Tag Archives: Malta

Oil tanker hijacked off coast of Gabon

Officials in Gabon say pirates hijacked an oil tanker with a 20-person crew near the main port where oil is loaded for transport to international markets.

Defense Minister Pacome Rufin Ondzounga and Interior Minister Jean Francois Ndoungou said in a statement distributed Wednesday night that the attack occurred early Monday.

Security firm AKE said the attack constituted “a significant expansion” of the area affected by piracy in the Gulf of Guinea, occurring 200 nautical miles further south than a previous attack in April. The firm said all contact had been lost with the Indian crew aboard the Malta-flagged tanker, which is operated by the Turkish firm Geden Lines.

The International Maritime Bureau warned earlier this week of a “worrying surge” of attacks by pirates in the Gulf of Guinea.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

European car sales down 6.6 percent in 1st half

The European automakers’ association says car sales were down 6.6 percent for the first half of the year compared with the same time in 2012.

ACEA said in a release on Tuesday that 6.205 million cars were sold from January to June in the European Union, providing further grim reading for an industry struggling in a deep recession.

The car industry also suffered its worst June since 1996, with demand falling 5.6 percent to 1.134 million cars. The figures exclude Malta and Croatia.

Car registrations have been on an almost uninterrupted decline for nearly two years. There was a small bounce in April, due to extra working days this year.

While car sales were falling across Germany, France and Italy, one bright spot was the UK, where numbers were up.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

10 Syrian seamen missing after cargo ships collide off southern Greece

A cargo ship sank off southern Greece after colliding with another freighter Monday, leaving two Syrian seamen dead and eight others missing and spurring a large rescue operation, officials said.

The accident occurred before 7 a.m. some 78 miles southwest of the southern Peloponnese peninsula, a Merchant Marine Ministry statement said.

It was not immediately clear what caused the collision between the Antigua-flagged Consouth and the Cook Islands-flagged Piri Reis in the Mediterranean Sea.

Weather conditions were good at the time, which facilitated rescue efforts involving coast guard vessels, merchant ships, a rescue helicopter and an airforce C-130 transport plane.

The Piri Reis, which was carrying a cargo of fertilizer to a Ukrainian port, sank, and seven of its crew of 17 Syrian seamen were rescued. Two bodies were pulled out of the sea a few hours after the collision.

The Consouth, sailing without freight from Turkey to Malta, had 16 Russian, Filippino and Polish seamen on board, all who were unhurt, the ministry said.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

10 seamen missing after ship sinks off Greece

Greek authorities say ten Syrian seamen are missing after two cargo ships collided off southern Greece and one of them sank.

A Merchant Marine Ministry statement says the accident occurred before 7 am (0400GMT) Monday some 78 miles (125 kilometers) southwest of the southern Peloponnese peninsula.

It was not immediately clear what caused the collision between the Antigua-flagged Consouth and the Cook Islands-flagged Piri Reis. The Piri Reis, which was carrying a cargo of fertilizer, sank, and seven of its crew of 17 Syrian seamen were saved.

The Consouth, which was sailing without freight from Turkey to Malta had 16 Russian, Filippino and Polish seamen on board, all who were unhurt.

An air and sea search was under way for survivors.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Gambling software developer moves to fix poker game flaws

A poker software developer plans to implement a fix this week for a vulnerability recently discovered by two security researchers who analyzed one of its gambling applications.

B3W Group, based in Malta, said it had identified the root problem pointed out in a report released last week by Luigi Auriemma and Donato Ferrante of ReVuln, a vulnerability research consultancy also based in Malta.

B3W makes a range of gambling software, including that used for online poker rooms, also known as skins, for variations of poker such as Texas Hold’em, Omaha and Stud. Many poker games require users to download software onto their computers, which then interacts with a web service for a realistic, real-time game play.

ReVuln’s report, which also looked at products from the companies Microgaming and Playtech, focused on poker software since the downloaded client allows attackers to get a good look at part of the game’s software design.

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From: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2034620/gambling-software-developer-moves-to-fix-poker-game-flaws.html#tk.rss_all

Researchers find vulnerabilities in online poker applications

A review of poker applications shows that many suffer security flaws, putting players at risk of attack, according to a Malta-based security company.

