Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948
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Dann müsste
http://www.buysellsignals.net/bcllandowners/Newsletter.do
Earnings/Dividends per share US$3.07
die Divi auf ca. 4 steigen
vielen Dank für die Info´s zum Buch! Ich hab es mir gleich mal bestellt, obwohl es schon ein ziemlich theoretischer Brocken ist.
Und das Buch "Performanceanalyse in der Praxis: Performancemaße, Attributionsanalyse, Global Investment Performance Standards: Performancemaße, Attributionsana" habe ich gleich mitbestellt, das mir den "Money Flow" von BOU etwas näher bringen soll.
Longwilli
Mit SAM KAUONA als Anführer. BRA,BRF u. Meekamuis friedlich vereint, interessieren sie sich für den"Drawdown of Powers"
Hat Semple Druck gemacht weil die Morumbis abgeka**t sind u. sich keine mehr abladen lassen? Gibt wohl keine "Lease"-Kohle bis die Miningpower auf der Insel entschieden werden kann? Obwohl Semple ein Abzocker ist könnten alle von dem Morumbideal profitieren.
-Die Landowners kassieren sofort Royaltys
-Kommt es zur Exploration entstehen Arbeitsplätze
-Das ganze wird von Semple u. Kauona finanziert mit der Publikation von News u. abladen von -Morumbishares an unbedarfte Lemminge.
By Aloysius Laukai
The Bougainville Veterans Association representing excombatants from both the former BRA, Resistance fighters and the Mekamui today presented a petition to the Autonomous Bougainville Government President this morning.
They among other things want the immediate review of the Bougainville Peace Agreement signed in Arawa in August 31st 2001 and should be reviewed every five years.
Since the signing it was never reviewed.
The excombatants want the National Government and the ABG review the agreement by November this year.
The excombatants also called on the ABG President to immediately request the UNITED NATIONS POLITICAL AFFAIRS to return from NEW YORK and monitor the Peace process which they claim has been purposely delayed.
They also called on the ABG legal office to tell the people of Bougainville what was the status of the drawdown of powers to Bougainville.
New Dawn FM was not able to get a copy of the petition which was delivered to the ABG President by former BRA Commander SAM KAUONA.
"Formal directions hearings for most of the cases should start by the end of this month, but it could take two to three years for a final decision."
Könnte grad so hinkommen dass die " final decision." noch vor dem Start der nächsten Wahlen fällt. (es sei denn irgendwas "unexpected" kommt dazwischen ;-))))))))))))
Radio Australia
MORE THAN 100 CANDIDATES who failed to win seats in Papua New Guinea's national elections are challenging the results in court.
Some of unsuccessful candidates are claiming that PNG election officials failed to enrol eligible voters, did not conduct polling in designated areas, or were bribed by winning candidates.
A total of 101 petitions disputing the result have been lodged with PNG’s National Court registry.
Justice Collin Makail is managing the cases and has warned petitioners and their lawyers to keep to election petition rules.
He says cases could be thrown out, if they do not comply with the law and petitioners must have facts to advance their cases.
Some of unsuccessful candidates are claiming that PNG election officials failed to enrol eligible voters, did not conduct polling in designated areas, or were bribed by winning candidates.
Some of the winning MPs have reportedly gone into hiding to avoid receiving the petitions.
Formal directions hearings for most of the cases should start by the end of this month, but it could take two to three years for a final decision.
Most of the petitioners are asking for a recount of ballots to nullify the results or for by-elections in their electorates.
Peter O`Neill ist eingeladen, da dürfte Peter Taylor nicht fehlen??
http://ramumine.wordpress.com/2012/09/13/png-to-host-mine-meet/
http://www.ga.gov.au/ccim/news.php
By Aloysius Laukai
ABG President chief JOHN MOMIS says no foreigner will be allowed to operate retail shops on Bougainville.
