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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Two suspects for Italy nuclear boss shooting
by Staff Writers
Rome (AFP) May 10, 2012


Italian police are searching for two men linked to the far-left Red Brigades militant group who are suspected of carrying out an attack on the head of a nuclear energy company, media reports said Thursday.

The suspects, who tried to recreate a former Red Brigades cell in 2000, are thought to be behind Monday's attack in Genoa, when a gunman shot the head of Ansaldo Nucleare in the ankle, before escaping with an accomplice.

The pair are also thought to be linked with a local convict serving time for possessing arms from former Communist countries, ANSA news agency said.

Italy's police chief Antonio Manganelli said all possible leads were being followed.

"We have no evidence on the emergence new Red Brigade groups but that does not mean that it is not possible," he said.

Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri had told reporters on Wednesday that the method used in the attack "in particular the use of a firearm and the preparation, could imply the influence of the Red Brigades".

Police were also investigating the possibility that anarchists or organised crime groups could be behind the attack, she said.

Roberto Adinolfi, a 53-year-old nuclear engineer, was followed by the gunman and shot in the ankle as he left his home in Genoa in northwest Italy.

The gunman escaped on a motorbike with a second man waiting nearby. Police said he used a Tokarev handgun -- a brand used by the Soviet army.

Security sources said the attack was similar to one of the first shootings by the far-left Red Brigades militant group, also against Ansaldo, which is part of industrial giant Finmeccanica.

A source said there was "major concern" that the shooting could be a signal for sleeper cells to carry out more attacks or spark copycat shootings.

A total of four Ansaldo managers were victims of attacks by the Red Brigades in Genoa in the 1970s including one who was snatched from the street and released a few hours later and three who were shot and wounded in the street.

The Red Brigades emerged in the 1970s seeking to create a Marxist-Leninist state through armed struggle and were responsible for a number of murders.

Among their most notorious actions was the kidnapping and murder of Italy's former Christian Democrat prime minister Aldo Moro in 1978.

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Germany energy giant RWE hit hard by nuclear exit
Berlin (AFP) May 10, 2012 - Germany's second-biggest power supplier RWE said Thursday its net profits had fallen by more than a quarter in the first three months of the year, hit by Berlin's decision to scrap nuclear power.

Net profits fell by 28 percent in the first quarter of the year to 1.3 billion euros ($1.7 billion) on broadly flat earnings of 15.6 billion euros, the firm said in a statement.

However, the firm was bullish about the outlook for this year, saying: "After significant one-off burdens caused by energy policy decisions taken in Germany during 2011, RWE will regain ground this year."

In the wake of the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, Japan, last year Berlin decided to phase out nuclear power, forcing energy suppliers to shutdown their profitable large-scale power plants.

The government also levied a tax on the reactors' fuel for their remaining lifespan.

Despite the headwinds stemming from this decision, RWE said it "continues to forecast that it will be able to end the year with an operating result and recurrent net income at 2011 levels."

The first quarter results were harmed by a comparison with the first three months of last year, because the nuclear exit decision had not yet been taken at that point.

On Wednesday, RWE's big rival E.ON also saw its net profits decline by around 24 percent but offered a sunny outlook for the rest of the year.

Investors seemed cheered by RWE's results, with shares up 0.84 percent, roughly the same gain as the wider DAX market of leading German stocks.



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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Germany energy giant RWE hit hard by nuclear exit
Berlin (AFP) May 10, 2012
Germany's second-biggest power supplier RWE said Thursday its net profits had fallen by more than a quarter in the first three months of the year, hit by Berlin's decision to scrap nuclear power. Net profits fell by 28 percent in the first quarter of the year to 1.3 billion euros ($1.7 billion) on broadly flat earnings of 15.6 billion euros, the firm said in a statement. However, the fir ... read more


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