman | Keter Group | |
. | Samir Assaf | Chief Executive, Global Banking and Markets | HSBC Bank Plc | |
. | Samir Brikho | Chief Executive Officer | AMEC Plc | |
. | Samir Lahoud | Chairman | Lahoud Engineering | |
. | Samuel A. Di Piazza Jr | Vice-Chairman, Institutional Clients Group | Citi | |
. | Sandeep A. Naik | Managing Director | General Atlantic | |
. | Sander van ‘t Noordende | Group Chief Executive, Management Consulting | Accenture | |
. | Sandip Patel | President, Aetna International | Aetna Inc. | |
. | Sandra Wu Wen-Hsiu | President and Chief Executive Officer | Japan Asia Group Limited | |
. | Sanford Climan | President | Entertainment Media Ventures | |
. | Sanford D. Greenberg | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | TEI Industries LLC | |
. | Sangita Singh | Senior Vice-President; Head, Healthcare, Life Sciences and Services | Wipro Technologies | |
. | Sania Nishtar | Founding President | Heartfile | |
. | Sanjay Khosla | President, Developing Markets | Mondelez International Inc. | |
. | Sanjiv Bajaj | Managing Director | Bajaj Finserv Ltd | |
. | Sanjiv Goenka | Chairman | RP-Sanjiv Goenka Group | |
. | Santiago Siri | Founder and Chief Innovator | Grupo 42 Argentina | |
. | Sanusi Lamido Sanusi | Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria | Government | |
. | Sarah Alexander | Founding President and Chief Executive Officer | Emerging Markets Private Equity Association | |
. | Sarah Gillett | Ambassador of the United Kingdom | Embassy of the United Kingdom | |
. | Sarah Mavrinac | Director Emeritus | aidha | |
. | Sarah Noble | Chief of Staff and Director, External Relations | Interpeace | |
. | Sari Revkin | Executive Director | YEDID – The Association for Community Empowerment | |
. | Sarita Nayyar | Managing Director, Head of Consumer Industries, World Economic Forum USA | Government | |
. | Satpal Brainch | President and Managing Director | CNBC | |
. | Sauat M. Mynbayev | Minister of Oil and Gas of Kazakhstan | Government | |
. | Sauli Niinisto | President of Finland | Government | |
. | Saurabh Srivastava | Chairman, India and Senior Vice-President | CA Technologies (India) Private Limited | |
. | Scot Sellers | Chief Executive Officer | Archstone | |
. | Scott B. Kapnick | Managing Partner | Highbridge Capital Management LLC | |
. | Scott Cutler | Executive Vice-President | NYSE Euronext | |
. | Scott Dadich | Editor-in-Chief | Wired Magazine | |
. | Scott J. Freidheim | Chief Executive Officer, Europe | Investcorp International Ltd | |
. | Scott Key | President and Chief Operating Officer | IHS | |
. | Scott Minerd | Chief Investment Officer | Guggenheim Partners LLC | |
. | Scott Painter | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | TrueCar | |
. | Scott Ratzan | Vice-President, Global Health, Government Affairs and Policy | Johnson & Johnson | |
. | Scott Spirit | Chief Strategy Officer | WPP Plc | |
. | Scott Weber | Director-General | Interpeace | |
. | Sean C. Rush | President and Chief Executive Officer | JA Worldwide | |
. | Sean de Cleene | Senior Vice-President, Global Initiatives, Strategy and Business Development | Yara International ASA | |
. | Sebasti‡n Bag— | President | Laboratorios Bag— SA | |
. | Sebastian Thrun | Research Professor of Computer Science | Stanford University | |
. | Seda Pumpyanskaya | Vice-President, International Relations and Communications | Skolkovo Foundation | |
. | Senam Okudzeto | Artist, Founder and Director | Art in Social Structures | |
. | Serge Dumont | Chairman, Asia-Pacific; Vice-Chairman | Omnicom Group Inc. | |
. | Serge Haroche | Professor and Chair, Quantum Physics | College de France | |
. | Sergei Guriev | Rector | New Economic School (NES) | |
. | Sergey A. Kogogin | Director-General | Kamaz Inc. | |
. | Sergey Gorkov | Deputy Chairman of the Board | Sberbank | |
. | Sergey Litvintsev | Deputy Director | Pi Council Think Tank | |
. | Sergio Balbinot | Managing Director | Generali | |
. | Sergio D’az-Granados | Minister of Trade, Industry and Tourism of Colombia | Government | |
. | Sergio Ermotti | Group Chief Executive Officer | UBS AG | |
. | Sergio Leo | Columnist and Senior Reporter | Valor Econ™mico | |
. | Sergio Sarmiento | Editor-in-Chief and Vice-President, Editorial Board | TV Azteca SA de CV | |
. | Seth F. Berkley | Chief Executive Officer | GAVI Alliance | |
. | Seturaman Mahalingam | Chief Financial Officer | Tata Consultancy Services Ltd | |
. | Sev Vettivetpillai | Member of the Executive Committee | The Abraaj Group | |
. | Shafagat F. Takhautdinov | General Director | OAO Tatneft | |
. | Shahril Shamsuddin | Group President and Chief Executive Officer | Sapura Group of Companies | |
. | Shahzada Dawood | Director | Dawood Hercules Corporation Limited | |
. | Shaikha Al Bahar | Chief Executive Officer | National Bank of Kuwait | |
. | Shaji Farooq | Senior Vice-President, Advanced Technologies and Go-to-Market | Wipro Technologies | |
. | Shamsuddeen Usman | Minister for National Planning | National Planning Commission | |
. | Shan Weijian | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | PAG | |
. | Shani Senbetta | Vice-President, Government and External Relations | SouthWest Energy (HK) Ltd | |
. | Shanker Ramamurthy | President, Global Growth and Operations | Thomson Reuters | |
. | Shannon Rochford | Director, Global Corporate Client Group | NYSE Euronext | |
. | Shantanu Narayen | President and Chief Executive Officer | Adobe Systems Inc. | |
. | Sharan Burrow | General Secretary | International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) | |
. | Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy | Documentary Filmmaker | SOC Films | |
. | Shashi Ruia | Chairman | Essar Group | |
. | Sheena Iyengar | Professor | Columbia Business School | |
. | Sheikh Khaled Bin Zayed Al Nehayan | Chairman | Bin Zayed Group | |
. | Sheikh Mohammed Bin Essa Al Khalifa | Adviser for Political and Economic Affairs | Court of the Crown Prince of Bahrain | |
. | Sheila Lirio Marcelo | Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Care.com | |
. | Shekhar Gupta | Editor-in-Chief | The Indian Express | |
. | Shelly Esque | President, Intel Foundation; Vice-President, Legal and Corporate Affairs and Director, Corporate Affairs Group | Intel Corporation | |
. | Shenggen Fan | Director-General | International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) | |
. | Sherif Barakat | General Manager | NBK Banque Privee (Suisse) SA | |
. | Sheryl Sandberg | Chief Operating Officer and Member of the Board | Facebook Inc. | |
. | Shigeo Ohyagi | President, Chief Executive Officer and Representative Director of the Board | Teijin Ltd | |
. | Shimon Peres | President of Israel | Government | |
. | Shinichi Koizumi | Executive Vice-President, Representative Member of the Board | Toray Industries Inc. | |
. | Shinichi Yoshida | Executive Editor | Asahi Shimbun | |
. | Shinjiro Koizumi | Member of the House of Representatives, Japan | Government | |
. | Shirley Ann Jackson | President | Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) | |
. | Shiv V. Khemka | Vice-Chairman | SUN Group | |
. | Shlomo Benartzi | Professor and Co-Chair, Behavioral Decision-Making Group | UCLA Anderson School of Management | |
. | Shobhana Bhartia | Member of Parliament; Chairperson and Editorial Director | HT Media Limited | |
. | Shoeb Kagda | Group Chief Editor | The Jakarta Globe | |
. | Shoji Takenaka | Global Vice-President, Smart Community Division | Toshiba Corporation | |
. | Shubhendu Amitabh | Group Executive President | The Aditya Birla Group | |
. | Shunichi Matsui | Senior Vice-President | Mitsubishi Corporation | |
. | Shyam Sankar | President | Palantir Technologies | |
. | Shyam Sunder Bhartia | Chairman and Managing Director | Jubilant Bhartia Group | |
. | Siddhartha Lal | Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer | Eicher Motors Limited | |
. | Siegfried Wolf | Chairman of the Board of Directors | JSC Russian Machines | |
. | Sigmund Gottlieb | Editor-in-Chief | ARD TV (BR) | |
. | Simon Bransfield-Garth | Chief Executive | Azuri Technologies Ltd | |
