UPDATE 1-Melexis increases guidance after Q2 beats hopes

BRUSSELS, July 29 (Reuters) – Belgium’s Melexis (MLXS.BR) said it now expects sales to increase by 60 percent for the full-year as it sees increased demand for its microchips, which make cars more environmentally friendly.

The company, which designs and tests chips, said it had experienced its highest ever quarterly sales and its market had yet to reach its peak.

“Ramping up production output so much faster than anticipated was a substantial challenge,” Chief Executive Francoise Chombar said in a statement on Thursday.

Melexis said net income for the second quarter was 12.1 million euros ($15.75 million), beating 8.50 million expected by four analysts polled by Reuters.

It said revenue for the quarter was 55.8 million euros, beating 49.6 million expected in the poll.

When it announced its first quarter results in April it forecast that revenues would rise by over a third. [ID:nLDE63K13Z] (Reporting by Ben Deighton; Editing by Mike Nesbit) ($1=.7684 euro)

UPDATE 1-Arseus repeats outlook as drugs unit offsets dental

BRUSSELS, July 14 (Reuters) – Belgian medical equipment and services company Arseus NV (RCUS.BR) reiterated its outlook for 2010 as an increase in pharmacies buying in raw materials offset falls in its dental business.

Its Fagron drug ingredients unit saw second-quarter sales rise 9.2 percent, benefiting from a trend towards bespoke prescribing by doctors which resulted in pharmacies buying in ingredients to prepare treatments for patients.

This helped offset a fall of 0.9 percent in sales at its dentist equipment unit as surgeries in Belgium and France delayed buying in equipment.

Overall, the company said on Wednesday, it made 108 million euros ($136 million) of sales in the second quarter, compared with a forecast for 107 million in a reuters poll.

Arseus repeated its expectation of sales growth of 5-10 percent in 2010. (Reporting by Ben Deighton; Editing by Dan Lalor) ($1 = 0.7939 euro)

Gates disappointed by Turkey vote on Iran sanctions

June 11 (Reuters) – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Friday he was disappointed by Turkey’s decision to vote against a U.N. Security Council resolution on sanctions against Iran but said it would not affect U.S.-Turkish military cooperation.

“I was disappointed by the Turkey vote in the Iranian sanctions. That said, Turkey is a decades-long ally of the United States and other members of NATO,” Gates said after a meeting of NATO defence ministers in Brussels.

“Turkey continues to play a critical part in the alliance,” he said.

Turkey, a key NATO member, joined Brazil in voting against the U.N. resolution on Wednesday, but the resolution still passed and the world powers are moving ahead with tighter sanctions on Tehran.

McChrystal expects Afghan progress by year-end – Gates

June 11 (Reuters) – The U.S. commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, expects to make solid progress in the conflict across the country by the end of this year, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Friday. Speaking at the end of a gathering of NATO defence ministers in Brussels, Gates said the road ahead would be “long and hard” but said progress in the offensive so far was sustainable.

“General McChrystal told the ministers that he is confident that he will be able to show progress in the south and across the country and that the strategy is working by the end of the year,” Gates told reporters.

McChrystal sees slower pace for Kandahar operation

BRUSSELS, June 10 (Reuters) – Military operations to gain control of Kandahar, the Taliban’s birthplace, will roll out more slowly and take longer than initially planned, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan said on Thursday.

The shift, outlined by General Stanley McChrystal on the sidelines of a NATO conference in Brussels, is aimed at buying more time to shore up Afghan support for the operation and to build up the capabilities of local authorities to provide services as security improves.

“It’s more important we get it right than we get it fast,” McChrystal told reporters of the Kandahar operation. Though he did not detail the revised timing, McChrystal said, “I think it will take a number of months for this to play out… We want this thing to be as shaped as possible before we go.”

McChrystal’s reassessment puts a spotlight on the limited window available to turn the tide against the Taliban.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates warned on Wednesday that NATO and Afghan forces will have to show gains by year-end to maintain public support at home and in Europe for the eight-year-old war.

Asked if the United States would know by year-end whether the operation in Kandahar was successful, McChrystal said, “I think we’ll know whether it’s progressing… I don’t know whether we’ll know whether it is decisive.”