Luigi Auriemma and Donato Ferrante of ReVuln, which is a consultancy that does vulnerability research, focused their analysis on poker clients downloaded by players in order to game.

The software clients interact with so-called “skins,” or online poker rooms run on gaming companies’ websites. “A vulnerability in one software can affect multiple skins and millions of players,” they wrote.

Online poker differs from other types of online gambling since players must download the software client, which improves players’ experiences and provides real-time data over customized protocols.

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From: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2034086/researchers-find-vulnerabilities-in-online-poker-applications.html#tk.rss_all

Tiny Luxembourg defends its large financial sector

Luxembourg defended the huge size of its financial sector from criticism Wednesday after Cyprus‘ messy bailout deal dragged other tiny economies with big banking sectors into the spotlight.

Land-locked Luxembourg is the European Union‘s second-smallest nation, with about 500,000 inhabitants, and has a banking sector about 20 times its annual economic output. Cyprus had a banking sector eight times its GDP.

Seeking to distance itself from Cyprus‘ collapse, the government said it “is concerned about recent statements and declarations” on the alleged economic risks of outsized financial sectors.

While Cyprus‘ banking sector was “structurally unbalanced,” that of Luxembourg “acts as an important gateway for the euro area by attracting investments and thus contributing to the general competitiveness,” it said.

The statement was highly unusual for Europe‘s wealthiest nation per capita, reflecting its fear of being bullied by the eurozone’s economic heavyweights, Germany and France, which are increasingly dominating the bloc’s decision-making.

Until recently, Luxembourg wielded much greater influence in the EU as its size would normally allow, because long-time Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker chaired the Eurogroup gatherings of the bloc’s 17 finance ministers.

Luxembourg‘s ratio of a banking industry 20 times as big as the country’s economic output doesn’t even take into account the huge investments funds based there. That’s “because they are only managed from Luxembourg but not physically located there,” said government spokesman Guy Schuller.

But the new Eurogroup chief, Jeroen Dijsselbloem, suggested Monday that nations with outsized financial systems — such as Luxembourg or Malta — must fix their banks now because they cannot rely on other Europeans to bail them out. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has also voiced criticism about some nations’ unbalanced economic models. Financial services account for about a quarter of Luxembourg‘s annual economic output.

The underlying issue is that in these small countries, the government would not be able to afford bailing out the banks, meaning a major bank insolvency could rapidly drag down public finances.

Cyprus secured a 10 billion euro ($12.9 billion) package of bailout loans on Monday. The deal also forced it to dissolve the country’s second-largest bank, inflicting significant losses — possibly up to 40 percent — on all deposits larger than 100,000 euros ($129,000).

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

AMD provides a sneak peek at its Radeon HD 7990

AMD took the wraps off a new high-end reference-design videocard at the end of the company’s GDC press briefing Tuesday night: The dual-GPU Radeon 7990.

Details are exceedingly sparse: Matt Skynner, general manager of AMD’s graphics business unit, simply held up the card for the audience to see. “This is the first public showing,” Skynner said. “We’re not saying much about it other than it’s two series-7900 GPUs on a single card, and it’s whisper quiet.”

AMD
Little is known about AMD‘s Radeon HD 7990, other than it will have two 7900-series GPUs and three cooling fans.

As you can see from this slide taken from AMD’s presentation, it’s a full-size, dual-slot card. A heat sink runs the length of the board, and there are three cooling fans. AMD had previously mentioned that the Radeon 7990, code-named Malta, at the CeBit trade show in Germany, but this is the first time the card has been shown.

The Radeon HD 7990 will compete with Nvidia’s Titan for fastest video card on the planet when the card ships (unless Nvidia manages to come out with a dual-Titan card). Expect to see cards like this at retail before the end of the first half of the year, because AMD is expected to ship its Radeon HD 8000 series GPUs in the second half.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Type 1 Diabetes Risk Linked To Low Pathogen Exposure In Early Life

Countries with lower death rates from infectious diseases have higher incidences of type 1 diabetes, researchers from the University of Malta explained at the Society for Endocrinology annual conference in Harrogate, UK. Their study was also published in Acta Diabetologica. The researchers explained that type 1 diabetes rates have been steadily increasing by 3% annually for over a decade… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Medical News Today

Dow May Rise as Children's Place Beats the Street

By Roland Head, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

LONDON — Stock index futures at 7 a.m. EDT indicate that the Dow Jones Industrial Average may open 0.16% higher this morning, while the S&P 500 may open up by 0.18%.

