Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948


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15644 Postings, 6499 Tage nekroRepresentative of the Panguna Landowners.......

 
  
    #15651
2
22.04.13 10:24
.........Association,

http://bougainville.typepad.com/newdawn/2013/04/...says-that-the.html

........MICHAEL PARIU says that the Panguna landowners want the ABG to come up with the best possible solution to the reopening of the now closed PANGUNA Copper and Gold mine.
Speaking at the Buin forum this afternoon, MR. PARIU said that the landowners will support the ABG in its endeavours to fast track the process.
He said the Panguna landowners are prepared to carry out more awareness with its people but want support from the ABG to move the process forward.
MR. PARIU said that they have established Associations for the Landowners but there is no backup from the Government.
Ends  

15644 Postings, 6499 Tage nekroMeekamui as one united people with one vision.

 
  
    #15652
1
22.04.13 10:26
http://bougainville.typepad.com/newdawn/2013/04/...i-is-appealin.html

SOUTH BOUGAINVILLE ME'EKAMUI WANTS CONSULTATION
By Aloysius Laukai in Buin

The South Bougainville Me'ekamui is appealing to the ABG and all stakeholders of the Bougainville Peace Process to work with the Me'ekamui faction as the goal for Bougainville is only one.

Speaking at the South Bougainville Mining forum, Me'ekamui representative, SIMON NAKUMIRA said that his group wants to work with the people to move the process forward but wants some understanding from everybody.

He said his group wants to be part of the process of rebuilding Bougainville and does not want to be left behind.

MR. NAKUMIRA said if the leaders of Bougainville want to reopen Panguna then more awareness is needed throughout the region.

He said the Me'ekamui group in South Bougainville were left without a leader after the death of FRANCIS ONA and are happy to join the people of Bougainville as one united people with one vision.

1335 Postings, 6498 Tage Traderevil@ 15652...wants to be part of the process.....

 
  
    #15653
1
22.04.13 10:53
......He said his group wants to be part of the process of rebuilding Bougainville and does not want to be left behind.......

der Satz geht mir runter wie Öl.  ;-)))))))))))))  

220 Postings, 5544 Tage peter_ski@alle

 
  
    #15654
22.04.13 11:52
Soll ich meine shares noch ins Aktienbuch eintragen lassen oder was? Immerhin wären das ja auch nicht gerade wenig.

Also bitte Antwort, da ich dann die Sache anleihern muss (2 Banken).

Besten Dank schon jetzt.  

933 Postings, 4710 Tage LOFP@ 15654

 
  
    #15655
22.04.13 13:09
Warum nicht?
Na klar, alles eintragen lassen.
Anbei meine Bestätigung über die Zusammenführung von 2 Einzelpoistionen bei Computershare in Australien.  
Angehängte Datei: _unbenannt_.pdf

933 Postings, 4710 Tage LOFPEiner von uns? ;-)

 
  
    #15656
22.04.13 15:25
Na, wer hat von euch die 43000 in FRankfurt soeben für 0,44 eingeatmet?  

1025 Postings, 4820 Tage antares0650@ Aktienregister

 
  
    #15657
2
22.04.13 16:35
Habe heute meine Bestätigung erhalten. Jetzt sind bis auf eine ganz kleine Position alle Böcke dort wo sie hingehören....
Und jetzt beginnt der Countdown für den Start der Rakete....  

1025 Postings, 4820 Tage antares0650@peter_ski

 
  
    #15658
22.04.13 18:01
jetzt so schnell als möglich....
wenn die Entscheidung fällt musst du die Stücke in Sicherheit haben.
Lass dich vom Orderbuch nicht beeinflussen..
Wie lang zögerst du noch?? Was ist der Grund, dass du es noch nicht gemacht hast?  

1025 Postings, 4820 Tage antares0650Register

 
  
    #15659
1
22.04.13 18:08

1025 Postings, 4820 Tage antares0650@LOFP

 
  
    #15660
22.04.13 18:13
vielleicht ein australisches Känguruh...
will auch was im Beutel haben...
möchte nur wissen wer da verkauft bei der Nachrichtenlage... der/die frisst Heu und Stroh...und schreit laut "iahhhhh"  

328 Postings, 6488 Tage kjensw.

 
  
    #15661
22.04.13 20:12
Halten die ESBC-Aktionäre eigentlich schon genug Aktien für die Sperrminorität?  