McChrystal said the changes in Kandahar reflected lessons learned by the U.S. military during a more difficult than expected offensive earlier this year in Marjah in neighbouring Helmand province.

“As we did it, we found that it’s even more complex than we thought and so we need to educate ourself from that and do it even better in Kandahar,” McChrystal told reporters.

“I want to make sure we’ve got conditions shaped politically with the local leaders, with the people. We really want the people to understand and literally pull the operation towards them as opposed to feel as though they are being forced with something they didn’t want,” he said.

McChrystal said he still envisages a gradual campaign in Kandahar aimed at delivering security and governance, as opposed to one big military assault.

But he said, “I do think that it will happen more slowly than we had originally intended.

“We are already in the process of doing political and military shaping but … I think that the timing in which we can be decisive in the environs around the city will probably happen more deliberately than we had originally laid out.”

U.S. commanders had initially seen the main thrust of military operations in Kandahar running from June to the beginning of August, before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, according to an internal schedule seen by Reuters in March.

The campaign would have then shifted from a “clearing” phase to a “secure and deliver government” phase, expected to last at least until mid-October.

But McChrystal said “there will be signficant things happening after Ramadan as well”, and made clear he expected to show progress by year-end, rather than complete the operation outright.

In March, Admiral Mike Mullen, the chairman of the U.S. military’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, described Kandahar as Afghanistan’s “center of gravity” and the key to reversing the Taliban’s momentum this year, Obama’s goal when he ordered the deployment of 30,000 extra U.S. troops in December.

But Gates said on Wednesday in London that he believed Kandahar was an important piece of a successful strategy, but not the only piece. “Kandahar and Helmand are important but they are not the only provinces in Afghanistan that matter in terms of the outcome of this struggle,” Gates said. (Editing by Louise Ireland)

Banimmo: Banimmo repositions two buildings of its portfolio on the basis of a long term pre-letting agreement

Both buildings, located in the Da Vinci Park in Brussels, were rented when acquired. The
objective was to realize an important renovation or restructuring in order to reposition
these buildings according to market needs.

Click on the link hereunder for the complete press release in pdf form.

HUG#1422143

Banimmo repositions two buildings http://hugin.info/137950/R/1422143/371237.pdf

Suspected Belgian courtroom killer arrested

(Reuters) – Belgian police have arrested a man suspected of shooting dead a judge and a clerk in a courtroom in central Brussels Thursday, Brussels prosecutors said Friday.

World

The man, armed with a gun, was overpowered in a Brussels park between the royal palace and parliament late Thursday.

Prosecutors said he had admitted killing the 61-year-old female judge in revenge for his eviction from an apartment three years ago following a rent dispute. A 59-year-old clerk was also killed.

“The investigation will have to determine whether the man was mentally ill,” said prosecution spokesman Jean-Marc Meilleur. He declined to comment on the nationality of the man, who will be questioned further Friday.

It was the first time a judge had been killed in a Belgian court, the justice minister said Thursday.

(Reporting by Antonia van de Velde, editing by Tim Pearce)(Reuters) – Belgian police have arrested a man suspected of shooting dead a judge and a clerk in a courtroom in central Brussels Thursday, Brussels prosecutors said Friday.

World

The man, armed with a gun, was overpowered in a Brussels park between the royal palace and parliament late Thursday.

Prosecutors said he had admitted killing the 61-year-old female judge in revenge for his eviction from an apartment three years ago following a rent dispute. A 59-year-old clerk was also killed.

“The investigation will have to determine whether the man was mentally ill,” said prosecution spokesman Jean-Marc Meilleur. He declined to comment on the nationality of the man, who will be questioned further Friday.

It was the first time a judge had been killed in a Belgian court, the justice minister said Thursday.

(Reporting by Antonia van de Velde, editing by Tim Pearce)

EU envoys to meet on storming of Gaza ship

May 31 (Reuters) – European Union governments’ envoys to Brussels will meet on Monday to discuss Israel’s storming of aid ships headed for the Gaza Strip, a spokesman for the executive European Commission said.

“EU ambassadors have called a special meeting in Brussels,” the spokesman told a news briefing.

