- neu gegründet: GLF Global Leadership Foundation (Bilderberg für Arme?) - marocki4, 02.04.2004, 15:44
neu gegründet: GLF Global Leadership Foundation (Bilderberg für Arme?)
-->GLF Global Leadership Foundation, in B e r n, c/o An-dreas
B. Notter, Fürsprecher und Notar, Gerechtigkeitsgasse 50/52,
3011 Bern, Stiftung (Neueintragung). Urkundendatum:
4. 02. 2004.
Zweck: Die Stiftung bezweckt, einen konstruktiven
Beitrag zu leisten bei der Förderung von: Frieden in zerstrittenen
Gesellschaften und zwischen den Ländern; Demokratie und Ent-wicklung
in Ländern, welche es nicht schaffen, dem globalen
Fortschriftt auf dem Weg zu Frieden und Wohlstand zu folgen. Um
diese Ziele zu erreichen, beabsichtigt die Stiftung: mit den inter-nationalen
Institutionen und Organisationen, wie den Vereinten
Nationen, dem Internationalen Währungsfonds, der Weltbank
und der Welthandelsorganisation (WTO) zusammenzuarbeiten;
Staatschefs, Parteien und Institutionen auf entsprechende Einla-dung
hin oder aufgrund vertraulicher Anträge Rat und Hilfe zu
leisten, insbesondere in Fragen der Konfliktbereinigung, der De-mokratisierung,
der Wirtschafts- und Sozialpolitik, des Verhal-tenskodex,
sowie in Bezug auf die aus der kulturellen Vielfalt ent-stehenden
Probleme und die fruchtbare Zusammenarbeit mit den
internationalen Institutionen; die effektive Kommunikation, das
Verständnis und das Engagement zwischen den Menschen, Par-teien
und Institutionen zu erleichtern, um Konflikte zu lösen
und/oder Übereinstimmung zu fördern, die zum Frieden, zur De-mokratisierung
und zur Entwicklung beitragen kann. Im Hin-blick
auf diese Ziele wird die Stiftung bezüglich Inhalt und Adres-saten
der erteilten Ratschläge zu jeder Zeit die Vertraulichkeit
wahren und mit Verstand und Diskretion vorgehen; ihre Mittel in
erster Linie für die Entwicklung der Ausbildung und die Finan-zierung
von ihrem Zweck entsprechenden Tätigkeiten einsetzen;
nicht gewinnorientiert handeln. Organisation: Stiftungsrat, Exe-kutivrat,
Beirat, Ad-hoc-Gremien, Stiftungsratswahlgremium,
Gremium der herausragenden Persönlichkeiten, Sekretariat und
Revisionsstelle. Eingetragene Personen: De Klerk, Frederik Wil-lem,
südafrikanischer Staatsangehöriger, in Cape Town (ZA), Prä-sident,
mit Einzelunterschrift; Aeschimann, Jean-Paul, von Lüt-zelflüh,
in Collonge-Bellerive, Mitglied, ohne
Zeichnungsberechtigung; PricewaterhouseCoopers SA, in Genf,
Revisionsstelle.
Tagebuch Nr. 754 vom 16.02.2004
(02132222 / CH-035.7.032.801-9)
Dazu die Times of India:
The Times of India Online
Printed from timesofindia.indiatimes.com >World >The United States
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Secret world of harassed PMs, presidents
AGENCIES[ SUNDAY, MARCH 28, 2004 04:25:58 AM ]
By day's end on Sunday, the world will have seen the launch of a shadowy organisation that seeks to show our leaders how to lead.
Actually, we won't really have seen anything because this is top secret business, conducted in gentlemanly fashion over the confidential cognac and coffee.
Notionally headquartered in London, registered in Berne and with the world atlas as its playing field, the Global Leadership Foundation parades itself as the discreet, confidential and impeccably private mentor of harassed prime ministers and presidents.
The idea, apparently, is to recycle the collective wisdom of more than 100 years of experience in government as totted up by our very own I K Gujral and 14 other former leaders, all of whom are the GLF's founder-members.
It brings to mind fanciful notions of world government, far removed from the chaotic logic of democratic accountability and scrutiny. The GLF describes itself as a virtual organization. It is an unfortunate description, recalling the still-more shadowy, deeply controversial Bilderberg Group, that 50-year-old, annual mingling somewhere in Europe or America of a trans-Atlantic medley of central bankers, defence experts, press barons, prime ministers, royalty and international financiers.
Ever since its inception, members of the Rothschild and Rockefeller families have always attended.
Asians, Africans and Latin Americans never figure on the secret-but-never-arbitrary list of roughly 100 annual invitees, all of them high priests of a Western-led globalisation.
Anecdotally, it was at Bilderberg that the initiation of the European Union, the idea of the Treaty of Rome and the euro was hatched. It was here that world dollarisation was discussed in advance of the euros entry.
It was here that Moscow was given carte blanche to do in Chechnya as it willed, in exchange for agreement on Nato action in Kosovo.
It was here that Bill Clinton and Tony Blair arrived to be approved, even as they teetered on the cusp of power. Last year's Bilderberg, in Versailles, had US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld and America 's neo-imperialist Prince of Darkness Richard Perle in attendance.
Newsweek's Indian-by-birth and American-by-choice editor Fareed Zakaria was the only honorary white man to attend.
Conspiracy theorists have long described Bilderberg as the real engine of world order, a capitalist secret society, whose strictly unreported conclaves are policed by military intelligence, firmly off-the-record even for publications such as The Economist, which routinely attend.
Bilderberg is said to set the agenda for the public forums and summits such as the G-8, Council of Europe and World Trade Organisation meetings that follow hard on its heels, often just miles from the secret meeting.
But the GLF is no Bilderberg. For one, it is not remotely as powerful, even though it counts the following among its honorary patrons Nelson Mandela; George Bush the Elder and Lech Walesa, that extraordinary Polish shipyard worker who executed the greatest historical irony of them all — leading a genuine workers revolution against a so-called worker's state, thus ending both communism and the Cold War.
And there are others. Gujral, unyielding man of peace and so cruelly, if pithily dismissed by Sanjay Gandhi as a drawing room conversationalist.
Two Nobel Peace laureates, one celebrated playwright-president, three European prime ministers, one director-general of the World Trade Organisation and an Arab prince who was a trainee king till he lost the throne he never had.
It might almost be a poor man's Bilderberg; an inclusive multi-cultural bastard offspring of the original group. That is a good way to begin a life in the shadows. But don't count on hearing how it gets on.
<ul> ~ Times of India zur neuen </ul>

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