He made these remarks when commenting in parliament on reports tabled by the commerce minister,WILFRED KOMBA that the Bougainville Import Export Group would be liquidated due to differences between certain Port Moresby Chinese businessmen.
He said that these groups were allowed on Wholesale bases and to provide factory prices not getting cargoes from Port Moresby.
He said if they go retailing then they will be asked to leave.
Chief Momis said that retailing should be for locals only.
On the question of some Bougainvilleans who bought shares under BIEG he said all their funds should be refunded.
He said the Commerce division has already set out a Reserved list of businesses that are for Bougainvilleans only.
The chief said that when the Panguna mine reopens all the supermarkets and other retailing will be run by Bougainvilleans only.
Ends
Aktueller Kurs: 0,77 AUD (-1,3%) / Umsatz: 14.860 Aktien --- WOW!!! ---
Ein Trauerspiel...
Ich denke mal ab Startschuss Miniminimum 3-4 Jahre bis Produktionsbeginn und 5-7 Jahre bis Vollausbau. Bei Block Cave Mining evtl. noch ein paar Jährchen länger.
Dividendenzahlungen schätze ich mal ab ca. 2025
Wenn es in Berlin/Brandenburg schon zu manchem UNEXPECTED kommt, sollte man das UNEXPECTED auf Bougainville schon fast als EXPECTED auf der Rechnung haben ;-)
Außerdem überschreiten Baumaßnahmen in Dtl. ihren Zeiplan im Regelfall um etwa 25-50%. Wieviel Zeit müssen wir da im LAND OF THE UNEXPECTED einplanen? ;-))
Das Pendeln um die 80 AUD-Cents-Marke wird bald ein Ende haben!
Bei Betrachtung der engen Bollinger wird klar, dass zeitnah (spätestens 5-10 Tage) eine volatile Bewegung ansteht! Da der MACD deutlcih zurückgekommen ist und die Initiaten von Draghi und Bernanke Rohstoffpreise weiterhin beflügeln sollten, wird BOC imho zeitnah die Konsolidierung beenden.
P.S. Die Bollinger waren bei BOC auf historische Sicht immer ein verlässlcher Indikator
Quelle: Post Courier, 13.9.2012
A peaceful protest march took place at the Bel Isi Park in Buka town on Wednesday. The march saw members from all the different factions who were involved in the Bougainville crisis airing their frustrations over many issues the autonomous region is currently facing.
The former combatants were led by their leaders including Ismael Toroama, Sam Kauona, and Peter Barik. The march was also significant because it saw Me’ekamui commander Chris Uma and his members attending.
The Me’ekamui faction’s attendance was seen by some as an indication that they were also monitoring developments in the region, since they had not previously attended any discussions regarding Bougainville’s political future, either within or outside the region.
Some of these issues raised include disunity between the ABG leaders and the Bougainville MPs in the National Parliament, the JSB meeting, law and order, weapons disposal, full autonomy and the review of the Bougainville Peace Agreement (BPA). They said a review of the BPA was long overdue.
ABG President Chief Dr John Momis and some members of the Bougainville House of Representatives were present to receive the petition from the former combatants. While responding to the demands, President John Momis said he agreed with some of the issues that they had raised. He however said that certain issues were supposed to be discussed between the ABG and the National Government.
Geldwäsche, Drogengeld und Terroraktivitäten
Behörden ermitteln gegen US-Banken
Bahnt sich ein neuer Skandal im Bankensektor an? Amerikanische Behörden nehmen einige der größten Banken des Landes ins Visier - offenbar besteht der Verdacht, durch laxe Kontrollen, Geldflüsse für Terror, Drogenhandel und Geldwäsche ermöglicht zu haben.
