Grand theft is official Cypriot policy. 
		
		Bank account 
		haircuts are authorized. Those above 100,000 euros are targeted.
 
	
 
	
		
		Depositors may lose much more than initially thought. 
		Minimally it's around 40% of their money. It may be double that amount 
		or more. Potentially it's everything. 
 
	
 
	
		
		In return, they'll get unsecured IOUs (promises to pay). 
		They'll be converted to bank shares. They may end up worthless.
 
	
 
	
		
		Small depositors aren't safe. If enough money isn't 
		raised, they're vulnerable. Once thought safe bank accounts are being 
		looted. It gets worse. Friends of President Nicos Anastasiades got
		
		advance word. Cypriot newspaper 
		Haravgi said A. Loutsios & Sons Ltd wired 21 million euros to London. 
		
 
		It 
		did so on March 12 and 13. It was days before capital controls were 
		imposed.
 
	
		
			
			Loutsios & Sons is co-owned by the husband of 
		Anastasiades' daughter. The company denied Haravgi's report. 
		
			
 
			Anastasiades said it,
			"attempt(ed) to defame companies or people linked 
		to my family."
 
		 
		
			
			It's "nothing but an attempt to distract people from the 
		liability of those who led the country to a state of bankruptcy."
 
	
	
	On March 22, London's
		
	Daily Mail headlined,
		
		"Cypriot 
		president 'warned his friends to move money abroad' before financial 
		crisis hit: Leader under fire as he faces just FOUR DAYS to save country 
		from collapse."
 
		
			
			"Cypriot president Nikos Anastasiades 'warned' close 
		friends of the financial crisis about to engulf his country so they 
		could move their money abroad, it was claimed on Friday."
 
		 
		
			
			"The respected Cypriot newspaper Filelftheros made the 
		allegation which was picked up eagerly by German media."
 
		 
		
			
			"The Cyprus newspaper did not say how much money was 
		moved abroad but quoted sources saying the president 'knew about the 
		possible closure of the banks' and tipped off close friends who were 
		able to move vast sums abroad." 
 
		 
		
			
			"Italian media said the 4.5 billion euros left the island 
		in the week before the crisis."
 
	
	
	On March 25,
	
	Reuters headlined "INSIGHT - 
		Money fled Cyprus as president fumbled bailout," saying:
		
			
			"…(L)arge amounts of euros fled (Cyprus) before and 
		after Cypriot lawmakers stunned Europe by rejecting a levy on all bank 
		deposits."
 
		 
		
			
			"No one knows exactly how much money has left Cyprus' 
		banks, or where it has gone." Minimally it was many millions. Perhaps it 
		was much more. Insiders got advance word. They took full advantage. 
		Others weren't as lucky.
 
		 
		
			
			On March 31, 
			
			AFP 
		said Cypriot politicians "had loans written off by the island's three 
		biggest banks, two of them at the heart of the financial meltdown."
 
		 
		
			
			"Lawmaker Mavrides, meanwhile, confirmed that a committee 
		appointed by President Nicos Anastasiades would investigate a list 
		published by Greek media of Cypriot politicians who allegedly had loans 
		forgiven."
 
		 
		
			
			"The Bank of Cyprus, Laiki and Hellenic Bank reportedly 
		forgave millions of euros in loans over the past five years to 
		lawmakers, companies and local company authorities, newspapers in Greece 
		said."
 
		 
		
			
			"The allegations would likely be discussed in parliament 
		next week, Mavrides added."
 
	
	
		
		Expect more whitewash and cover-up than revelations. 
		What's reported is likely true. Politicians often get special favors. 
		Advance word let privileged insiders shift money offshore. They did so 
		in time.
 
	
 
	
	On March 31, the
		
	Financial Times headlined 
		"Scramble to find Cypriot cash escape route," saying:
		
			
			The hunt's on. In recent weeks, at least three people 
		tried fleeing "with more than 200,000 euros in cash on their person." 
		They were caught. Funds were confiscated.
 
		 
		
			
			Limassol police stepped up security. At issue is stopping 
		people trying to get funds offshore by boat.
 
		 
		
			
			Unidentified Cypriots called Russian businessman Sergei 
		Tyulenev. They did so the day capital controls were imposed. They 
		offered help to shift more than one million euros from Laiki Bank to 
		Hellenic Bank. It's relatively safer.
 
		 
		
			
			He explained a catch. He'd have to pay 200,000 euros up 
		front. He refused. Eurocrats raised concerns. Politically connected 
		depositors moved cash out in time. Others got funds out after banks 
		closed.
 
