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Lithuania introduces e-residency to boost foreign investment by Staff Writers Vilnius (AFP) July 16, 2019 Lithuania's parliament voted Tuesday to offer e-residency which will allow entrepreneurs to run businesses in the Baltic state from abroad, in a bid to boost foreign investment. The legislation will enable foreigners to set up companies in the EU and eurozone country of 2.8 million people starting in 2021, and run them remotely with the ability to declare taxes and sign documents digitally. The programme does not provide citizenship, tax residency, physical residency or the right to travel to Lithuania. "We must go along with technological progress, and take into account the ever increasing digitalisation of services," Interior Minister Eimutis Misiunas told AFP. He added that officials are assessing the programme's potential security challenges, including those relating to money laundering and terrorism financing. Lithuania is following the trail blazed by neighbouring Estonia, which became the first country to offer e-residency identification cards to people worldwide in 2014. Around 54,000 entrepreneurs from 136 countries have since become Estonian e-residents, according to its official e-residency website. Businesses from Ukraine top the list, followed by ones from Germany, Russia, Turkey and France. Some 6,000 e-residency driven companies have paid over 15 million euros ($17 million) in taxes to Estonia,
Science suffers collateral damage as US, China tensions rise Beijing (AFP) June 18, 2019 A rise in US visa denials for Chinese academics and intensified scrutiny of alleged links to Beijing over fears of potential espionage are having a chilling effect on long-standing research collaboration, researchers say. American and Chinese scientists have co-authored thousands of papers each year, far outpacing the output from scientific collaborations between any other two nations, according to a 2018 survey by academic database Nature Index. But it is getting tougher for researchers to work ... read more
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