. | Simon Cooper | Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Middle East and North Africa | HSBC Bank Middle East Limited | |
. | Simon Jack | Today’s Business Presenter | BBC World News | |
. | Simon Kennedy | Chief International Economics Correspondent | Bloomberg News | |
. | Simon Stevens | President, Global Health | UnitedHealth Group Inc. | |
. | Simpiwe K. Tshabalala | Deputy Group Chief Executive | The Standard Bank Group Limited | |
. | Sir Andrew Cahn | Vice-Chairman | Nomura International Plc | |
. | Sir David Walker | Group Chairman | Barclays | |
. | Sir David Wright | Vice-Chairman | Barclays | |
. | Sir John Peace | Chairman | Standard Chartered | |
. | Sir Leszek Borysiewicz | Vice-Chancellor | University of Cambridge | |
. | Sir Martin Sorrell | Chief Executive Officer | WPP Plc | |
. | Sir Michael Rake | Chairman | BT Group Plc | |
. | Sir Mohammad Jaafar | Chairman and Managing Director | The Kuwaiti Danish Dairy Company KCSC | |
. | Sir Nigel Knowles | Managing Partner | DLA Piper UK LLP | |
. | Sir Richard Broadbent | Chairman | Tesco Plc | |
. | Sir Roger Carr | Chairman | Centrica Plc | |
. | Sir Suma Chakrabarti | President, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), United Kingdom | Government | |
. | Sir Tim Berners-Lee | Director | World Wide Web Foundation | |
. | Sirdar Aly Aziz | Chairman | The Dashwood Group | |
. | Sofie Mathiassen | Political Editor | Dagens Naeringsliv | |
. | Somsavat Lengsavad | Deputy Prime Minister of Laos | Government | |
. | Sonja Bata | Chairman | Bata Shoe Foundation | |
. | Soulaima Gourani | Chief Executive Officer | Soulaima Gourani ApS | |
. | Sri Prakash Lohia | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Indorama Corp. | |
. | Srikrishna Ramakarthikeyan | Head, Global Infrastructure Services and Healthcare | HCL Technologies Ltd | |
. | Stanislav Kuznetsov | Deputy Chairman of the Board | Sberbank | |
. | Stanislav Voskresenskiy | Deputy Presidential Plenipotentiary, Kaliningrad Region Administration, Russian Federation | Government | |
. | Stanley Fischer | Governor of the Central Bank of Israel | Government | |
. | Stanley M. Bergman | Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer | Henry Schein Inc. | |
. | Steen Riisgaard | President and Chief Executive Officer | Novozymes A/S | |
. | Stefan Ingves | Governor of the Swedish Central Bank | Government | |
. | Stefan Schnyder | Head, Economic Section | Berner Zeitung | |
. | Stefan von Holtzbrinck | President and Chief Executive Officer | Verlagsgruppe von Holtzbrinck GmbH | |
. | Stefan Winners | Member of the Executive Board | Burda Media | |
. | Stefano Aversa | President and Member of the Board | AlixPartners | |
. | Stefano Pessina | Executive Chairman | Alliance Boots GmbH | |
. | Stefano Poli | Chief Executive Officer | Electro Power Systems SpA | |
. | Steffen Naumann | Chief Financial Officer | The Zuellig Group Incorporated | |
. | Stein Erik Hagen | Chairman | Orkla ASA | |
. | Stephan Gemkow | Chief Executive Officer | Franz Haniel & Cie GmbH | |
. | Stephan Heimbach | Corporate Vice-President; Head, Corporate Communications and Government Affairs | Siemens AG | |
. | Stephan Klapproth | Anchor, Ten O’Clock News | Swiss Television SF | |
. | Stephan Morais | Deputy Chief Executive Officer and Member of the Board | Banco Nacional de Investimento | |
. | Stephan Schmidt | Director | Musik Akademie Basel/University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland | |
. | Stephan Tanda | Member of the Managing Board of Directors | Royal DSM NV | |
. | Stephanie Czerny | Managing Director | Burda Media | |
. | Stephanie Flanders | Economics Editor | BBC World News | |
. | Stephen A. Schwarzman | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | The Blackstone Group | |
. | Stephen Dobbs | Senior Group President | Fluor Corporation | |
. | Stephen Fidler | Brussels Editor | The Wall Street Journal | |
. | Stephen G. Pagliuca | Managing Director | Bain Capital | |
. | Stephen Olabisi Onasanya | Group Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer | First Bank of Nigeria Plc | |
. | Stephen P. Gottesfeld | Senior Vice-President, General Counsel and Secretary | Newmont Mining Corporation | |
. | Stephen S. Poloz | President and Chief Executive Officer | Export Development Canada (EDC) | |
. | Stephen Toope | President and Vice-Chancellor | University of British Columbia | |
. | Stephen van Coller | Chief Executive, Corporate, Investment Banking and Wealth Management, Africa | Absa Capital | |
. | Stephen Wilson | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | CF Industries Holdings Inc. | |
. | Steve Adler | President and Editor-in-Chief | Thomson Reuters | |
. | Steve Bolze | President and Chief Executive Officer, Power and Water | General Electric Company | |
. | Steve Clarke | Vice-President, Sales, Western Europe, Africa and Middle East | AGCO Corporation | |
. | Steve Davis | President and Chief Executive Officer | PATH | |
. | Steve Fludder | President and Chief Executive Officer | Samsung Engineering America Inc. | |
. | Steve J. Lennon | Group Executive, Sustainability | Eskom Holdings SOC Limited | |
. | Steve King | Chief Executive Officer, Worldwide | ZenithOptimedia | |
. | Steve Koltes | Co-Founder and Managing Partner | CVC Capital Partners (Luxembourg) Sˆrl | |
. | Steve Kuhn | Partner and Head of Fixed Income Trading | Pine River Capital Management LP | |
. | Steven Kelmar | Senior Vice-President, Chief of Staff to the Chairman and Head of Government, Regulatory and Policy | Aetna Inc. | |
. | Steven Mollenkopf | President and Chief Operating Officer | Qualcomm | |
. | Steven P. Stanbrook | Chief Operating Officer, International Markets | S. C. Johnson & Son Inc. | |
. | Steven Vanackere | Minister of Finance of Belgium | Government | |
. | Stewart Wallis | Executive Director | New Economics Foundation | |
. | Strive Masiyiwa | Group Executive Chairman | Econet Wireless Group | |
. | Stuart Brooks | Special Adviser | Chevron Corporation | |
. | Stuart E. Eizenstat | Partner and Head, International Trade and Finance | Covington & Burling LLP | |
. | StŽphane Benoit-Godet | Editor-in-Chief | Bilan | |
. | StŽphanie Antoine | Senior Business Editor | France 24 | |
. | Subra Suresh | Director | National Science Foundation (NSF) | |
. | Subramanian Ramadorai | Vice-Chairman | Tata Consultancy Services Ltd | |
. | Subramanian Rangan | The Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Court Endowed Chair in Societal Progress | INSEAD | |
. | Sudhir Maheshwari | Member of the Group Management Board | ArcelorMittal | |
. | Sue Riddlestone | Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer | BioRegional Development Group | |
. | Sugiarto Prijono | President and Chief Executive Officer | PT Astra International Tbk | |
. | Sulak Sivaraksa | Founder and Director | Sathirakoses-Nagapradeepa Foundation | |
. | Sulayman Al-Bassam | Playwright and Theatre Director | SABAB Theatre | |
. | Suleyman Sozen | Vice-Chairman | Dogus Group | |
. | Sultan Bin Saeed Al Mansoori | Minister of Economy of the United Arab Emirates | Government | |
. | Sun Yafang | Chairwoman of the Board | Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd | |
. | Sun Yinhuan | Chairman of the Board | Yida Group Co. Ltd | |
. | Sunil Bharti Mittal | Chairman and Group Chief Executive Officer | Bharti Enterprises | |
. | Sunil K. Munjal | Joint Managing Director | Hero MotoCorp Limited | |
. | Sunny Varkey | Chairman | GEMS Education | |
. | Suresh Chaturvedi | Group Chairman | Overseas Infrastructure Alliance (India) Pvt. Ltd (OIAPL) | |
. | Surong Bulakul | Chief Financial Officer | PTT Public Company Limited | |
. | Surya Kant | President, North America, Europe and UK | Tata Consultancy Services Ltd | |
. | Susan Cook | Research Executive | Royal Bafokeng Nation | |
. | Susan Glasser | Editor-in-Chief | Foreign Policy Magazine | |
. | Susan M. Clark | Managing Director | SABMiller Europe | |
. | Susan Shabangu | Minister of Mineral Resources of South Africa | Government | |
. | Susan Taylor Martin | President, Reuters Media | Thomson Reuters | |