Markets began to stabilize in Europe this morning after slipping yesterday afternoon in the wake of Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem‘s comments that the Cypriot deal could be a template for future bailouts. He later stepped back from these comments, saying that Cyprus was a special case — but it hasn’t escaped investors’ notice that Malta and Luxembourg are both similarly small countries with oversized financial sectors, just like Cyprus, while Spain and Greece also have problematic banking sectors.

By 7 a.m. EDT, most European markets were broadly unchanged, although in Greece, the Athens Stock Exchange was down by 4.2% following Dijsselbloem’s comments, and Spanish and Italian banks also dropped. In London, the FTSE 100 was up 0.1%, with investment manager Aberdeen Asset Management continuing yesterday’s strong run, up 3.9% at 7:35 a.m. EDT, while Kazakhstan miner Eurasian Natural Resources Corp was down 3.7%, after one of its largest shareholders, copper miner Kazakhmys, reported that it had halved the book value of its 26% stake in ENRC, reducing it to $2 billion.

In the U.S., investors will be watching today’s economic reports closely. First up, at 8:30 a.m. EDT, durable-goods orders are expected to have risen by 4.6% following a 4.9% fall in January. At 9 a.m. EDT, January’s Case-Shiller home price index will provide further information on the strength of the housing-market recovery, while at 10 a.m. EDT February’s new-home sales are expected to show that 417,000 new homes were sold last month, down slightly from 437,000 in January.

Companies reporting earnings before the markets open this morning include Children’s Place, which reported fourth-quarter earnings of $1.15 per share, ahead of consensus estimates of $1.04 per share. However, the firm revised its first-quarter and full-year guidance, suggesting it could fall below consensus expectations. Also due to report is food-testing specialist Neogen, which is expected to report earnings of $0.27 per share and says it has seen a surge in demand for its beef-testing kits following recent scandals involving the use of horse meat in beef products.

Let’s not forget that the Dow’s daily movements can add up to serious long-term gains. Indeed, Warren Buffett recently wrote, “The Dow advanced from 66 to 11,497 in the 20th Century, a staggering 17,320% increase that materialized despite four costly wars, a Great Depression and many recessions.” If you, like Buffett, are convinced of the long-term power of the Dow, you should read “5 Stocks To Retire On.” Your long-term wealth could be transformed, even in this uncertain economy. Simply click here now to download this free, no-obligation report.

The article Dow May Rise as Children’s Place Beats the Street originally appeared on Fool.com.


Roland Head has no position in any stocks mentioned. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Arena Faces Europe's Obesity Opportunity

By Dan Carroll, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

You can’t find a hotter topic in health care than obesity. From its impact on public health and quality of life to its long-term costs to advanced economies, rising obesity rates across the world are one of the most polarizing trends for the future. It’s no surprise then that Arena Pharmaceuticals and VIVUS  — rivals squaring off with their FDA-approved obesity drugs Belviq and Qsymia, respectively — capture the hearts and opinions of investors everywhere.

While the FDA has been happy to welcome Belviq and Qsymia to the market, Europe hasn’t been so kind. The European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use, or CHMP, rejected VIVUS’ appeal for approval last month and has also raised questions this year about Belviq’s approval. While Arena’s European fate hasn’t been decided yet, what are these companies missing out on if Europe rejects both obesity drugs? Let’s go inside the obesity crisis across the Atlantic to see just how damaging a rejection could be.

Lower obesity rates, but no less a crisis
It’s easy to point to the U.S. as the capital of the obesity revolution, but Europe’s not at all skinny by comparison. The U.K.’s Academy of Medical Royal Colleges has raised concerns that Britain’s obesity crisis could soon become “unresolvable,” and rates are on the rise across the continent.

