Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948
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Die Chinesen machen das doch nicht für lau, oder?
Was ist denn bei denen in der Hinterhand?
Doch nicht etwa unsere Mine, was?
Und weil momentan so viele gute Nachrichten auf uns prasseln - deshalb sinkt der Kurs.
Logisch!
ob die Chinesen, die Präsident Momis jetzt als "Katze aus dem Sack" (= Breaking News ???) lässt, nicht in relativer Kürze ganz andere Probleme zu lösen haben werden ...
Bei den 25 Mill. ausgeliehenen,bzw. zur Ausleihe freigegebenen KANN es sich nur um einen Teil der von
JPM 51.5 Mill.
Citicorp 16.5 Mill.
National Nominees 7.5 Mill.
HSBC Custody Nominees 4.1 Mill.
.........gehaltenen Shares handeln.
Diese Shares werden ohne Wissen u. Zustimmung der nicht im Aktionärsregister eingetragenen Aktionäre verliehen.
Meldung eines Regelverstoßes:
Melder: Aditi
Zeitpunkt: 13.06.11 12:52
Grund: dümmliches off-topic, push&spam. die id nekro stellt seit monaten tagtäglich irgendwelche artikel über die insel ein um die aktie zu pushen. Wann wird das unterbunden?
Es ist der beste und informativste Thread im www!!!
dank an alle
Wenn die Chinesen auf Bougainville,welches ca 200-220000 Einwohner zählt eine Mega-City für 5000000 Einwohner planen,so wird es sich wohl kaum um ein chinesisches Feriendorf handeln.
Wer den chin. Rohstoffhunger u. den Bougainviller Rohstoffreichtum kennt wird schon die richtigen Schlüsse ziehen,zumal eine chinesische Delegation diese Woche die Pangunamine besuchen wird.
Ich glaube, dass hatten wir überhaupt noch nicht...und das bei der Nachrichtenlage.
Mal schauen, ob die Chinesen in den nächsten Tagen mal ein paar kaufwillige anlocken.
... oder hast du eine Null zu viel "spendiert" in #8958 ???
Kann es sein, dass die Chinesen auf Boug. andere gute Leases ausfindig gemacht haben, die mit eigenen Leuten ausgebeutet werden sollen ... und BOC nebenbei "tot" liegen bleibt, da die sich nicht einigen können???
@Tom
ich komme auf Axels Seite ganz normal rauf ... wenn nicht sogar schneller als sonst manchmal ...
... denken auch an anderen Fleckchen des Globus in etwas größeren Kategorien ...
"China plant Mega-Industriepark in den USA"
www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/unternehmen/0,1518,768388,00.html
So denn, sind die letzten Blogs endlich auf der richtigen Spur gelandet und meine Wenigkeit wird mit meinen sisitierten Kursprognosen, welche Z-N in Aufruhr brachten, nun hoffentlich besser verstanden. Wenn dass nun mal kein Hype wird¨?!
Soll ich die Zahlen nochmals einspielen?
bis bald
THE Autonomous Region of Bougainville today celebrated its sixth anniversary as an autonomous governed region with traditional singing and dancing from various groups from the mainland of Bougainville, Buka Island and the atolls.
The day began with traditional groups from Wakunai and Ieta according former North Bougainville MP Sir Michael Ogio to a traditional welcome at the Buka airport on his first official visit to the region as the Governor General of PNG.
Sir Ogio was also honoured with a royal salute by the Bougainville Police Service (BPS) who provided escort for the governor general and Autonomous Bougainville Government (ABG) president John Momis to Hutjena where more than 300 people including school children had gathered to mark the event.
Sir Ogio, in marking the event said the anniversary symbolized the ‘tremendous stride’ the people of Bougainville and its government had achieved since signing the Bougainville Peace Agreement on Aug 30, 2000 and establishing an autonomous government on June 15, five years later. “Such event serves as a reminder of the past, of what Bougainville has been through and the achievement it has made in unifying its people in peace and prosperity,” said Ogio.
He appealed to all Bougainvilleans to ensure unity prevailed in the region. “Bougainville must be unified. I would not underestimate the challenges facing Bougainville, if Bougainville is to succeed, you must demonstrate to the world that you are a creative, self reliant and united people,” urged Ogio.
ABG president John Momis in honour of the event reiterated ABG’s commitment to collaborating with the national government to bring peace and prosperity to the people of Bougainville. “I am proud that we have reached our sixth anniversary, an amazing achievement. Our peace process has been very successful,” said Momis.
He added that despite the progress so far, there are many challenges that the region would face in its journey towards referendum of independence. Such challenges include localised armed conflict, weapons disposal, unequal development in areas throughout out the region and corrupt mining interests causing conflict among the people. Momis urged all Bougainvilleans gathered to work together in addressing these challenges.
“I also remind the national government that when it signed the peace agreement, it committed itself to the peace process in Bougainville,” said Momis. He said that meant working closely with ABG in various ways including granting directly to the Bougainville government the committed high impact project money of K500 million for the next five years instead of keeping this ‘locked’ in Port Moresby.
Momis thanked the governments of PNG, Australia, New Zealand and Europe who have collaborated with ABG in building Bougainville.
Autonomous Bougainville Government leadership has lost touch with reality, especially when dealing with foreign investor issues in the region, Bougainville Affairs Minister Fidelis Semoso, said.
Because of this, the leader has chaired an all business meeting recently where it has been agreed in principal that as of June 08, 2011, no more foreign businesses will be allowed to operate in Buka, Bougainville; in areas like retail, transport and agriculture, wholesale, tourism and hospitality and other reserved lists of activities which was endorsed by the Bougainville Executive Council.
The meeting, convened by all business stakeholders of Buka, Arawa and parts of Buin and Siwai at Kenny’s Hall last week, was told that what was happening in Bougainville was that the autonomy was beginning to lose its face – ABG was allowing foreign investors to come in at the time the leadership still needed to help its small stakeholders in the region through financial support.
“The leadership is bringing foreign investors in when important issues have not been addressed,” Mr Semoso said. “ABG is allowing this to happen and the action of the leadership totally contradicts the aspirations for Bougainvilleans. “I want to warn business houses who use locals as fronts to sell their stock, you will be dealt with in the next four weeks.
“I will not allow or I do not want to see mistakes repeated in PNG where foreigners have gone as far as selling buai or smoke, practically it means we have lost 25,000 lives and we are going 25 years backwards. Not under my leadership. “We need to get our leadership right,” he said.
Mr Semoso said that on the eve of the region’s sixth anniversary, which falls today, the leadership has not exhausted every avenue to help the Bougainville business houses (the ones who have grown the economy of Bougainville) by providing the financial help they need to grow further.
He said foreign investors who are interested in doing business on Bougainville should have more than K5 million and anything below should be given to Bougainville businesses to handle. “These business houses, they are not asking for free handouts, no. “All they are asking for is ABG injecting money into the bank so they can loan from it and they will repay it,” Mr Semoso said.
“In light of the problems business houses are facing, we have come up with recommendations to ban all foreigners from having reserved businesses in the region as of the eighth of this month. “Basically, as the mandated leader of Bougainville, I will not tolerate foreigners involved in businesses where Bougainvilleans are involved in or capable of handling. “I want Bougainville to develop at our own pace.”
Mr Semoso said that as long as he remains the Regional MP and the minister in charge of Bougainville, he will not let down business houses who are engaged in these reserved businesses by allowing outsiders to compete with them.
Bougainville President, John Momis, has gone on Radio Australia to declare his support for plans by the Chinese to build a huge Special Economic Zone on Papua New Guinea's Bougainville island.