468 Postings, 4992 Tage macoubaABG is pushing for the reopening...

 
  
    #15662
22.04.13 22:20
Another politician wedded to the idea of Rio Tinto as Bougainville’s saviour
Punghau on finance

Aloysius Laukai | New Dawn

The ABG Minister for Finance, Planning and Treasury, Albert Punghau wants Bougainville to increase its Internal Revenue to sustain its work. 

He was speaking at the South Bougainville Forum in Buin this morning.

Mr. Punghau said that to run the ABG the government needs One Hundred Fifty Million Kina all of it comes from Papua New Guinea and the donor partners.

He said this is why the ABG is pushing for the reopening of the Panguna mine under Bougainville’s own mining law.

Mr. Punghau said that the ABG is also looking at other measures however the only quickest way to get there is by re-opening the Panguna mine.

The ABG President,  John Momis and ABG Members and Ministers are attending the South Bougainville Forum in Buin. 

The meeting will end tomorrow.

This is the 4th Consultation forum organized by the Mining Division and the secretariat of the Office of the Panguna Negotiations. 

New Dawn FM understands that a separate forum for Bana, Panguna and Arawa will be organized later this month.  

222 Postings, 6341 Tage reinhold_tabrisPostcourier

 
  
    #15663
23.04.13 07:22
Forum held to discuss mine

By WINTERFORD TOREAS in Buin

THE third Regional Forum on Panguna Negotiations is currently underway in the Buin district of South Bougainville.
Themed ‘Fostering people’s participation in deciding the future of the Panguna Mine’, this forum was officially opened yesterday by the President of the Autonomous Bougainville Government Chief Dr John Momis.
The forum which ends today is being held at the Buin secondary school Hall and attended by selected representatives from Buin and Siwai districts.
The purpose of organising this forum is to update the various stakeholders and the wider communities in South Bougainville, especially in Buin and Siwai, on the progress of preparing the ABG and the Panguna landowners to participate in negotiations concerning the possible reopening of the Panguna mine in Central Bougainville.
This forum will also be used to gauge the views of the people of Buin and Siwai districts regarding the reopening of the Panguna mine.
Other ABG members who are also attending the forum include the South Bougainville Ex-combatants representative Michael Laita, Peace and Reconciliation Minister Newton Kauva, Minister for Finance, Treasury and Planning Albert Punghau, Mining Minister Michael Oni, Minister for Community development Melchior Dare, Minister for Primary Industry Nicholas Daku and ABG constituency members Joseph Buia (Baubake-Buin district), Steven Suako (Torokina-Torokina district), Lawrence Wakai (Bolave-Bana district), William Silamai (Baba, Bana district) Philip Kuhena (Kopii-Siwai district), Thomas Mauroko Pa’ataku (Ramu-Siwai district) and John Ken (South Nasioi-Kieta district).
Representatives of the Panguna landowners and the Me’ekamui faction are also attending the forum and have also presented their views regarding the opening of the Panguna mine.
Grade twelve students of Buin secondary school are also attending the forum as observers.
The forum is being spearheaded by the Office of the Director for Panguna Negotiations and is being facilitated by the ABG Mining Department, Division of Law and Justice and the Office of Panguna Negotiations.
Topics that will have been covered during these two days forum include the Update on the 15 Steps Strategic Framework on transfer of functions and powers over Mining, Oil and Gas, Update on ABG’s Preparation to negotiate Panguna Mine, Update on Landowner preparations and Implementing Autonomy in relation to Mining.
ABG President John Momis, before officially opening the forum, outlined some of the achievements that will come about following the opening of the mine.
Mr Momis also updated the participants on some of the developments that ABG is taking to address this issue concerning the reopening of the Panguna Mine.
One of this is the drafting of the ABG Mining Act. This draft Act, which was made in Buka and not Australia (as what some people have been saying), will benefit both the landowners and the people of Bougainville.
He also took the opportunity to rectify some of the misleading statements that some Bougainvilleans together with certain foreigners, have been making regarding ABG’s stand towards the mining issue.
The ABG President said he will not sign and approve any decisions that will not benefit all Bougainvilleans.
He added that his commitment is for the betterment of the people of Bougainville.
Mr Momis also urged all Bougainvilleans to be united and help ABG achieve the dream and wish of all Bougainvilleans.  