	
	
	An unidentified Eurocrat said:
 
		
			
			"There are some dubious capital outflows out of Cyprus as 
		we speak. I'm sure it's 'the friends,' and the friends are not only 
		Russians."
		
		Before crisis erupted, many foreign depositors exited.
		 
		They smelled trouble. They moved funds offshore in time. The 
		handwriting's been on the wall for months.
 
	
 
	
		
		In February alone, about 18% of Cypriot deposits moved to 
		other Eurozone countries. Central Bank of Cyprus figures confirm it. 
		Since last June, Cypriot deposits fell 41%.
 
	
 
	
		
		Hours before capital controls were imposed, large sums 
		exited Laiki Bank and Bank of Cyprus.
 
	
 
	
		
		On March 31, The
		
		New York Times headlined "As 
		Banks in Cyprus Falter, Other Tax Havens Step In," saying:
			
			"(F)inancial centers across Europe and beyond are 
		promoting their own skills at keeping money hidden and safe."
		
		A Malta law firm said:
			
			"We are aware of the economic problems facing Cyprus at 
		the moment. We would like to propose an avenue of action for your 
		consideration: offering corporate relocation to Malta."
 
		
			
				- 
				
				Switzerland 
- 
				
				Luxembourg 
- 
				
				the Cayman Islands 
- 
				
				Dubai 
- 
				
				Singapore,  
		
		...and other tax havens made similar offers.
 
 
	
		
		Swiss-based 
		
		Gonthier Group emailed Cypriot firms working 
		with foreigners. It suggested they offer clients an investment,
			
			"vehicle 
		which is extremely low-profile, not classified as a bank account or 
		trust and thus very much under the radar of national fiscal 
		authorities."
		
		Turkey controls northern Cyprus. It's promoting its own 
		banks. It does so as a safer alternative.
 
 
	
		
		Nicholas Papadopoulos heads parliament's finance and 
		budgetary affairs committee. 
		
			
			"We are being thrown to the wolves, and now 
		the wolves have responded," he said.
		
		Limassol lawyer Andreas Marangos said Cypriot banking "is 
		finished." 
		
		 
		At stake is the island's main industry and tens of thousands 
		of jobs. Expect unemployment to soar. Protracted Depression looks certain. An entire economy is 
		being destroyed. 
		
 
		Cypriot economics Nobel laureate Christopher Pissarides 
		is right saying 
		
		when the IMF gets involved, there's always blood on the 
		ground.
 
	
 
	
		
		On March 31,
		
		Cyprus Mail accused President 
		Anastasiades of failing,
			
			"to introduce an honest, reality-based, 
		political discourse." 
		
		
		He said what people wanted to hear. He sounded like his predecessor. He's not up to the 
		challenge. He panders to privileged Cypriots. He offers false hopes and 
		breaks promises. 
		
 
		He hasn't prepared Cypriots for hard times.
			
			They "need to know they have a leader who is aware of the 
		crushing difficulties we face, but he has a plan to help the country get 
		back on its feet eventually."
		
		He's got none. Cyprus' future remains hugely challenged. 
		For most Cypriots, it's bleak.
 
	
 
	
		
		Today Cyprus. Tomorrow Euroland. 
		
		 
		FT's
		
		Wolfgang Munchau says,
			
			"Economics will catch up with the Euro."
 
			"(A)t what point (is it) economically rational for a 
		country to leave the Eurozone?" 
		
		
		It's an "imperfect banking union." 
		
		
		 
		Public and private sector debts are unsustainable in troubled countries. They're better off going it alone. Insured depositors in 
		Spain, Italy, Portugal and Greece aren't safe. For sure, Cypriot ones 
		aren't.
 
	
 
	
		
		Spain looks next up for a bail-in. Its banking system is 
		broke. It faces protracted Depression. 
			
			It's "logically irrational for any Spanish saver to keep 
		even small amounts of savings in the Spanish banking system. There is no 
		way that the Spanish state can guarantee the system without defaulting 
		itself."
		
		Spain's best chance is exiting the Eurozone. 
		
		 
		The same 
		goes for Greece, Italy and Portugal. Economics may not be the main 
		driver. 
		
			
			"Politics may trump economics." Longterm, "you cannot operate a 
		monetary union in the face of economic logic."
		
		One size fits all Eurozone rules don't work. Imposing 
		them reflects financial tyranny. Surrendering monetary and fiscal 
		control assures trouble. 
 
	
 
	
		
		Cyprus' virus is spreading. Ordinary people will be 
		harmed most. Insured savings aren't safe. Euroland looks most 
		vulnerable. Take the money and run is policy. Depositor haircuts are authorized. Canada did the same 
		thing. 
		
		 
		It's a short leap to America. 
		
 
		They're coming. Expect them...