Special Economic Zones are fenced enclaves where foreign businesses are given special incentives including tax free status to set up manufacturing industries. SEZs have been heavily criticized in other country's for promoting low wages, poor health and safety standards and environmental damage.
The International Finance Corporation, a division of the World Bank, is currently drafting laws to allow the first SEZs to be declared in PNG.
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MOMIS: They are responding to our call for foreign investors to invest in Bougainville to help the Autonomous Bougainvile government (ABG) and the people of Bougainville to develop their huge natural resources and by doing so enable the Bougainvilleans to become beneficiaries of the development of their resoureces, instead of just being owners of the resource. In response to that, the Chinese have been coming to Bougainville to look at a number of potential economic projects one of which is the proposal to set up a Special Economic Zone on the northern tip of Bougainville Island including eventually, I suppose, the building of the Buka Passage Bridge to connect Buka Island with Bougainville.


GARRETT: Some reports say the plans entail a 1.2 billion Kina (AUD$480 millon) investment and the building of a new city. Is that correct?


MOMIS: That was put to the Bougainville Business Association and the ABG. I, personally, am not well informed on the exact amount of money that is required but I know of the fact that they are making a proposal to build a modern township that would attract tourists and other investors to come and invest their money to develop projects such as steel prefab housing materials, hotels and things like that. Because Buka Island and the Buka Passage and the surroundings, which includes the northern tip of Bougainville is potentially a very, very rich beautiful tourism hub of Bougainville.


GARRETT: Special Economic Zones are controversial but you actually asked the Chinese to put a proposal involving a Special Economic Zone. Why?


MOMIS: That is correct. Special Economic Zone has been talked about in PNG. It has been tried in Lae, and a couple of other places, but the government of Papua New Guinea and, I guess others, have not had the expertise nor the capital available to develop them. You need, I presume, a lot of money and I think chinese capitalists, or Chinese investors, would have that kind of money. We would provide as partners the rich resources that we have and negotiate something that would be mutually beneficial. We have engaged, ..the ABG I mean, has engaged an expert from New Zealand who is going to give us independent advice as to how we should go about stiking a win-win deal.


GARRETT: You had one group of Chinese investors last week and I understand another group went over on Saturday. What are you hoping to see come out of that?


MOMIS: Three Chinese came went over last week, one of whom is our representative in China who travels throughout China to potential investors. The other one was the architectural engineer who is looking at the proposed site for the Special Economic Zone; the buildings and so on and so forth. And just a couple of days ago a group went over who are interested in mining and construction of a hydro project.


GARRETT: Turning now to PNG politics, is the current instability in the PNG government affecting Bougainville?


MOMIS: The instability in the government does worry us. We would hope that things would be stabilised and that the commitment that the National government has made to Bougainville, especially in the Bougainville Peace Agreement and the other subsequent commitments such as the K500 million that has been pledged to be given to Bougainvile in the next five years and K15 million that is a requirement of the Bougainville Agreement, would flow to Bougainville, without disturbance, I suppose. And also the good relationship we need to have. The rapport we need to have between Bougainville and Papua New Guinea is crucially important to manage the issues of referendum, issues of Bougainville being given the best opportunity to enjoy in ful its automomy, in order to be ready for the referendum to be held in a responsible way.


GARRETT: There have been reports of severe food shortages on Bougainvile's atoll islands. How is the Bougainville government responding?


MOMIS: I understand that the administration is dealing with the issue. This is a perennial problem that Bougainville has and it is not made easy, in any way, by the fact that the administration has very meagre resources at our disposal to deal with this sort of thing. Our budgetry allocation is usually for recurrent activities. I am hoping that the administration will have adequate funding. If they don't have enough then they should contact the National Emergency department, in Port Moresby, to get the extra funding which we need to provide food and make provisions for the people of the atolls.