Gegen mehrere große US-Banken wird laut einem Zeitungsbericht wegen des Verdachts der Geldwäsche und der möglichen Finanzierung von Drogenhandel und Terroraktivitäten ermittelt. Die Bundes- und örtlichen Behörden ermittelten gegen einige der größten Banken des Landes wegen des Verdachts, bei der Überwachung von Bargeld-Transfers versagt zu haben, berichtete die "New York Times" unter Berufung auf anonyme Quellen. Dadurch sei es Drogenhändlern und Terroristen möglicherweise gelungen, Geld zu waschen.
Dem Bericht zufolge handelt es sich um eine der größten Anti-Geldwäsche-Aktionen der Behörden seit Jahrzehnten in den USA. Die Ermittlungen seien noch nicht abgeschlossen, stünden jedoch "kurz davor", gegen die Bank JPMorgan vorzugehen. Auch die Aktivitäten anderer Großbanken wie der Bank of America würden durchleuchtet.
Erst vor kurzem hatten die US-Behörden mehreren großen europäischen Banken vorgeworfen, illegale Geschäfte mit Staaten gemacht zu haben, die mit Sanktionen belegt sind. Um nicht von der New Yorker Börse ausgeschlossen zu werden, erklärte sich die britische Standard Chartered Mitte August zur Zahlung einer Geldbuße in Höhe von 340 Millionen Dollar bereit.
Quelle: AFP
Adresse:
http://www.n-tv.de/wirtschaft/...-gegen-US-Banken-article7231436.html
Earnings/Dividends per share US$3.22
Soweit man das von hier überblicken kann gibt es auf Boug. (zumindest in deren Chatroom) bis auf die grünangehauchte Aussie-Emanze V.J. nur positive Meinungen zur Wiedereröffnung der Pangunamine.
......that we had enough and we want to see Bougainville progress. The only impact progress that we see at the moment is the re-opening of the Panguna mine!
.....If I had it my way, it will reopen tomorrow...
.....The decision to reopen Panguna will be a collectievone by all
Bougaivilleans. Including the faction to seem to adore on
Bougainville...they will be consulted as well. But the decision of
majority will be upheld. From my observations Majority do want to see
Panguna reopened.
#13042 scheint bis jetzt eher als non-event angesehen zu werden (its private and non mining related?)
This is a sad case of people taking the law into their own hands. From
what i heard the victim and his attackers have been in a cyclical
slicing of each other with bush knives. As to whether the situation is
tense or not mi no save. It may well be but from where i am (klostu lo
sovele) mi no harim planti samtin. SK from nagovisi.
http://search2.dtcc.com/...p_notices&sp_p=all&sp_f=ISO-8859-1
http://asopa.typepad.com/asopa_people/2012/09/...eople-.html#comments
LEONARD FONG ROKA
Panguna-mineTHE PEOPLE OF PANGUNA – site of the now ghost copper and gold mine, no more than a huge hole in the ground - have seen environmental carnage and the influx of aliens.
Today they know that the extraction of the mineral ore on their land was for the good of Papua New Guinea and not Bougainville.
They know a Panguna kina was spent on the Highlands Highway construction; a Panguna kina was there in the founding of Air Niugini; a Panguna kina was built into Waigani parliament house….
To them, Papua New Guinea was made by the Panguna mine and the many Bougainville cocoa and copra plantations.
To the Panguna people, the making of Papua New Guinea, from the basic economics to politics, was all Bougainville design and financing.
This is the insight that the uneducated or illiterate majority of Panguna landowners are told day-in, day-out.
Since the days of the crisis and civil war to the dawn of the peace process, this is the information they are nurtured on.
One hears these stories in the family home, after church services and, worst of all, in the boozing where you hear all the Panguna curses.
For the majority of the static, illiterate Bougainvilleans, the Bougainville crisis opened their realization of the fact that they are Solomon Islanders.
At the peak of the Australia-backed PNG blockade of their island, they had a brother who gave them little ammunition and medicine. His islands were close to the coasts of Buin and Kieta and could be seen from the high mountains.
The political discourse of the conflict-days was anti-PNG. Churchmen preached gospels loaded with sentiments of anti-PNGism. Musicians of Bougainville sing the negativity created by the New Guineans and BCL (the illiterate so love their artists and their songs).