. | Susan Whiting | Vice-Chair | The Nielsen Company | |
. | Susanne Giger | Economics Editor | Swiss Radio and Television SRF | |
. | Susantha C. Ratnayake | Chairman | John Keells Holdings Limited | |
. | Suzan G. Benmayor | Columnist | HŸrriyet Gazetesi | |
. | Svein Aaser | Chairman of the Board | Telenor ASA | |
. | Svein Richard Brandtzaeg | President and Chief Executive Officer | Hydro | |
. | Sven AfhŸppe | Deputy Editor-in-Chief | Handelsblatt GmbH | |
. | Svetlana Mironyuk | Editor-in-Chief | RIA Novosti | |
. | Syed Naveed Qamar | Minister of Defence of Pakistan | Government | |
. | Sylvester Chauke | Chief Architect | DNA Brand Architects | |
. | Sylvie Kauffmann | Editorial Director | Le Monde | |
. | SŽbastien Marot | Executive Director | Friends-International | |
. | T. Hixonia Nyasulu | Chairman of the Board of Directors | Sasol Limited | |
. | T. K. Kurien | Chief Executive Officer, Information Technology Business | Wipro Limited | |
. | Tadataka Yamada | Chief Medical and Scientific Officer, Executive Vice-President and Board Member | Takeda Pharmaceuticals International Inc. | |
. | Tadhg Flood | Head of Financial Institutions Group EMEA | Deutsche Bank AG | |
. | Tae Yoo | Senior Vice-President | Cisco | |
. | Taisuke Sasanuma | Representative Partner | Advantage Partners LLP | |
. | Takahiro Mitani | President, Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF), Japan | Government | |
. | Takahisa Miyauchi | Executive Vice-President and Group Chief Executive Officer, Chemicals | Mitsubishi Corporation | |
. | Takashi Sasaki | Chairman | JTB Corp. | |
. | Takeshi Kimura | President | Mitsubishi Chemical Europe GmbH | |
. | Takeshi Niinami | President and Chief Executive Officer | Lawson Inc. | |
. | Tal Keinan | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | KCPS & Company | |
. | Talal Khalid Idriss | Chief Executive Officer | Bahra Advanced Cable Manufacture Co. Ltd | |
. | Tamzin Booth | European Business Editor | The Economist | |
. | Tan Chin Hwee | Co-Head of Asia-Pacific | Apollo Global Management | |
. | Tan Chorh-Chuan | President | National University of Singapore | |
. | Taner Yildiz | Minister of Energy and Natural Resources of Turkey | Government | |
. | Tanya Beckett | Presenter | BBC World News | |
. | Tarek Sultan Al Essa | Chairman and Managing Director | Agility | |
. | Tarik M. Yousef | Chief Executive Officer | Silatech | |
. | Tatiana Lysova | Editor-in-Chief | Vedomosti | |
. | Ted Smyth | Executive Vice-President, Corporate Affairs | McGraw-Hill Companies | |
. | Teresa Ko | Partner, Chairman of China and Member of the Practice Committee | Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer | |
. | Terri Toyota | Director, World Economic Forum, Switzerland | Government | |
. | Terry Bowen | Director, Finance | Wesfarmers Limited | |
. | Teruhide Sato | President and Chief Executive Officer | netprice.com Ltd | |
. | Tetsuya Jitsu | Deputy Chief Editorial Writer | Nihon Keizai Shimbun (Nikkei) Inc. | |
. | Tewodros Ashenafi | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | SouthWest Energy (HK) Ltd | |
. | Thapana Sirivadhanabhakdi | President and Chief Executive Officer | Thai Beverage Public Company Limited | |
. | Theaster Gates | Artist and Director, Arts and Public Life Initiative | University of Chicago | |
. | Theodore L. Dysart | Vice-Chairman | Heidrick & Struggles | |
. | Thero Setiloane | Chief Executive Officer | Business Leadership South Africa | |
. | Thierry Tanoh | Chief Executive Officer | Ecobank Transnational Inc. | |
. | Thomas Burmeister | Bureau Chief | DPA – Deutsche Presse Agentur | |
. | Thomas Campbell | Director and Chief Executive Officer | Metropolitan Museum of Art | |
. | Thomas Enders | Chief Executive Officer | EADS (European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company) | |
. | Thomas J. Donohue | President and Chief Executive Officer | US Chamber of Commerce | |
. | Thomas J. Jordan | Chairman of the Governing Board, Swiss National Bank, Switzerland | Government | |
. | Thomas J. Pritzker | Chairman | Hyatt Hotels Corporation | |
. | Thomas K. Montag | Co-Chief Operating Officer | Bank of America Corporation | |
. | Thomas Keller Lippold | President and Chief Executive Officer | Corporaci—n Nacional del Cobre de Chile (CODELCO) | |
. | Thomas L. Friedman | Columnist, Foreign Affairs | The New York Times | |
. | Thomas Larsen | Editor and Political Commentator | Berlingske Tidende A/S | |
. | Thomas Nagy | Executive Vice-President, COS | Novozymes A/S | |
. | Thomas Rabe | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Bertelsmann SE & Co. KGaA | |
. | Thomas Robertson | Dean | The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania | |
. | Thomas T. Noland Jr | Senior Vice-President, Corporate Communications | Humana Inc. | |
. | Thomas V. Milroy | Chief Executive Officer, BMO Capital Markets | BMO Financial Group | |
. | Thomas W. Purcell Jr | Portfolio Manager and Executive Board Member | Viking Global Investors LP | |
. | Thorkil Sonne | Founder and Chairman | Specialist People Foundation | |
. | Thorold Barker | Editor, Heard on the Street | The Wall Street Journal | |
. | Thorsten Heins | Chief Executive Officer | Research in Motion Limited | |
. | Thulasiraj Ravilla | Executive Director | Aravind Eye Care System (AECS) | |
. | Tian Ning | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | Zhejiang Panshi Information & Technology Co. Ltd | |
. | Tian Wei | Moderator and Host, CCTV News | China Central Television | |
. | Tibor Toth | Executive Secretary | Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization | |
. | Tidjane Thiam | Group Chief Executive | Prudential Plc | |
. | Tihomir D. Kamenov | Founder and Chairman | Commercial League Healthcare Group | |
. | Tijo Collot d’Escury | Managing Partner and Member of the Global Executive Committee | Roland Berger Strategy Consultants | |
. | Tim Armstrong | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | AOL | |
. | Tim Brown | Chief Executive Officer | IDEO LLC | |
. | Tim Groser | Minister of Trade of New Zealand | Government | |
. | Tim Hunt | Professor | Cancer Research UK | |
. | Tim Palmer | Co-Director, Programme on Modelling and Predicting Climate | Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford | |
. | Timothy Minges | Chairman | PepsiCo Greater China Region | |
. | Tina Brown | Founder and Editor-in-Chief | Newsweek and The Daily Beast | |
. | Tito Mboweni | Chairman | AngloGold Ashanti Ltd | |
. | Tom Albanese | Chief Executive | Rio Tinto Plc | |
. | Tom Braithwaite | US Banking Editor | The Financial Times | |
. | Tom Hulme | Design Director and Founder, OpenIDEO.com | IDEO Inc. | |
. | Tom Keene | Host | Bloomberg Radio & Television | |
. | Tom‡s Saraceno | Artist | Studio Tomas Saraceno | |
. | Tomas Ko Freitag de Lara | Co-Founder and Business Partner | Engage | |
. | Tony Blair | United Nations Middle East Quartet Representative | Government | |
. | Tony F. Chan | President | The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology | |
. | Tony Haymet | Director | Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego | |
. | Torbjšrn Tšrnqvist | Chief Executive Officer | Gunvor Group | |
. | Torsten Hagen Jorgensen | Member of Group Executive Management, Head of Group Operations and Other Lines of Business | Nordea Bank AB | |
. | Torsten Krauel | Senior Columnist | Die Welt | |
. | Toru Hashimoto | Mayor of Osaka City, Japan | Government | |
. | Toshimitsu Motegi | Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan | Government | |
. | Toshiyuki Shiga | Representative Director and Chief Operating Officer | Nissan Motor Co. Limited | |
. | Tracy Clarke | Group Head, Human Resources and Communications | Standard Chartered | |
. | Traver Ncube | Deputy Executive Chairman | Mail & Guardian | |
. | Trem Smith | President and Chief Executive Officer | HKN Energy | |
. | Trevor Manuel | Minister of the National Planning Commission (NPC) of South Africa | Government | |
. | Trevor Mundel | President, Global Health Program | Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation | |
. | Tri Mumpuni | Executive Director | IBEKA | |
. | Tristan Lecomte | Chief Executive Officer | Pur Projet | |
. | Trond Bentestuen | Group Executive Vice-President | DNB ASA | |
. | Trond Giske | Minister of Trade and Industry of Norway | Government | |
. | Truong Gia Binh | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | FPT Corporation | |
. | Tryfon Natsis | Senior Trader and Partner | Brevan Howard Investment Products Ltd | |
. | Tsuguhiko Kadokawa | Chairman | Kadokawa Group Holdings | |
. | Tulsi Tanti | Chairman | Suzlon Energy Limited | |
. | Tuncay …zilhan | Chairman | Anadolu Group | |
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. | Viktor Yanukovych | President of Ukraine | Government | |
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. | Vinod Mittal | Vice-Chairman | JSW Ispat Steel Limited | |
. | Viola Vogel | Professor | ETH Zurich | |
. | Vishakha N. Desai | Independent Director of the Board, Mahindra Group | Mahindra and Mahindra | |
. | Vitaly Saveliev | Chief Executive Officer | Aeroflot | |
. | Vitor Hallack | Chairman of the Board | Camargo Corra SA | |
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. | Vittorio Grilli | Minister of Economy and Finance of Italy | Government | |
. | Vivek C. Burman | Chairman Emeritus | Dabur India Ltd | |
. | Vivek Y. Ranadive | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer | TIBCO Software Inc. | |
. | Viviane Reding | Vice-President and Commissioner, Justice, Fundamental Rights and Citizenship, European Commission, Brussels | Government | |
. | Vladimir A. Dmitriev | Chairman | State Corporation Bank for Development and Foreign Economic Affairs (Vnesheconombank) | |
. | Vladimir Evtushenkov | Chairman of the Board of Directors | Sistema JSFC | |
. | Vladimir Lisin | Chairman of the Board of Directors | Novolipetsk Steel (NLMK) | |
. | Vladimir Spivakov | Violinist, Conductor and President | Vladimir Spivakov International Charity Foundation | |
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. | Xu Minsheng | Managing Director and Partner | Hony Capital Ltd | |
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Do Australian politicians listen or respond to those that put them in office? – Part 1
How do the political parties and their hierarchy respond when facts are put before them?
Part 1
Having been involved in political lobbying (internationally speaking) for many many years I thought I would test the three main parties in Australia to see how they would react to some hard hitting articles and supporting evidence.
As the Prime Minister of Britain and Australia were put under immense pressure on one particular topic (Child Sex Abuse) it was only a matter of time before they buckled in to respond to the facts that were laid out before them.
British PM David Camerson launched an inquiry into such abuse and Australia’s PM Julia Gillard went a step further to launch a Royal Commission………however I found that the title of both these inquiries should have had a broader spectrum with possible a new title “An inquiry into Paedophilia”
It would now appear that because many celebrities and politicians in the UK were/are involved in Paedophilia and have been for decades……….including up to Prime Minister level…….. David Cameron has been forced to widen the net to include the political sector.
I now feel that the Australian Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, should likewise extend the Royal Commisstion into the same area and would strongly recommend that both PM’s include looking into the Masonic Order which is extensive in both countries!!
It is clear that although the Catholic Church has been the mainstay of such abuse one must also include all christian and non christian faiths. However, one must also be cautious not to overreact with keeping the main focus on the church when it is clear that there has been a massive involvement at both political and masonic level.
The other issue we must be careful to avoid is the fact that the New World Order Cabal’s main target is to destroy religion and bring into being their own religion which is clearly based on Lucifer.
For those that are not aware of this elite group we have to understand that the New World Order is basically run from an area called Temple in the City of London (centred on Chancery Lane off Fleet Street) which is its legal/judiciary/financial administrative centre. This is referred too as the Crown……… not the Royal Crown but that of the Crown Templar…….they in-turn are subservient to Rome but not to the Catholic Church as we know it but to the Jesuits who abide near to the Vatican and who basically run the upper levels of the New World Order…….they worship Lucifer and carry out evil and satanic rituals with direct links to the Masonic Lodges. Many of the upper structure of Freemasons are involved in politics and also consist of members of European Royal Families, ex Ambassadors, ex Military Chiefs of Staff, senior members of the Judiciary (including high profile Judges) and finally the corporate sector. It is common for many of the above to be involved in paedophilia which in case you do not know also just so happens to be the most sensitive and dangerous topic to expose…….many investigators and journalist have lost their lives to this scum that plagues this planet!!
I may possibly cover who controls what and where in another article in order for you all to understand that the good old British Empire and all those countries that fell to its greed still are owned and controlled by this “Satanic Cabal” with the USA, Canada,Australia etc all being no exception to the controlling “Talons” of the current New World Order.
Let’s now look at what I sent to those Australian Political Parties and who has or who has not responded to my many articles.
Here is one of my first emails to the Australian Prime Minister, Julia Gillard – The Leader of the Opposition, Tony Abbot and to the Greens:
Your message to the Prime Minister
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-
- Hidden
Thank you for your message to the Prime Minister at www.pm.gov.au.
Below is a copy for your records.
Responses prepared to your message will generally be emailed to you. If you have supplied a postal address, a response may be sent to you via Australia Post. In some cases, your message may be forwarded to other Federal Ministers for their consideration.
This is an automatically generated email. Please do not reply to this email as this address is not monitored. If you have any problems with this service please contact the Web Administrator through the site feedback service at http://www.pm.gov.au/site-feedback
Submitted on Sun, 16 Dec 2012 16:57:49 +1100
Title: Mr
First name: Peter
Family name: Eyre
Email address: Hidden
Street address: Hidden
Street address:
Town / City: Hidden
State: Hidden
Postcode: Hidden
Country: Australia
Subject: Child abuse – Royal Commission
Comment:
To whom it may concern
I have been fighting paedophilia for some considerable time and have written many articles on the subject.
It is my belief that the current investigations into child abuse is only lip service and will fall well short of an open investigation that should not have any restrictive constrains or terms.
We have truly missed an opportunity to extend this inquiry from the current worded title about child abuse and open it up to becoming a full and proper inquiry into paedophilia.
I also note that a great emphasis has been placed on the Catholic Church when in actual fact it is rife in all churches, politics up to the highest level, boys and girls clubs and institutions, care homes and in almost all sectors such as the health services, care and social workers, police, judiciary, education etc etc…….one should also add to this list the activity in Freemasonry and the many Masonic Lodges around this country and the world.
I would strongly suggest that this will turn out to be yet another “White Elephant” at vast expense to the taxpayers with what would possibly be a sort of fizzle-out conclusion thus allowing the cabal to continue on in their evil satanic ways.
