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US senator wants probe of Blackwater's tax practices

WASHINGTON, Oct 26 (Reuters) US Sen John Kerry vowed on Thursday to press for further investigation of the tax practices of Blackwater USA, the private security firm already under scrutiny over killings of Iraqi civilians.

''Blackwater is hiding behind the Bush administration to explain why they bilked the taxpayers out of millions of dollars,'' said the Massachusetts Democrat in a statement. ''I intend to get to the bottom of this.'' Blackwater, which employs about 1,000 people in Iraq, has been under a spotlight since some of its security guards were involved in the shooting deaths of at least 17 Iraqis in Baghdad last month in an incident that enraged the Iraqi government.

The company was accused on Monday of ''significant tax evasion'' by Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House of Representatives Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

The California Democrat said Blackwater failed to withhold contributions from employees or pay to the government millions of dollars in mandatory Social Security retirement funds. He also alleged that it failed to make required payments for medical and unemployment benefits and related taxes.

In a letter to Blackwater Chairman Erik Prince -- a former Navy SEAL who founded the company in 1997 -- Waxman raised questions about the treatment of Blackwater personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan as contractors rather than employees.

Blackwater responded by saying that Waxman was ''incorrect'' in asserting that the deployed personnel should be treated as employees for tax purposes. The Blackwater statement said: ''The US Small Business Administration (SBA) has determined in an official finding applying 'the criteria used by the IRS for federal income tax purpose,' that 'Blackwater security contractors are not employees.''' Kerry, chairman of a Senate committee that oversees the SBA, had asked the agency about the finding cited by Blackwater and whether the SBA had helped ''Blackwater avoid paying 31.8 million dollars in taxes.'' SBA Administrator Steven Preston told Kerry in a letter that the agency had ruled in a November 2006 case involving Blackwater affiliate Presidential Airways that Blackwater personnel were not employees. But Preston said such findings have to do only with ''eligibility for our small business programs and have no applicability to tax liability matters.'' Asked about the SBA statement, Blackwater spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell said in an e-mail to Reuters: ''Blackwater's decision to treat the personnel as (independent contractors) was based on a review of the relevant circumstances, including receiving input from outside advisors. That decision was reinforced by the SBA's conclusion.'' Kerry said the SBA's letter showed its 2006 finding ''provides no basis for tax decisions.'' ''I'm asking Blackwater to provide documentation for their decision and I am asking the (Senate) Finance Committee to investigate this matter further,'' he said.

Reuters SZ VP0745

Ramadoss to open health fair on AYUSH

New Delhi, Oct 26: Union Health Minister Anbumani Ramadoss will inaugurate 'AROGYA 2007", a comprehensive International Health Fair on Ayurveda, Yoga and Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and Homeopathy (AYUSH), here today. The fair is being organized by the Department of AYUSH, aims at projecting the capabilities and requirements of these systems in modern day health care, current research trends and exhibiting work of research institutions under this department. The three-day fair is being organised by the department with the collaboration of India Trade.....

Combine treatment to fight dangerous TB - report

WASHINGTON, Oct 26 (Reuters) Simple, common-sense measures such as opening hospital windows and using face masks would greatly reduce the number of new cases of extensively drug-resistant or XDR tuberculosis, doctors reported. Use of face masks, reducing how long patients spend in the hospital and treating more people as outpatients could prevent nearly a third of new XDR TB infections, at least in one area of rural South Africa, the researchers reported yesterday in the Lancet medical journal. ''Supplementing this approach.....

Cold spot could be relic of Big Bang - scientists

CHICAGO, Oct 26 (Reuters) A cold spot in the oldest radiation in the universe could be the first sign of a cosmic glitch that might have originated shortly after the Big Bang, British and Spanish scientists said. They think this spot -- detected on satellite maps of microwave radiation -- might be a cosmic defect or texture, a holdover from the universe's infancy. But they said their theory would need confirmation. Such defects or textures, they theorize, reflect a flaw in.....
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