1025 Postings, 4820 Tage antares0650@ alle

 
  
    #15664
1
23.04.13 07:22
ich habe eine Bitte an alle die Lust und Laune für diese Sache haben:
Interessierte mögen bitte alle Fondsgeschäftsberichte durchforsten, ob vielleicht bei Fonds BCL-Aktien im Bestand sind....
Vorrangig würde ich die Geschäftsberichte von Metall-Fonds durchsuchen...
Sollte jemand fündig werden ersuche ich um kurze Nachricht per PN  

119 Postings, 5026 Tage Bankster90Eintragung

 
  
    #15665
23.04.13 07:47

Hallo,

ich bin erst vor ca 1 Woche hier bei Bougainville Copper eingestiegen. Ich lese ständig was von Eintragung ins Aktienregister etc.

Kann mir jemand erklären welchen konkreten Vorteil man daraus hat? Läuft man Gefahr bei einer Nichteintragung seine Aktien zu verlieren?

Danke schon mal.

 

1025 Postings, 4820 Tage antares0650@Bankster

 
  
    #15666
23.04.13 08:42
lies mal  #15261
vielleicht verstehst du es dann, was hier gespielt werden kann...  

15644 Postings, 6499 Tage nekroGovt must address autonomy

 
  
    #15667
1
23.04.13 10:59

468 Postings, 4992 Tage macoubaMomis responds to crisitism of mining law!

 
  
    #15668
3
23.04.13 11:10

15644 Postings, 6499 Tage nekroGold: Was wirklich hinter dem Preissturz steckt

 
  
    #15669
2
23.04.13 15:26

1025 Postings, 4820 Tage antares0650@bankster

 
  
    #15670
23.04.13 17:35

15644 Postings, 6499 Tage nekroRadio NZ

 
  
    #15671
1
23.04.13 21:02
http://www.rnzi.com/pages/news.php?op=read&id=75506

Bougainville MP says unity needs to be forged before mine reopens

Posted at 16:35 on 23 April, 2013 UTC

The regional member of parliament for Papua New Guinea’s autonomous province of Bougainville says his people must take ownership of decision making in their province in order for there to be unity.

Joseph Lera says Bougainville society remains fragmented years well over a decade since the civil war wound up.

His comment comes as Bougainville Copper Ltd looks to reopen the Panguna copper and gold mine which was at the centre of the Civil War and has lain idle for 24 years.

Mr Lera says unity needs to be forged, and the participation of local communities in decision-making ensured, before the mine is reopened.

   “I think the answer to the mine is with the people. And through that unity that I’m trying to build, I think the people themselves must decide. At the moment, that has not been the case, it’s people outside trying to come in with answers. My belief is that the answer is with my people.”

Joseph Lera.

News Content © Radio New Zealand International
PO Box 123, Wellington, New Zealand

15644 Postings, 6499 Tage nekroAusAID Fuels Bougainville Mining Tensions

 
  
    #15672
1
23.04.13 21:10
http://ramumine.wordpress.com/2013/04/24/...ainville-mining-tensions/

Kristian Lasslett | New Matilda

Rio Tinto stands to make big profits if the Panguna mine on Bougainville reopens. In recruiting advisors with strong links to the mining giant, AusAid isn’t helping the peace process, writes Kristian Lasslett

Last week The National – one of Papua New Guinea’s major newspapers – featured a full page advertisement attacking the AusAID-funded legal adviser to Bougainville, Anthony Regan, who is also a fellow at the Australian National University.

Written by two former Autonomous Bougainville Government (ABG) ministers the full page spread claims that Regan, along with ABG President, John Momis, have engineered a “top-down [mining] policy” that will “take ownership, control and all decision making away from the customary landowners of Bougainville”.

Mining is a sensitive issue on Bougainville. The decade-long civil war that pounded the island during the 1990s, taking somewhere between 10,000 and 20,000 lives, was triggered by Rio Tinto’s mammoth copper and gold mine, which landowners accused of destroying their environment and fracturing Bougainville’s tightly knit communities.