We should grasp this opportunity to expose as much as possible and bring all those involved in paedophilia to trial…….that must include those in very high positions including dare I say up to political leadership level both past and current.
Currently I have republished and modified some of my past article two of which are as per the following link:
I will be publishing many other articles on this topic whilst we have such inquiries in the system so as to educate the public at large of the truth and the extent of the problem…………I sincerely hope that you will all seize this opportunity and make sure such inquiries are correctly carried out and cover all aspects of this sordid paedophilia that is so rife.
Kind regards
Peter Eyre – Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis
17th of December 2012
End of email
The above email was sent to the Leader of the Opposition, Tony Abbot as follows:
Fw: Your message to the Prime Minister
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To: Hidden
Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2012 8:56 AM
Subject: RE: Ministerial Correspondence Referral from PM&C. C12/82429 [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED]Dear Mr Eyre,
Thank you for your email regarding the Royal Commission into Institutional Childhood Sexual Abuse in Australia. The Prime Minister has referred your email to the Secretariat for response.
The Royal Commission is being established because of the overwhelming intensity of the stories that have come to light. Child sexual abuse is a crime that can damage young lives and haunt adults.
The Government has asked all stakeholders, including organisations that represent survivors of child sexual abuse and people formerly in institutional care, community and legal leaders, law enforcement, governments and religious organisations to help shape the development of the Royal Commission.
All suggestions made by these organisations and concerned members of the public are currently being considered by the Government and will help inform the establishment of the Commission. The Commission is expected to begin its public work in early 2013.
The Royal Commission is an important step in ensuring what happened in the past does not happen again and we thank you for your interest.Yours sincerely
Royal Commission SecretariatFor the latest information on the Royal Commission, you may wish to visit: childabuseroyalcommission.dpmc.gov.au/home or call 1800 099 340
If you require immediate or crisis support, please call Lifeline on 13 11 14
- From
- To
Dear Mr Eyre
Thank you for your email following the announcement of a Royal Commission into child sex abuse.
As a community we must have zero tolerance for the sexual abuse of children. Wherever abuse has occurred it must be tackled and it must be tackled vigorously, openly and transparently.
It is clear that for a long period there was insufficient awareness and insufficient vigilance when it came to predatory behaviour by people in positions of authority over children. Many terrible things have been done, and many people have suffered deeply.
For these reasons the Coalition supports a Royal Commission to investigate the sexual abuse of children.
I believe the investigation must be wide-ranging, must consider any evidence of the abuse of children in Australia, and should not be limited to the examination of any one institution. It must include all organisations, government and non-government, where there is evidence of sexual abuse.
I take my faith seriously but as a member of parliament, my duty is to the public, not to the Church. Where the law requires mandatory reporting then that law should be observed.
It would be in the best interests of all community organisations, as well as in the best interests of victims, if every institution that’s been caught up in this, including the churches, has a full disclosure, no cover-ups rule.
My understanding of confession is that it requires repentance. Absolution could hardly be given to someone who is not prepared to atone for their sins.
Yours sincerely
TONY ABBOTT
To which I replied:
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Dear Mr Abbott
Thank you very much for your comments re child sex abuse………your response was almost perfect to say the least.
However, I would add that the Royal Commission should be into Paedophilia and not child sex abuse as this then opens up to a much broader spectrum.
Paedophilia is rife in Australia (as it is in so many other countries) and some of my previous articles have revealed just how rife it actually is.
It is also fact that much of this satanic type activity is associated with the Masonic Lodge and accordingly I would hope that you will continue to monitor the Prime Minister and the Royal Commission into doing the right thing and not coming up with yet another “Government White Wash.”
I am sure that with the support of many “Whistle Blowers” and some of the victims of paedophilia that we may well see some startling information come to light, as was the case with Sir Jimmy Saville in the UK…….it is therefore a good time for our politicians to keep a close eye on events and apply pressure as required.
Elections always bring out someones dirty washing and so I think 2013 will be a very good year for the public to make sure their elected representatives do their job.
I now await your response in regard to my other article i.e. War Crimes, Depleted Uranium, Massive Fraud/Corruption here in Australia and on the issue as to who controls Australia, keeping the Crown Templar in mind etc etc…….not forgetting the fact that we are about to see the changing of the guard as far as the current New World Order (NWO) is concerned as the World’s Collateral Accounts and associated Gold Bullion are handed over to the next “Super Power” in the Far East which will have direct implications for Australia.
Perhaps you would be kind enough to pass comment on the last paragraph and that you are aware of the current fraudulent workings of the NWO, the establishment of at least 160 countries into a New Alliance of Non Aligned Members (that will form part and parcel of that Super Power) and if you as Leader of the Opposition will seek participation with the new alliance members?
Kind Regards
Peter Eyre – 9/1/2012
Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis
———————-
In relation to the Australian Green Party I have to say I have not received any interest whatsoever and certainly no feedback which is rather sad seeing as I once had a soft spot for this party……..oh well we all know where to place our votes at the next election!!
————————–
I would like to remind you of historical paedophilia and also that I myself many years ago became aware of possible child abuse in relation to the so called “Lost Generation” which was when the church took Aboriginal children from their parents and forces them in Christianity and obviously also became victim to these paedophiles that plague Australia. It was also fact that such places as the Clontaft Boys Home in Perth and other locations abused their position……..here are some references made by that wonderful Canadian Kevin Annett who has worked so tirelessly to expose this evil satanic practice and who also proved that over 50,000 Canadian Indian Children had gone missing……….it has been proven that once children are hired for their warped sexual practices they are never seen again…….that amounts to murder of the first degree!!
Some of his Australian research:
Customs Paedophile Ring Alleged By Simon Santow for PM – Fri Oct23 2009
A former Customs officer has told the inquiry that corruption is an issue within the service. A parliamentary inquiry has been told that a paedophile ring is probably operating within the Australian Customs Service.
Speech by Senator Andrew Murray – Immigraton and Multicultural Affairs – Australian Democrats. Made on the 19th September 2001, Western Australia:
MATTERS OF PUBLIC INTEREST: Keaney, Brother Francis Paul
Senator MURRAY (Western Australia) (1.15 p.m.) In the August 2001 Senate Community Affairs References Committee report on child migration Lost innocents: righting the record, recommendation 4 states:
That in accordance with the Statutes of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, the Commonwealth Government initiate the process for Francis Paul Keaney’s membership of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire to be cancelled and annulled.
This unanimous recommendation goes some way to `righting the record’ for all those child migrants and Australian children who suffered under Brother Keaney in Western Australian orphanages run by the Christian Brothers. The evidence damns him as a despicable and heartless monster.
The fight to vanquish evil in the church is international. In France, a bishop has recently been jailed for covering up paedophilia by another priest. In the United Kingdom, the church has supported the Nolan Review, an independent appraisal of harm done to children in the Catholic Church’s institutions. In April 2001, in the executive summary of their first report, their hope was:
… to bring about a culture of vigilance where every single adult member of the Church consciously and pro-actively takes responsibility for creating a safe environment for children and young people.
I deeply regret that the official response by the Christian Brothers to the committee’s Keaney recommendation does not contain the same sentiments. Instead, leading Christian Brother Shanahan said on Channel 10 news on 30 August that stripping Keaney of his honours was going `too far’ because:
I think we need to recognise that it’s not just black or white, but like all human beings there’s quite a mixture in the man. Surea mixture of evil, conman, sadist and deviant. Brother Shanahan’s reaction continues a long history by some of support for men like Keaney. Thankfully, others like the courageous Brother Coldrey campaign to expose these crimes and to address the uncomfortable issues so arising.