According to the World Health Organization, between 2% an 8% of all health care costs can be attributed to obesity in Europe, depending on country and region. That’s considerably less than the U.S., where 17% of all health care costs come back to obesity; then again, European obesity rates are considerably less than in America.

15% of French citizens were obese as of 2012, according to a study sponsored by ObEpi-Roche — while Romania reported obesity rates of just 8% in women and 7.6% in men. The U.K. reported the top obesity rate among European women at 24%, while Malta reported the highest male rate at 22%. Both are still considerably less than the U.S.’s astronomical 35.7% adult obesity rate in 2012, as measured by the CDC.

That’s not to say that obesity drug companies like Arena don’t have an opportunity in Europe. Obesity rates have been rising fast — France’s 2012 statistic included a 35% increase in obesity in 18 to 24 year-olds in just the prior three years. By comparison, only 11.2% of French citizens were obese in 2008; total obesity rates for the nation climbed almost 34% between 2008 and 2012. Europe’s problem is growing fast, but America’s obesity crisis still tops the charts among advanced economies.

However, with health care budgets under attack in Europe due to the continent’s ongoing fiscal crisis, Europe’s ability to pay for obesity drugs is under fire.

Budgets under fire
France’s 2012 obesity study showed that poorer people had a higher likelihood of being obese than their wealthier counterparts. While Arena’s Belviq isn’t a very expensive drug by pharmaceutical standards — the company set …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Malta swears in new premier after big election win

The tiny Mediterranean country of Malta has sworn in as premier the 39-year-old leader of the Labor Party, who captured the biggest electoral victory since independence.

Joseph Muscat was cheered by huge crowds of supporters Monday as he became the second-youngest premier in Malta‘s history.

His party won 55 percent of the vote in Saturday’s national election to oust the Nationalist Party after 15 years in power which garnered 43 percent of the vote. It was the largest victory by a political party since the archipelago obtained independence from Britain in 1964.

The Labor Party is expected to have a nine-seat majority in Parliament, a contrast from the Nationalist Party‘s one-seat majority in the last legislature.

Muscat’s first duty is to appoint ministers before an EU summit Thursday.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Malta election returning Labor party to power

An election victory is returning Malta‘s Labor party to power after 15 years in the opposition.

Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi of the Nationalist Party conceded defeat on Sunday as ballots were still being counted in the island nation and eurozone member. Labor leader Joseph Muscat will be sworn in as the new prime minister on Monday.

Projections by both parties indicated a decisive victory for Labor, giving it 55 percent of the votes cast, compared to 43 percent for the conservatives.

Smaller parties took the rest of the votes, as Labor clinched its biggest victory since Malta obtained independence from Britain in 1964.

Complete results weren’t expected until late Sunday, and the exact breakdown of seats in Parliament was still being determined.

Analysts said the shift in power apparently reflects voter desire for change.

The conservative Nationalists had kept unemployment at 4.3 percent and pledged to reduce taxes. But Labor promised to lower energy tariffs and fight corruption.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Maltese hold national elections

Maltese head to the polls Saturday to decide whether to grant the center-right Nationalist Party a fourth straight term or give the opposition a shot at government after 15 years.

The ruling Nationalist Party has campaigned on its strong employment record, with Malta boasting Europe‘s lowest unemployment rate of 4.3 percent. Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi, 59, also has promised more education and health spending and lower income taxes.

The opposition Labor Party, led by Joseph Muscat, 39, has pledged to reduce water and electricity rates, a major bone of contention in the past legislature, along with greater civil liberties, less bureaucracy and action to fight corruption.

Some 330,000 Maltese are eligible to vote between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. Results are expected Sunday afternoon.

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…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

First Bitcoin Hedge Fund Launches From Malta

By Jon Matonis, Contributor

Ever since the bitcoin cryptocurrency first launched and achieved initial success, institutional investors and hedge fund managers have secretly sought a regulated investment vehicle for bitcoin placements. Malta-based Exante Ltd. has the solution with their new Bitcoin Fund. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Pope approves German lawyer to head embattled bank

Pope Benedict XVI has signed off on one of the last major appointments of his papacy, approving a German lawyer to head the Vatican’s embattled bank.