The EU has called for an enquiry into deaths aboard the ships and urged Israel to allow the free flow of humanitarian aid into the Palestinian territory. (Reporting by Justyna Pawlak, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

(timothy.heritage@reuters.com; +32 2 287 8632; Reuters Messaging: timothy.heritage.reuters.com@reuters.net))

Kasuri’s ‘Kashmir issue near resolution claim’ nothing but ‘delusion’: Observers

Islamabad, May 11 (ANI): Rubbishing former foreign minister Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri’s claims that the Kashmir issue was about to be resolved during former President General Pervez Musharraf’s, participants of a seminar titled “The Near Agreement. What it was” have described such assertions a mere ‘delusion’.

Speaking during the seminar, Nazir Ahmed Shaal, Executive Director Kashmir Centre London, said there were no evidence which suggested that the Kashmir issue was about to be resolved during the Musharraf era.

While stressing that the right to self-determination of the people of Kashmir was “non-negotiable”, Shaal said people who are revolting against India’s control over the region must be brought to the dialogue table if the two countries are serious about resolving the long pending issue.

Kashmir Centre Brussels Executive Director Majeed Tramboo also rejected Kasuri’s claims, saying none of the prominent Kashmiri leaders were taken on board for any such deliberations.

“Not a single prominent Kashmiri leader was taken on board. India and Pakistan primarily reduced it to a bilateral territorial dispute in the process,” The Daily Times quoted Tramboo, as saying.

“We challenge Kasuri to identify a single person from either part of Kashmir who was part of the discussions,” he added.

Reiterating the Pakistani leadership’s long-standing view, Tramboo said that the Kashmir issue must be addressed keeping in mind the United Nations’ (UN) resolutions.

“No solution to the issue will be acceptable other than the implementation of the United Nations (UN) resolutions or the right to self-determination,” he said. (ANI)

Belgian bishop resigns over abuse of boy

A Belgian Catholic bishop resigned on Friday after admitting he had sexually abused a boy when in charge of the diocese of Bruges.

“When I was still a simple priest, and for a while when I began as a bishop, I sexually abused a boy in my close entourage,” the bishop of Bruges, Roger Vangheluwe, said in a statement issued at a news conference in Brussels.

“I profoundly regret what I have done and I present my sincerest apology to the victim, his family, the Catholic community and society in general,” said the 73-year-old.

The abuse took place more than 20 years ago. It was not clear how old the boy was when the abuse began or how long it lasted.

Vangheluwe stepped down after a person close to the victim complained to the church. His is the first such case in Belgium, although a church commission said it was investigating about 20 other cases involving sex abuse allegations.

Hundreds of instances of abuse by clergymen have come to light in Europe and the United States in the last month as disclosures encouraged victims to go public with their allegations.

Vangheluwe was born in the western town of Roeselare and was ordained as a priest in Bruges at the age of 26. He was appointed bishop of the historic city aged 48, a role he held for 25 years until his resignation on Friday.

Vangheluwe had a high profile at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, one of Belgium’s leading universities, where he often delivered a homily at the beginning of the academic year. He also sat on the steering committee of a local charity.

Lib Dems lead UK poll race

London, Apr.19 (ANI): The Liberal Democrat party in Britain has taken a shock lead in the three-way race to win this year’s General Election, but a YouGov opinion poll has warned that voters are not too enamoured by its “potty policies”.

The Sun, quoting from the poll, put support for Nick Clegg”s party at a staggering 33 per cent.

It is the first time the former Liberals have been in the lead in a general election race for 104 years.

The Conservatives lag one point behind at 32 per cent, while Labour have tanked on just 26 per cent.

Of the top ten plans put forward by his party, six of them have been given a resounding thumbs down.

They were on an illegal immigrant amnesty, community service instead of jail for criminals, upping taxes to scrap tuition fees, giving more powers to Brussels, joining the Euro and halting nuclear power stations.

One of the plans – dumping the UK”s Trident nuclear missiles – split the public down the middle. Only three got support – scrapping income tax on earnings of less than 10,000 pounds a year, changing the voting system and limiting public sector pay rises.

Just 51 per cent said they knew either a lot or a fair amount about Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg, making him the least understood of the three.