Before addressing the mixture that maketh this particular man, a brief profile of Keaney is in order. Born into a farming family in Ireland in 1888, aged 23 he emigrated to New South Wales in 1911 where he joined the police force before entering the Christian Brothers Order in 1916 at the age of 28. Apparently, it is a characteristic of people like Keaney to seek out opportunities for their deviant behaviour. Where else would he start his ecclesiastical career then but at an orphanage in South Melbourne? In 1919 he joined the staff at Clontarf Orphanage in Perth, Western Australia. In the late 1920s he inaugurated the Tardun Farm School Scheme east of Geraldton and then later served a number of terms as principal, including at Clontarf from 1936 to 1941 and at Bindoon Boys Town from 1942 to 1944 and again from 1948 until his death in 1954 at the age of 65. Keaney was physically imposing. He stood six foot three inches tall and was of powerful build with a voice to match. He intimidated fellow Christian Brothers and boys alike.
In the late 1940s, Keaney set about erecting his own monument by embarking on the near impossible task of completing five large granite buildings at Bindoon using child labour. His unpaid hungry, fearful labour force were mostly child migrant boys who were also expected to clear, fence and establish vineyards and orchards on 17,000 acres of undeveloped Western Australian farmland. To achieve his vision, he inflicted a manic and brutal regime of slave labour on the boys under his care. They were relentlessly driven from dawn to dusk in a dangerous work environment where the risk of accident was a reality. With their bare hands they cleared the land, laid the foundations and erected the most magnificent structures for Keaney and the Christian Brothers Order. Education was largely denied these boys, as was an adequate diet and protective clothing. Christian love and care was distinguished not by its presence but by its absence.
So what is the mixture that Brother Shanahan likes in Keaney? Publicly, he possessed considerable public relation skills that he put to good work in creating a mythology about himself. He had many friends and acquaintances in high places that he wined, dined and conned. There were political and business leaders, heads of government departments and high ranking militarists and church dignitaries. He was referred to as `Keaney the builder’, as `the orphans friend’, as `the mender of broken lives’ and other extravagant sobriquets. Such was the admirationif not adulationthat he was awarded an MBE and an ISO in 1954 and a statue was erected to his memory in 1957.
Privately, however, a very different man is revealed. No McLean, no Philby, no spymaster better concealed his true self. Listen to the former child migrants themselves. From submission 13:
When Brother Keaney arrived the real slavery beatings and sexual assaults became rampant.
From submission 20:
Some of the scars of Keaney’s brutality still remain with me both physically and emotionally … his actions would have warranted criminal charges had he not operated and exerted influence over the law in Western Australia.
From submission 25:
Bindoon was nothing more than a paedophile ring. Most of the Brothers were into raping and molesting the little boys, sometimes sharing their favourites with each other. They seemed to like the shy boys best.
Again, from submission 25:
We had no shoes, mixing sand and lime for the mortar. I remember the pain of lime burns on my feet and legs and if I stopped I would be flogged with …Keaney’s walking stick. We were all flogged by Keaney …
From submission 57:
We built that bloody place. We built it with our bare hands … We were slave labourers … We had no shoes. We worked in our bare feet every day. Winter and summer. We built that bloody place for them …
From submission 26:
I lost my teeth at Bindoonmy face kicked repeatedly by Brother Keaney
From submission 36: We would be …subjected to …extreme atrocious verbal abuse and very personal insults mainly from Brother Keaney. He would loudly shout to us that we were the scum of the earth and the descendants of whores …
Again, from submission 36:
Br. Keaney was a very sadistic, perverted and deviant paedophile. He abused many of the boys … in his care. Tragically, there was just no one that we victims could go to for help. Who would have believed us anyway?
From Welsh’s Bindoon file:
When one boy asked Keaney if he could be taken off the pick and shovel to learn the electrical trade, he was hit between the eyes with Keaney’s walking stick. [His] head was split open and with blood pouring from the wound, he fell to the ground. Get up, you little black shit, Keaney roared as he unleashed a barrage of savage kicks to [his] body. Get back to the pick and shovel! That’s all you’re good for … Damn you to hellfire!
And another from the Geordie Bindoon file, pages 59 to 60:
An Irish lad, who happened to be closest to Keaney in one of his rages, and for no other reason, was backhanded off the scaffold and landed 10 feet below on his back. [He] spent six weeks in Royal Perth Hospital followed by five weeks rehabilitation at Shenton Park Hospital. Forty years later [he] is on a pension due to back and neck problems.
Sadly, there were some who knew the truth but did not have the courage to blow the whistle. Even prior to Bindoon, a child welfare department official considered taking proceedings against Keaney for criminal assault on a Clontarf boy. That is in submission 95. Certainly from government records uncovered it is clear that some officials had serious reservations about Bindoon. For example, a 1948 departmental memo states:
I have never been very happy about Bindoon and if the migrant boys are to remain there … a great improvement will have to be effected.
Another in 1949:
I’m afraid that if something is not done to rectify the present position both the Department and the Bindoon authorities will leave themselves open to a charge of exploiting children.
If the boys ran away the police returned them, unbelieving of what they were told. The aura and the power of the church were too strong. The very brothers in charge of their care were often themselves the perpetrators of criminal physical and sexual assault. When a boy did pluck up enough courage to complain, he was savagely flogged for his temerity. Hard to believe? Read the report and the submissions.
So this is the private part of Keaney’s mix. The tragedy is that his crimes were hidden from the public. He got away with them, and hundreds of migrants and Australian children live a lifetime of pain as a result. A number of the leaders of the church were accomplices in this crime, but there are those who will not be a part of the cover-up. In Australia, the Christian Brothers’ official,
for the order’s leadership in Ireland and Rome, he states that the brothers knew of sex rings operating in their institutions and that no effective steps were taken to prevent them. Legally, they were accomplices to crimea crime in itself.
So unpopular has Coldrey’s work been that he has paid a price in the church. Although I am certain that there are very large numbers of Catholic priests who do support his cleansing work, there have also been moves to deny Coldrey any official post. Before Christmas last year he released his latest book on the Internet, called Religious Life Without Integrity. It was only a matter of months before he was ordered by superiors from Rome to withdraw it.
Another authority in this area is Richard Sipe of the United States. He retired from the Catholic priesthood with the permission of Rome in 1970 and has spent 37 years working in the area of psychology and mental health and for the Catholic priesthood with the backing of the church. In a report sent to the committee, he reveals that 30 per cent of United States’ priests have some regular, some occasional adult sexual relationships. There is nothing wrong with that, in my view. Sadly though, his long-term research results in an estimate of six per cent of priests who have and do sexually abuse children. Thankfully, the vast majority94 per centhave not and do not. There are obvious problems with transferring figures from one country to another. We do know, however, that there have been and are priest paedophiles in Australia. Currently there are 4,445 Catholic priests in Australia. Six per cent would mean a possible 267 paedophiles. One per cent would mean 44. Point one of a per cent would be four. I do not know how many there are, but there are not none.
Sipe believes that many, but not all, clerical sexual abusers cannot help their behaviour, whilst others are simply evil. Whatever the case, they and their crimes cannot and must not be protected. Mercy for them means scores of victims for society to deal with, preyed on by those whom little children trust. Keaney was evil and should be stripped of his imperial honours. He was a sadist who indulged in criminal assault and who knowingly protected rings of predatory brothers engaged in systemic long-term sexual assault on defenceless children. I do hope the government will take the committee’s unanimous recommendation to heart.
In concluding, I would like to quote from an interaction between myself and Brother Shanahan on Thursday 22 March 2001. The Senate Hansard reference is CA486-487. I said as follows to him:
The accusations are as follows: those two orders
I was referring to the Christian Brothers and the Sisters of Mercy
engaged in systemic criminal assault, which included systemic floggings with a variety of weapons and brutal and dangerous behaviour towards children which were offences against the law at the time; widespread sexual assault including rape;widespread conspiracy between individuals and organisations within the Catholic Church to conceal crimes and to persuade police, medical staff and other authorities to be accomplices to the concealment; denial of education and the rights of children; brutal and inhumane working conditions including slave labour; theft of possessions and wages; cruelty and emotional deprivation on a grand scale; aggravated breach of contract with governments who entrusted children to their care; lies and deceit to children and to children as adults and to families, including forging and uttering; and a hypocritical and continuing use of legal stratagems to avoid the moral responsibilities arising out of those times.
I said to him: You have dealt with that, to some extent, with your apology and, to some extent, with your submission. Do you accept those accusations as being an accurate reflection of the evidence of many people?