Ernst Von Freyberg has solid financial and Catholic credentials as a member of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, an ancient chivalrous order drawn from European nobility.

The appointment ends a nine-month search after the Institute of Religious Works ousted its previous president, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, for incompetence. The ouster came just as the Vatican was submitting its finances to a review by a Council of Europe committee in a bid to join the list of financially transparent countries.

The Vatican said Von Freyberg had been appointed by the bank’s commission of cardinals and that the pope had “expressed his full consent.”

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Vatican celebrates Knights of Malta's 900 years

The Knights of Malta, one of the most peculiar organizations in the world, is marking its 900th birthday with a colorful procession through St. Peter’s Square, a Mass in the basilica and an audience with Pope Benedict XVI.

The Knights are at once a Catholic religious order, an aid group that runs soup kitchens, hospitals and ambulance services around the globe, and a sovereign entity that prints its own passports and enjoys diplomatic relations with 104 countries — yet has no country to call its own.

Some 4,000 people — volunteers and members, draped in their trademark black cloaks with a white, eight-pointed Maltese Cross on the front — processed through St. Peter’s Square Saturday for the Mass marking the 900th anniversary of the order’s recognition by the Holy See.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Knights of Malta marks 900 years

By hnn

ROME — Matthew Festing — aka His Most Eminent Highness The Prince and Grand Master of the Knights of Malta — bounds into the sitting room of his magnificent Renaissance palazzo sweaty and somewhat disheveled, and asks an aide if he should take off his sweater to be photographed.

Garrulous and self-effacing, Festing embodies some of the paradoxes of a fabled Catholic religious order that dates from the medieval Crusades: Steeped in European nobility and mystique, the order’s mission is humility and charity — running hospitals, ambulance services and old folks’ homes around the globe. It has many trappings of a country, printing its own stamps, coins, license plates and passports, and yet — a stateless state — it rules over no territory….

Source:
WaPo

Source URL:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/ancient-order-of-the-knights-of-malta-confronts-modern-world-as-it-marks-900-years/2013/02/05/8e08e346-6f6e-11e2-b35a-0ee56f0518d2_story.html

Date:
2-5-13

Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

At 900 years, Knights of Malta confronts modernity

Matthew Festing — aka His Most Eminent Highness The Prince and Grand Master of the Knights of Malta — bounds into the sitting room of his magnificent Renaissance palazzo sweaty and somewhat disheveled, and asks an aide if he should take off his sweater to be photographed.

Garrulous and self-effacing, Festing embodies some of the paradoxes of a fabled Catholic religious order that dates from the medieval Crusades: Steeped in European nobility and mystique, the order’s mission is humility and charity — running hospitals, ambulance services and old folks’ homes around the globe. It has many trappings of a country, printing its own stamps, coins, license plates and passports, and yet — a stateless state — it rules over no territory.

The Sovereign Military Order of Malta‘s world headquarters, down the block from the Spanish Steps and with an Hermes boutique on the corner, features reception rooms draped in oil portraits of grand masters past and a gem of a chapel where King Juan Carlos of Spain was baptized by the future Pope Pius XII. On the ground floor, it runs a health clinic that, while private, provides free services for anyone who can’t pay.

“It is, I suppose, a series of contradictions,” Festing told The Associated Press ahead of the order’s 900th birthday this week. “I’m on the inside of it, so it doesn’t seem to be contradictory to me, but maybe it is.”

And as the Sovereign Military and Hospitaller Order of St. John of Jerusalem of Rhodes and of Malta, as the group is officially called, celebrates the anniversary on Feb. 9 with a procession through St. Peter’s Square, a Mass in the basilica and an audience with Pope Benedict XVI, the ancient order is confronting some very modern-day issues.

Once drawn exclusively from Europe‘s nobility, the order is trying to shed its image as a purely rich man’s club while still tapping the world’s wealthy to fund its charitable work. And though its military past is well behind it, the order is waging real legal battles to fend off what it says are impostors seeking to piggyback on its name to con people out of money.