Almost seven out of ten said the same for Gordon Brown, and just over six out of ten said they knew what David Cameron stood for. (ANI)

Lib Dems lead UK poll race

London, Apr.19 (ANI): The Liberal Democrat party in Britain has taken a shock lead in the three-way race to win this year’s General Election, but a YouGov opinion poll has warned that voters are not too enamoured by its “potty policies”.

The Sun, quoting from the poll, put support for Nick Clegg”s party at a staggering 33 per cent.

It is the first time the former Liberals have been in the lead in a general election race for 104 years.

The Conservatives lag one point behind at 32 per cent, while Labour have tanked on just 26 per cent.

Of the top ten plans put forward by his party, six of them have been given a resounding thumbs down.

They were on an illegal immigrant amnesty, community service instead of jail for criminals, upping taxes to scrap tuition fees, giving more powers to Brussels, joining the Euro and halting nuclear power stations.

One of the plans – dumping the UK”s Trident nuclear missiles – split the public down the middle. Only three got support – scrapping income tax on earnings of less than 10,000 pounds a year, changing the voting system and limiting public sector pay rises.

Just 51 per cent said they knew either a lot or a fair amount about Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg, making him the least understood of the three.

Almost seven out of ten said the same for Gordon Brown, and just over six out of ten said they knew what David Cameron stood for. (ANI)

John Cleese pays £3,300 taxi fare from Oslo to Brussels!

London, April 17 (ANI): English actor John Cleese is said to have reportedly paid 3,300 pounds as taxi fare from Oslo to Brussels after he was stranded in the Norwegian capital by the volcanic ash plume from Iceland.

Cleese, 70, was in Norway to appear on the Scandinavian talk show Skavlan, and when the cloud descended, closing airspace around the city, he is said to have taken a cab on April 16.

“We checked every option, but there were no boat and no train tickets available,” the Guardian quoted him as telling Norwegian TV2 in a telephone interview posted on the network’s website.

“That’s when my fabulous assistant determined that the easiest thing would be to take a taxi,” he said.

The taxi carried two extra drivers for the 930-mile journey.

“It will be interesting. I’m not in a hurry,” Cleese said, adding that from Brussels he planned to take the Eurostar train to London, where he hoped to arrive on April 17.

“I will think about a joke you’ve probably already heard: how do you get God to laugh? Tell him your plans,” he added. (ANI)

EU takes Greece to court over illegal shipyard aid

BRUSSELS, April 14 (Reuters) – The European Union executive said on Wednesday it was taking Greece to court over a failure by Athens to recover about 230 million euros ($314 million) of illegal state aid granted to Hellenic Shipyards.

The European Commission, competition watchdog of the 27-nation EU, said in a statement that it was referring Greece to the European Court of Justice for not complying with a 2008 decision that found the state aid for the eastern Mediterranean’s largest shipyard to be unlawful.

“The Commission allows member states to pay out large sums in state subsidies to business every year, but in those cases where the aid is found to be illegal it must be recovered swiftly to restore the level playing field,” EU Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia said. (Reporting by Bate Felix, editing by Dale Hudson) ($1=.7322 euro)

Euro zone readies giant rescue package for Greece

(Reuters) – Euro zone finance ministers approved a giant 30-billion-euro ($40 billion) emergency aid mechanism for debt-plagued Greece on Sunday but stressed Athens had not requested the plan be activated yet.

Together with at least 10 billion euros expected from the International Monetary Fund in the first year, it could add up to the biggest multilateral financial rescue ever attempted.

“With today’s decision, Europe sends a very clear message that no one, any longer, can play with our common currency, no one can play with our common fate,” Greece’s Prime Minister George Papandreou said in a statement.

In a rare weekend telephone conference, finance ministers of the 16 nations that share the single European currency backed a detailed plan for Greece to borrow from euro-zone governments and the IMF at significantly below market rates.

IMF chief, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, said the IMF was ready to provide help, possibly through a multi-year standby loan arrangement, and is set to hold talks with Greek, EU and European Central Bank officials in Brussels on April 12.

“The IMF stands ready to join the effort, including through a multi-year stand-by arrangement, to the extent needed and requested by the Greek authorities,” he said in a statement.

He welcomed the euro zone’s financial package for Greece, calling it an important step that will also help safeguard financial stability in the euro area as a whole.

