Sex for money in Liechtenstein
Sweet women from Liechtenstein wants teen relationships DWM looking for spanish woman must be under 48.
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Long-distance trains don't stop in Liechtenstein's capital, Vaduz, because the place has no mainline railway station to speak of. When Crown Prince Alois, the principality's head of state, wants to travel by plane, he has to take a car to neighbouring Austria because there is no airport either.
This may seem odd for an Alpine country not only rated as one of the richest in the world but which likes to attribute at least part of its wealth to its role as global industrial player, albeit as manufacturer of a workman's tool considered virtually indispensable to modern construction: the Hilti drill.
But prowess on the world's building sites plays only a minor role in the Liechtenstein success story. As European governments have been sharply reminded over the past 10 days, the principality, only twice the size of Manhattan island and sandwiched between Austria and Switzerland, owes its reputation and wealth to its role as one of the world's most secretive tax havens.
The atmosphere is almost palpable on the sleepy streets of Vaduz , which is on the banks of the river Rhine. Overlooked by its medieval mountain-top castle, glistening bank facades jostle for space with investment firms and dubious "letter-box" holding companies of which the country boasts an estimated 73, Liechtenstein does not need a mainline railway station because few of its paying clients make a habit of travelling by train.