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  • New guidelines for market participants on management and internal control have been welcomed but the Securities and Futures Commission has also published suggested control techniques which have been less well received. By James Walker and Kenneth Leung of Clifford Chance, Hong Kong
  • The Privy Council restored Rogers J's decision in Canon Kabushiki Kaisha v Green Cartridge Co (HK) which the Court of Appeal overturned, as reported in this column in May 1995 and September 1996.
  • German firm Bruckhaus Westrick Stegemann has announced the closure of its Tokyo office. The office had been staffed by a single German lawyer since it opened in 1990.
  • Meighen Demers, Toronto
  • Millar Wyslobicky Kreklewetz, Toronto
  • Filion, Wakely & Thorup, Toronto
  • Burlington Resources and Louisiana Land and Exploration have combined. The deal is valued at US$3 billion. The combined company will be one of the leading independent energy exploration and production companies worldwide.
  • Netting in securities and currency trading
  • By the end of fiscal 2000, a momentous series of reforms should have opened the Japanese financial markets. The government’s programme is reviewed by Naoaki Eguchi, Yasushi Murofushi and Jeremy Pitts of Tokyo Aoyama Law Office-Baker & McKenzie, Tokyo
  • The London office of New York's Debevoise & Plimpton has won Arthur Marriott from rivals Washington DC-based Wilmer Cutler & Pickering. A leading English advocate, Marriott was one of the first two solicitors made Queen's Counsel in March this year. He takes two assistants with him "Having Marriott will be of great benefit to our clients, for now we will have leading professionals in the international dispute-resolution field on both sides of the Atlantic," says Debevoise's presiding partner Barry Brown. "This move also reflects the firm's overall commitment to our international practice, and to London in particular." International arbitration and litigation issues were formerly handled largely from the firm's New York and Paris offices.