Festing, a 63-year-old Briton and former Sotheby’s auctioneer, is expansive about the unusual attributes of his organization of 13,500 Knights and Dames who make promises be good Christians and fund the order’s humanitarian work.

“On the one hand it’s a sovereign entity. On the other hand it’s a religious order. On the other hand it’s a humanitarian organization. It’s a complicated mixture of things,” he says in an interview in the gold silk brocaded state drawing room between meetings with parting Vatican nuncios and visiting ministers, diplomatic receptions and silent prayer.

The order traces its history to the 11th century with the establishment of an infirmary in Jerusalem that cared for people of all faiths making pilgrimages to the Holy Land. It is the last of the great lay chivalrous military orders like the Knights Templars that combined religious fervor with fierce military might to protect and expand Christendom from Islam’s advance during the Crusades.

In February 1113, Pope Paschal II issued a papal bull recognizing the order as independent from bishops or secular authorities. That “birth certificate,” as Festing calls it, is the legal basis for asserting the order’s sovereignty and the reason for Saturday’s anniversary celebrations at the Vatican.

Festing himself is a “Professed Knight” — the highest rank of members who take vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. The poverty vow seems a bit relative in this context: Knights on the order’s governing council have their own private apartments inside the palace, complete with a valet and driver for cars that carry either diplomatic plates or the order’s own SMOM plates. Wine from the order’s own vineyards is often served.

Pope Benedict XVI is among the professed knights, though he’s an exception since professed knights aren’t ordained priests and traditionally descend from noble blood.

Festing, whose family traces their ancestry to 14th and 16th century knights, was elected grand master in 2008. It’s a title he holds for life and is equivalent to the rank of cardinal, though he can’t vote in a conclave to elect a pope.

Currently there are about 60 professed knights and Festing hopes to increase their numbers as he seeks to expand the rank-and-file base to a younger generation of equally Catholic but not necessarily noble classes around the globe.

“It’s not exactly out of date, but you can’t maintain that in the 21st century,” he says. “In general terms, in the old countries of Europe, we maintain the nobiliary requirement to an extent. But only to an extent. But in places like Australia, Central America, North America, Southeast Asia, it’s all done on a different basis.”

Members are still expected to chip in when natural disasters strike or wars erupt. Contributions in the tens of thousands of dollars (euros) are not unusual. Members also volunteer, bringing the sick to the shrine at Lourdes or pitching in at a one of the order’s clinics, like the maternity hospital it runs in Bethlehem just a few steps from Jesus’ traditional birthplace, where most of the patients are Muslim.

One perk of membership in the top ranks, reserved for men only, is the fabulous uniform: bright-red military-style jacket, with sword, spurs and epaulettes for official duties, a dark cloak with a white, eight-pointed Maltese Cross on the front for religious services.

All told, 98,000 members, employees and volunteers work in aid projects in 120 countries; the overall annual operating budget can run to euro 200 million, Festing says.

“We certainly don’t want to be, and in fact we’re not a sort of rich man’s club,” Festing insists. “To a sort of an extent you could say, ‘Well maybe they are, slightly.’ But that’s not the basis of it, otherwise I wouldn’t have gotten in.”

That elite reputation, however, combined with the order’s genuine relief work, has earned it a level of prestige that few organizations can match. Governments, the European Union and U.N. agencies finance the order’s humanitarian operations; it has observer status at the United Nations and diplomatic relations with 104 countries — many in the developing world where such ties can help smooth the delivery of aid.

But the prestige has come with a price: Copycat orders have sprung up claiming to be the Knights of Malta or an offshoot that may or may not legitimately trace its origins to the group. These “false orders” prey on people eager to contribute to a Catholic charity thinking it’s sanctioned by the Holy See.

The con jobs are sometimes so good that even the Vatican has been fooled. In October, the Vatican issued a public reminder that it recognizes only two ancient equestrian orders — the Order of Malta and the Equestrian Order of the Holy See Sepulcher of Jerusalem — after a group purporting to be the knights obtained approval to host a ceremony within the Vatican walls, Festing said.

“It was entirely innocent,” on the part of the Vatican, said Festing. “But it wasn’t actually us, it was somebody else.”

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Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News