Geneva - Air passenger traffic in February dropped by 10.1 per cent, following a trend of declines in recent months, The International Air Transport Association said Thursday.
A 5.9 reduction in capacity last month, deemed by the association to be "the most aggressive since the crisis began," was not able to keep pace with the continued decline in passenger travel.
Also, international freight volumes were 22.1 per cent below 2008 levels, the third consecutive month of such steep declines.
Geneva - Banque Cantonale de Geneve on Wednesday reported a record drop in profits last year, news that was counterbalanced by data showing a boost in the amount of funds deposited.
Profits at the regional publicly traded bank fell by 11.6 per cent to 68.1 million Swiss francs (60.3 million dollars), the bank reported.
However, it also reported 12,600 new clients, more than double the amount of a normal year, and a 930-million-franc increase in client funds deposited.
Geneva - Somalia is the scene of one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world and its citizens have been victims "of most terrible human rights and humanitarian law abuses," the United Nations expert on the east African country said Wednesday.
Geneva- The United Nations was marking Tuesday the 50th day that John Solecki, who worked for the organization in Quetta, Pakistan, was being held in captivity.
Solecki was abducted on February 2 this year, in an attack that killed another UN staff member. His health was said to be deteriorating and the UN was worried about his medical condition.
Currently, 19 UN staff members are under arrest, detained or missing, around the world, said UNHCR, the refugee agency that employs Solecki.
Geneva - Airlines will suffer losses of 4.7 billion dollars in 2009, the International Air Transport Association said Tuesday, downgrading a previous forecast.
"The state of the airline industry today is grim," Giovanni Bisignani, the head of the IATA, said.
A forecast at the end of last year had predicted a 2.5 billion dollar loss.
The IATA also revised its estimate losses for 2008 from 5 billion dollars to 8.5 billion, citing a particularly bad fourth quarter.
Zurich - Swiss Life, the largest insurance company in Switzerland, announced Tuesday it was forming a strategic partnership with German insurer Talanx.
Talanx was to purchase up to a 9.9 per cent stake in Swiss Life and a 8.4 per cent share in MLP, a German pension specialist, from Swiss Life.
The news came as Swiss Life announced a 345 million Swiss franc (306.9 million dollars) net profit for 2008 and said it had a solid capital base.