A Greek Finance Ministry official said it was logical to expect the package would amount to significantly more than 40 billion euros over 3 years. Earlier in the day, he had said it could hit 80 billion euros, but later corrected this.

If Greece obtains aid, the package could dwarf past IMF bailouts for Mexico and Argentina. The largest IMF commitment ever made to a country was the $47 billion arrangement for Mexico approved in April 2009 under a so-called flexible credit line; Mexico has not drawn from the credit line.

The firepower in the Greek package, even if held in reserve, may reassure investors and make them more willing to continue buying Greek bonds. But big uncertainties remain over the longer-term prospects for reducing Greece’s debt mountain, which have dented confidence in the euro.

The Greek official said the government would decide within a few days whether to ask for the aid, depending on whether market interest rates subside.

European Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said the 3-year euro zone loans would carry an interest rate of about 5 percent — well below current market rates of about 7.3 percent. That responds to Greece’s appeal to be able to borrow at rates closer to its peers in the currency area.

Assistance for subsequent years would be decided later.

“If the mechanism had to be activated, it would not be a violation of the no-bailout clause (in the European Union treaty) since the loans are repayable and contain no element of subsidy,” Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of the Eurogroup of finance ministers, told a Brussels news conference.

A German government official welcomed the agreement, which he said should enable Greece to do its fiscal “homework” on deficit reduction without market distraction.

“It should contribute to a calming of the markets so that Greece can take care of its homework in peace and quiet.”

Rehn said all euro zone countries would pay proportionately to their share in the ECB’s capital, making Germany by far the biggest lender, followed by France and Italy.

Talks on coordination with the IMF will begin on Monday, he said.

“GUN ON THE TABLE”

The agreement was urgently awaited because Athens is due to auction short-term debt on Tuesday after investors last week sent Greek borrowing costs spiraling due to fears of a possible default and doubts over the EU safety net.

Papandreou made clear in a newspaper interview that detailing the rescue plan was a last-ditch effort to deter speculation against his country.

“The question remains whether this mechanism will convince markets just like a gun on the table. If it does not convince them, it is a mechanism that it is there to be used,” he told the Sunday edition of To Vima.

But Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou told reporters after Sunday’s decision that Greece hoped to be able to continue to borrow smoothly on financial markets.

Skepticism over Greece’s ability to manage its 300 billion euro ($400 billion) debt pile, more than its 240 billion euro annual economic output, grew last week. Investors dumped Greek stocks and bonds, and ratings agency Fitch downgraded Athens’s debt by two notches on Friday.

Fitch lowered Greece’s credit rating to BBB-, the lowest investment grade just above junk, saying a deepening recession and rising debt service costs would make it harder for Athens to meet its budget deficit reduction target.

The government has imposed tough austerity measures to meet a pledge to cut the public deficit by four percentage points of gross domestic product to 8.7 percent this year.

Juncker said data provided by Greece showed the fiscal consolidation programme were encouraging and showed Athens was on track to reach this year’s target. Rehn said Greece would not be asked for further cuts this year, but would have to take more deficit-cutting steps, notably on pensions, in following years.

Strong public opposition to any bailout for Greece in Germany, Europe’s biggest economy and main paymaster, had fueled market doubts about the availability of any rescue.

Germany, the Netherlands and Austria argued that any emergency loans should be at current market rates to avoid moral hazard that would ensue if profligate countries were rewarded.

However, euro zone officials broke the deadlock on Friday, based on the IMF pricing formula with adjustments, Rehn said.

The euro, which has been dragged down by concerns over Greece and possible contagion with other weak Mediterranean euro zone economies, rebounded slightly on news of Friday’s technical agreement among deputy finance ministers and central bankers.

The risk premium that investors charge to hold Greek debt rather than benchmark 10-year German bonds narrowed to just over 400 basis points after hitting a record 454 on Thursday.

However, any durable reduction in the spread will depend on the credibility of the EU rescue plan and markets’ assessment of how likely it is to be invoked.

Greece needs to borrow about 11 billion euros by the end of May to refinance maturing debt and interest charges. Its overall 2010 borrowing requirement is 53 billion euros.