At every traditional feasting night there are anti-PNG or BCL folksongs and poetic lamentation songs at funerals for any post-conflict death.
For all, every bad thing happening is attributed to these past deeds.
For the majority of Bougainvilleans and the Panguna people, this is their culture.
Thus, when one looks at the re-opening of the Panguna mine, one has to look at the people of the area and their landowners’ body to get a clear picture of what our hope is for re-opening the mine.
The noted trend in approaching the subject today is that the non-landowners dictated the wishes of the Bougainville Peace Agreement and the Autonomous Bougainville Government did not consider retributive justice for all the bad things that happened on Bougainville because of the mining.
There are many injustices in Bougainville that ought to be addressed before talking about mining.
Firstly, the majority of the Panguna population consists of the illiterate or half-literate men and women (high school failures, ex-BCL labourers and other ordinaries). But in this group is a new culture alongside the wealth of guns.
One finds the culture of entrepreneurship is growing. This unit of people hosts gold panners, gold buyers, scrap metal dealers, victims to scrap metal dealing conman, retail outlet operators and investors in cocoa planting who buy land in the coastal areas such as Wakunai and Tinputz.
Before the Bougainville conflict, these people were nobodies in their own land and in 1988-89 the late Francis Ona ran to them for support and got what he wanted readily.
He did not even establish a political manifesto to execute the secessionist struggle.
Thus the crisis was born against BCL, its few local friends and Papua New Guinea.
When the Bougainville peace process came into existence, it was those surviving BCL ‘local friends’ and the opportunists who went ahead with the Panguna mine re-opening talks.
Meanwhile the majority slowly adapted to change by engaging in business and investment with their own sweat without talking about the mine re-opening.
So, on the issue of Panguna re-opening, one has to deal with the crisis-created opportunists (some armed), the few old BCL ‘local friends’ (most in the current Panguna Landowner Association) and the change-adaptive majority (to whom the crisis-created opportunists run for support).
So far, the discourse on the issue of Panguna re-opening comes from the opportunists and the few old BCL ‘local friends’ who feign as genuine representatives of the people.
The dangerous majority has no voice yet. The re-opening gossip that every now and then excites the world is not representative of the Panguna majority.
It is obvious. Every foreigner who enters Panguna with mine re-opening hopes chats with the crisis-created elite or members of the Panguna Landowners Association (many of whom are BCL old ‘local friends’) and returns to spill their biased in-house chit-chat to the media as a breakthrough towards the re-opening of the mine.
The majority of the Panguna people (illiterate and literate) are standing at the foundation of Bougainville history. To them, BCL was for Papua New Guinea’s development and not Bougainville’s.
The re-opening of the mine bodes well for the locals in an independent Bougainville that is free from Papua New Guinea with the benefits for Bougainvilleans.
(The failure of the Bougainville weapons disposal program comes into play here because many people see that Papua New Guineans will return if Bougainville is free from weapons.)
The majority of the people of Panguna and Bougainville need to be assured that their crisis-created spirit of entrepreneurship will be sustained by the ABG. But so far, the signs are not good as the ABG is trying to suppress self-reliance by inviting Chinese foreign direct investment to get Bougainville, in a trickle of seconds, away from the stone-age and into the computer-age (a process that took industrial countries centuries).
This is likely to create loopholes for the Bougainville economy in the long run. When extraction of raw materials is depleted and the investors proudly depart, where will Bougainvilleans turn to where all farming land is gravel?
Many can criticise my discourse, but one has to note that the Bougainville crisis was a ‘natural university’ to many Bougainvilleans for it opened the islanders’ mind’s eye.
So, re-opening the Panguna mine must follow the dictates of the Bougainville people with a leadership that is trusted by the people and not the kind of leaders that are dirt to the people’s eyes and yet are currently playing the game for Bougainville.
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