And Brother Shanahan’s response was:
I accept that those accusations have been made by people. I do not accept them in the sense of pleading guilty as charged.End of speechHere are some more media articles from Australia that Keven extracted:
• Parole for disgraced Test umpire. AUSTRALIA: Steve Randell. Indecent to girls at Tasmanian Catholic school. – West Australian, Thur Apr 4 02 p31
• “Crimes like sex abuse by priests and acts of hypocrisy by Christians have only worsened an already suffering public image for the Churches.” PERTH: – The Record, Western Australia Roman Catholic newspaper, “I say, I say” (comment by Paul Gray), April 4 2002, p 6
• Catholic clergy not main offenders + Celibacy is a tradition of love:
• “Forced care inquiry ‘overdue’.” AUSTRALIA: Democrats Senator Andrew Murray wants an inquiry into the bad treatment of non-indigenous Australian-born children who were taken from their homes, and put into orphanages and children’s homes. It would be a follow-on from the inquiries into the stolen generations [of Aboriginal children], and the child migrants [see Parliamentary report of August 2001 atwww.aph.gov.au/senate/committee/clac_ctte/child_migrat/c04.doc]. – The West Australian, Sat April 6 2002, p 34.
• Abuse of Trust: Child Sexual Abuse and the Churches. AUSTRALIA, and WORLD: “Background Briefing” on ABC, Australian (and a bit of global) wide-ranging discussion.
Various Churches and general
In Australia, more than 100 clergy from the Catholic and Anglican Churches have been convicted of child sexual abuse in the past five years.
Melbourne lawyer, David Forster, said: “You have to have firstly a Royal Commission established by the Federal government to look at the sexual abuse issue within Australia, specifically within the religious community.”
Mr Forster has represented over 100 sexual abuse victims, both Catholic and Anglican.
Prof. Patrick Parkinson, Professor of Law, University of Sydney, author of the book Child Sexual Abuse and the Churches, says that many priests and ministers are in a position of extraordinary power — to define what is right and what is wrong to young children.
Prof. Parkinson said: “There was a fundamental confusion between forgiveness and trust. You could forgive somebody, that doesn’t mean you have to trust them, and in particular it doesn’t mean you have to trust them working with children. “
Anglicans (Church of England)
Anglican minister (dec’d) in the diocese of Bendigo 30 years ago sexually assaulted a boy, Peter O’Flaherty, then 10, for about six years. His father had complained to the minister’s superior about the abuse, but nothing was done.
The Anglican process is haphazard: 23 dioceses with 23 different sets of procedures to deal with child sexual abuse complaints.
The Anglican Church in Sydney was forced to introduce a better system of dealing with victims’ complaints after the 1996 Wood Royal Commission Inquiry into Paedophilia embarrassed the Church. The result was a new Church Discipline Ordinance which sped up the investigation of complaints.
But Clare Pascoe Henderson, one of the key witnesses to the Wood Royal Commission, someone whose evidence was a catalyst for change in Sydney, is still waiting for some justice. Three years sexual relations from age 14 to 17 with her local Anglican minister had left her shattered.
When she complained to the Church more than ten years later, she was told the Church couldn’t do anything because of its “statute of limitations”. When the Anglicans relaxed this, they did not contact her.
The Head of the (Anglican) Professional Standards Unit, Philip Gerber, says the Church’s “ordinances are published” and there was no particular agreement to tell her!
In Victoria (Australia) Fr Kevin O’Donnell (dec’d) was jailed for sexually abusing boys and girls aged between 8 and 14 years old from the 1940s to the 1970s, and senior Church leaders knew.
Encompass was set up four years ago by the Catholic Church in Australia, as part of a system to deal with child sexual abuse. Dr Gerardine Taylor, the Clinical Director of an Assessment and Treatment Centre for Sex Offenders, says “Paedophilia, like all paraphilias, is not curable.”
Fr Vincent Ryan, New South Wales, appealed to the High Court over the severity of his sentence, a minimum prison term of 11 years, for dozens of offences against boys aged from 6 to 14. He had been warned by the Church as far back as 1975 that his abuse of children must stop but his offending continued for another 15 years.
There are separate Catholic Church procedures in Melbourne and for any complaints against priests of the Jesuit order.
The policy of removing clergy as an ‘unacceptable risk’ has brought Australian Catholic bishops into conflict with the Vatican, which wants allegations of child sexual abuse dealt with by secret, internal Church courts.
Fr Peter Chalk of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart, masturbated in front of a 17-year-old student priest in a Victorian seminary in the mid-’70s and tried to seduce him. He went abroad and has not been charged.
– Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Background Briefing, produced by Chris Bullock, http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/bbing/stories/s531384.htm , Sunday April 14 2002
• Bravehearts anti-abuse group holds rallies. AUSTRALIA:: Bravehearts hold rallies in five states. — ABC news, “Children’s group disappointed in WA inaction”, Mon, Apr 15 2002
• Anger as priest faces sex counts. [2002] PERTH, W. Australia: Van Klooster supporters harm and hinder media. – West Australian Tue Apr 16 02 p14
The West Australian, Wednesday April 17 2002, p 27
• PM Howard ‘cool’ on sex abuse inquiry. AUSTRALIA: Democrats move; The West Australian, Wednesday April 17 2002, p 44
• Church rocked by sex scandals.
• Pope lays down sex abuse law. ROME: But repentance loophole lingers still. – The West Australian, Thur Apr 25 02, p 19
• Sex abuser jailed at 69. [1986-87 Crisafio] – No religion link reported. Boy.
The West Australian, By David Darragh, p 52, Saturday, August 10, 2002
PERTH (W. Australia): AN ELDERLY man has been jailed for eight years after a jury found him guilty of sexually abusing a teenage boy who had run away from home.
In sentencing, District Court Judge Hal Jackson said yesterday that Peter Pasquale Crisafio had initiated sex acts with his 15-year-old victim on nine different occasions after the boy had run away from home and stayed with the then 53-year-old at his North Perth home.
A jury last month found Crisafio, now 69, guilty of all 24 sex charges. Crisafio was convicted of seven counts of sexual penetration of a child under 16 and 17 counts of indecent dealing.
• Umpire back. AUSTRALIA: Former test cricket umpire, convicted paedophile Steve Randell, 46, released from gaol, may umpire again. He had served 2 years 9 months gaol. – The West Australian, Wed May 1 02, p 14
• ABC Radio talk about R.C. priests’ problems with celibacy. AUSTRALIA: Some go visiting prostitutes, and there’s been a decade of sex-abuse charges. Books discussed Cassocks in the Wilderness, Sex, Priests and Power, and Celibacy, a Way of Living, Loving and Serving. — Australian Broadcasting Corporation, May 3 02COST OF ABUSE HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS, and, CELIBACY DISPUTED
• [Newspaper reviews of clerical child abuse.] AUSTRALIA: Catholic cardinals get lecture from Pope John Paul II, celibacy not part of original Christianity, Anglican problems, and other information:n Australia R.C. Christian Brothers had been exposed, and in mid-1993 publicly apologised for sexual and physical abuse of migrant and other children in the 1940s to the 1960s. Australian R.C. leaders in 1996 had set up the Towards Healing protocol for dealing with offenders and victims (except in Melbourne Diocese, which has its own Independent Commission into Sexual Abuse since 1996). Brigidine Sister Angela Ryan is the executive officer of the National Committee for Professional Standards, which advises victims to tell the police. She said that in the past priests had been moved about, “but only because society did not know better.” [!!!] Perth Archbishop Barry Hickey said that there had been no complaints of current sexual abuse since 1996. From 1998 39 complaints of past abuse had been logged. Payments: 1999 $49,000, 2000 $110,000, 2001 $335,000, 2002 $220,500 so far. Of 15 payments made, nine were for events in Christian Brothers’ institutions up to 51 years ago. Norman Aisbett.
”Anglicans’ sexual abuse inquiry stalled” p 2: Anglican Brisbane Archbishop Phillip Aspinall says he’s unable to start the Church inquiry into sexual abuse complaints, because none of the eminent people approached had been able to take on leading it, but he remained optimistic. He’s made no headway with his call to Canberra for a royal commission to deal with such issues as mandatory reporting.