(Additional reporting by Marcin Grajewski in Brussels, Erik Kirschbaum in Berlin, Michele Kambas in Nicosia, Lesley Wroughton in Washington and Ingrid Melander in Athens; writing by Paul Taylor; editing by Michael Roddy and Gunna Dickson)

IMF offers Greece help, talks set for April 12

(Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund is ready to contribute financing for Greece through a multi-year stand-by loan arrangement and will hold talks on the matter in Brussels on April 12, IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said on Sunday.

He said an earlier announcement by euro zone member countries to provide debt-strapped Greece with emergency financing if needed marked “an important step” and will also safeguard financial stability in the euro area as a whole.

“The IMF stands ready to join the effort, including through a multi-year stand-by arrangement, to the extent needed and requested by the Greek authorities,” Strauss-Kahn said in a statement. “An IMF team will hold discussions in Brussels on April 12 with the Greek authorities, the European Commission and the ECB.”

Euro zone finance ministers earlier agreed on a giant 30 billion euro ($40 billion) emergency aid package for Greece but stressed that Athens had not asked for the plan to be activated yet.

(Reporting by Lesley Wroughton; editing by Gunna Dickson)

IMF set for talks on Greek aid on April 12 – IMF

WASHINGTON, April 11 (Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund is ready to contribute financing for Greece through a multi-year stand-by loan arrangement and will hold talks with Greek and European officials in Brussels on April 12, IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn said on Sunday.

Bonds

“The IMF stands ready to join the effort, including through a multi-year stand-by arrangement, to the extent needed and requested by the Greek authorities,” Strauss-Kahn said in a statement. The talks in Brussels will include the European Union and European Central Bank.

Euro zone finance ministers earlier agreed on a giant 30 billion euro emergency aid mechanism for Greece but stressed that Athens had not asked for the plan to be activated yet. [nLDE63A0BO]

(Reporting by Lesley Wroughton)

Eurogroup earmarks 30 bln euros for Greek aid

BRUSSELS, April 11 (Reuters) – Euro zone finance ministers earmarked a total of 30 billion euros for emergency loans to Greece in the first year, the chairman of euro zone finance ministers Jean-Claude Juncker said.

Bonds

In a rare weekend telephone conference, ministers from the 16 nations that share the single European currency backed a plan for Greece to borrow from euro zone governments and the IMF at below current market rates if market funding dries up.

“It will be 30 billion euro, this be coofinanced by the IMF,” Juncker told a news conference.

“The amount for the subsequent years will be decided at a later date depending on how the financial situation in Greece develops,” he said.

Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn added that the International Monetary Fund contribution, which would roughly follow the formula of two thirds euro zone and one third IMF, would be on top of the 30 billion euros from the euro zone.

The IMF loans are also likely to be cheaper for Greece than the euro zone ones, he said. (Reporting by Jan Strupczewski and Marcin Grajewski)

GDF Suez unit Electrabel appoints new CEO

BRUSSELS, April 8 (Reuters) – Belgian energy company Electrabel, owned by French utilities giant GDF Suez (GSZ.PA) said its Chief Executive Jean-Pierre Hansen had asked the board to end his mandate.

Utilities

Hansen, who will remain a director and retain a seat on the utility’s executive committee, will be replaced by Dirk Beeuwsaert, Electrabel said in a statement following a board meeting on Wednesday.

Hansen would also continue to lead the group’s talks with the Belgian government to extend the lifetime of Electrabel’s three oldest nuclear reactors, Electrabel said. (Reporting by Antonia van de Velde; editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

Thenergo sells waste collection unit

BRUSSELS, April 2 (Reuters) – Biomass energy company Thenergo (THEB.BR) said on Friday it had sold its waste collection unit Leysen to Van Gansewinkel Group as part of measures aimed at rescuing the loss-making company.

Utilities

Thenergo said it would invest the proceeds of the sale in its core activities of transforming renewable fuels into electricity and heat.

In addition, by selling Leysen, the group would be able to reimburse the outstanding debt from Thenergo’s original acquisition in 2007 as well as its total debt by 15 million euros, it said.

The group on Tuesday reported another net loss in 2009 and said shareholders would have to determine whether or not to wind up the company. [ID:nLDE62U1WJ]

The board said at the time it proposed attracting capital, continuing cost cuts and stopping the cash drain through divestments and seeking a capital increase. (Reporting by Antonia van de Velde; Editing by Mike Nesbit)