”Celibacy put in the spotlight” p 2: It was alleged that the R.C. Church had become a magnet for homosexuals, because of celibacy. Catholic auxiliary bishop in Sydney, Geoffrey Robinson, chairman of the R.C. national professional standards committee, says it is by no means the total cause. He cited the NSW Wood royal commission on paedophilia estimates that 46 per cent of all child abuse occurred in families, 44% of offenders gained access to children through families or friends, and 5% involved people such as teachers, babysitters and clergymen. Some comments were made on sexual maturity. Sr Angela Ryan says a national conference in July will examine all aspects of priestly “formation,” or development. Perth Archbishop Hickey said the entrants to the Guildford seminary tended to be in their 20s these days. Norman Aisbett.
”In the heart of darkness” p 3: Associate Professor (University of NSW) and psychiatrist Carolyn Quadrio has interviewed hundreds of victims of sexual abuse. In a very short time she interviewed 32 male victims of the Christian Brothers, and since then had seen a couple of hundred who were abused as children in places like Bindoon and Clontarf. About 15 years ago she had started moves to reform the psychiatry profession, which itself had sexual abusers in its ranks. “The battering the church is taking at the moment knocks people’s belief systems,” the professor says. “If people don’t have belief systems they get very distressed and confused and even depressed. … there’s still tremendous denial in the community about the extent of child abuse.” Derek Pedley.
”Celibacy a singular problem” p 4: Home is the most dangerous place to be, as far as the possibility of sexual abuse. However, is celibacy in the Catholic priesthood, given its problems and perils, worth it? Well, it was not considered so for more than half that Church’s existence. The narrow culture which is associated with a celibate male priestly caste can result in cover-ups and a refusal to accept that something is wrong, and a fearful clinging to power and authority instead. The remedy could be that Rome made celibacy optional and ordain women as well as men. The celibacy requirement was probably driving heterosexual men away while drawing in men unable to accept their sexuality. The relentless commercialisation of sex and the promotion of a culture where very little is sacred any more makes a dangerously superficial society. In such a world the promotion of core values which undergird the integrity of all — men, women and children — is increasingly difficult. Gavin Simpsongavin.simpson@wanews.com.au
!!!: Supplying pornography from prison! [2000s] AUSTRALIA: (Presbyterian) Martin Francis Dodge, 38, former worker with a Presbyterian church, a prisoner for child-sex offences (three boys aged 7 to 12), has pleaded guilty to charges of possessing and supplying pornography while in gaol. – The West Australian, “Paedophile may go free,” By Steve Butler, Thur May 9 2002, p 38
Crisafio was made eligible for parole and his sentence was back�dated to July 18 when he went into custody.
PERTH, W. Australia: Lloyd Luciano Sampson, 49, of Merriwa, has appealed seeking a new trial after three juries had convicted him on five charges of sexual penetration and three of indecent dealing against three young sisters. A married father of two who worked as a mechanic, he was dismissed by the Church at Koondoola after he was charged. Decision reserved. – The West Australian, By Sean Cowan, Sat May 11 02, p 52
• “Paedophile kept in jail for sex text” [?2000s] – Presbyterian. Boys.
PERTH, W. Australia: Three years gaol without parole was imposed on Martin Francis Dodge, 38, former worker with a Presbyterian church, for using child sex literature to arouse himself while masturbating in a W.A. gaol. He had been due to be released from Bunbury gaol next Tuesday after serving 12 1/2 years for sex acts against three boys aged between seven and 12. The court was told he had been raped when he was five. – The West Australian, By Steve Butler, Sat May 11 02, p 56
• “At the crossroads.” PERTH: (Roman Catholic) Attendance at Sunday Mass has been crumbling since the 1960s, about half a million stopped going in the 15 years after the Second Vatican Council in 1965, Fundamentalist Churches are sprouting. In the U.S. Fr John Geoghan molested or raped more than 130 children during a “three-decade spree through half a dozen parishes in greater Boston.” The hierarchy knew since 1980, when he made a written statement that his abuse of seven boys in one extended family was not a serious problem. The crisis in Catholicism has been linked by some to celibacy. Perth Archbishop Barry Hickey and Vicar-General Tim Corcoran were quoted. At the Guildford seminary there were 19 candidates for the priesthood. Sydney Archbishop George Pell said that the clerical sex-abuse problem was shameful and lessened the Church’s moral authority in society. But in the past the leaders had not understood psycho-sexual development. The main criterion now is public safety. – The Sunday Times, Perth, Sun May 12 02, pp 39 and 42
• “New flak for Hollingworth;” AUSTRALIA: Former Anglican archbishop, Governor-General Hollingworth’s PR advisor (recommended by his daughter) was paid $250 an hour, i.e., $13,517 for three weeks during the furore over a sex abuse row. The West Australian, Tue May 28 02, p 5“60 MINUTES LOOMING:” SYDNEY’S DR PELL SWEARS THAT SILENCING A VICTIM OR COVERING UP ALLEGATIONS UNFOUNDED, UNTRUE, AND AN ANATHEMA TO HIM (keep reading and reading!)
• Sydney’s Catholic Archbishop Pell swears out Statutory Declaration denying he offered money or goods to David Ridsdale. SYDNEY (NSW) Australia: He was commenting on Mr Ridsdale’s statements to “60 Minutes”, which was going to air on June 2. “The allegation that I attempted to silence a victim or cover up allegations is unfounded and untrue and is an anathema to me.” Statutory declaration by Dr Pell is in PDF (Acrobat) format athttp://www.sydney.catholic.org.au/pdf/Statdec.pdf , dated May 30 02CATHOLIC ARCHBISHOP PELL DENIES HE ATTEMPTED TO SILENCE A SEX-ABUSE VICTIM, TRIES TO STOP HIS TV INTERVIEW GOING TO AIR (please keep reading!)
• “Pell denies sex cover-up report.” SYDNEY (NSW) Australia: Sydney’s Catholic Archbishop George Pell brandished a statutory declaration and foreshadowed legal action over allegations that he had attempted to silence a sex-abuse victim by “buying him off.” Dr Pell said that it was “anathema” to him. He lambasted Channel 9′s “60 Minutes” programme which plans to telecast the allegations on Sunday. – The West Australian, Fri May 31 02, p 33End of abuse articles
As one can see from these reports paedophilia has been rife in Australia for decades and you may also note that despite many comments made in Parliament over a long period of time and despite other inquires taking place the problem continues to accelerate out of control.
One must also note the references made in some of the above to Jesuits……….I have discussed the Jesuits as being the true power behind the New World Order and have long been associated with their worship of Lucifer and in carrying out satanic rituals………as is the case with the upper crust of the Masonic Lodges scattered around the world.
It is also interesting to note that the respective ex Australian Prime Minister did little to stop the paedophilia that existed back in the lost generation days and up to the current time.
Part 2 will give more details on the scope of the existing Royal Commission but I have to say that based on past records we are not likely to see an end to this far reaching problem…………as I said to our Current PM and Leader of the Opposition the inquiry needs to be into Paeodophilia across the board…….this also means delving into the Masonic Lodges and looking further up the chain to see if it also involves the political and judiciary sectors as it does in the United Kingdom.
We now understand that David Cameron has been forced to follow up connections with Politicians and many members of the House of Lords after Lord McAlpine and others were named and shamed…………I feel as a precautionary measure there should be no restrictions on the Australian Royal Commission otherwise we will again see another “Whitewash” and waste of tax payers money in Australia!!!
I must apologise for the rather complex reports above but It would be wrong for me to alter or reduce all the hard work carried out by Keven Annett…….remember this is only some of the Australian articles and believe me it goes much deeper.
In closing I would urge anyone who has had their lives changed forever by these mongrels to come forward and take this last opportunity to blow the lid off Paedophilia in Australia. Likewise anyone with credible evidence or information should also do the right think and make the appropriate report.
I would be more than happy to receive such evidence/information. should you feel so inclined, and can assure you that it will get to those at the top and to the members of the Royal Commission.
Peter Eyre -25/1/2013
Broadcaster – Investigative Journalist – Middle East Consultant – Political Analysis