Given the intimate role Rio Tinto played in supporting brutal defence force operations during the war’s early years, the mining question to this day elicits a strong response on Bougainville.

In this tense post-conflict environment, AusAID’s recent efforts to assist the island’s government to resolve the mining question have been anything but adept.

It can now be revealed that one of Regan’s ABG co-advisors, Griffith University Professor Ciaran O’Faircheallaigh, has direct links with Rio Tinto, a company that stands to make a large financial windfall were the mine on Bougainville to reopen.

O’Faircheallaigh’s appointment was trumpeted in an upbeat announcement on Griffith University’s website in September 2011:

   “The last time the Bougainville Copper Mine was open, a civil war broke out in Papua New Guinea. This time help is at hand to re-open one of the world’s largest open-pit mines with the assistance of Griffith’s Department of Politics and Public Policy Professor Ciaran O’Faircheallaigh. Professor O’Faircheallaigh has twice been contracted through Coffey International [AusAID service provider] to examine mineral policy options and start preparations for negotiations.”

Absent from this media release – pithily titled “Griffith academic negotiates a mine field” – is mention of O’Faircheallaigh’s close association with the research project at the epicentre of a recent controversy involving Marcia Langton and her Boyer Lectures (“Poverty in the Midst of Plenty: Economic Empowerment, Wealth Creation and Industrial Reform for Sustainable Indigenous and Local Communities”). Along with Langton, O’Faircheallaigh is a chief investigator on the $480,000 study, which is part bankrolled by Santos ($45,000), Woodside ($30,000), and perhaps most controversially, given O’Faircheallaigh’s role on Bougainville, Rio Tinto (Rio’s support is for an undisclosed amount, but on the project’s website it is described as “substantial financial assistance”).

It is worth adding that O’Faircheallaigh’s immediate employer Coffey International, who acts as an implementing service provider for AusAID, draws a large chunk of its revenue from the mining, oil and gas industry. Rio Tinto is one of Coffey’s major clients.

These financial links between Rio Tinto and those operationalising AusAID’s programme on Bougainville, which are starting to be unravelled in the social media, are bound to be poorly received on the island.

And it comes in a particularly tense period in Bougainville’s post conflict history, where AusAID-funded advisors are coming under sustained fire. Indeed, in February Anthony Regan was publicly rebuked in Papua New Guinea’s national press by former Bougainville Revolutionary Army commander Sam Kauona. Matters then deteriorated last week with the full page advertisement.

One source of potential tension, recently highlighted on PNG Exposed, are the significant sums being paid to contract Regan’s services. In one instance, AusAID paid out $41,951.25 for a six week “Bougainville Strategy Review”.

But it is not just about the significant sums, Kauona and other senior political figures appear to view Regan as a partisan force. For example, in 2003 Regan publicly defended Rio Tinto against allegations of collusion during the war:

   “Despite some claims to the contrary,” Regan wrote, “there is as yet no credible evidence that BCL [Rio’s PNG subsidiary] took any direct part in the operations against the BRA [Bougainville Revolutionary Army]”. In a footnote Regan adds: “For example, in the claims made in a class action launched in 2000 in a U.S. court by some Bougainvilleans against BCL.”

This is a surprising claim given that the latter legal challenge is built on a significant body of evidence, including affidavits from towering figures in PNG’s political landscape, such as Michael Somare (former prime minister), John Momis (former minister, current ABG president) and Jerry Singirok (former commander of the PNG Defence Force). The testimony is corroborated by a large cache of internal BCL records.

Yet this is not the only surprising statement Regan has made with respect to the Bougainville conflict. He has also employed curious methods to question the conflict’s death toll.

One of the worst killers was the military blockade placed around Bougainville by the PNG government in May 1990. Nothing was allowed onto the island, not even humanitarian aid. Thus one scholar noted that it was stiffer – and more indefensible – than the sanctions placed on Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.

The death toll ballooned accordingly; women and children fared worst. Using records kept by Bougainvillean medical staff, Lissa Evans, from Community Aid Abroad’s Disaster Response Desk suggested 3000 people died needlessly in 1990-1991 alone. Indeed the situation was so parlous that Médecins Sans Frontières publicly condemned the PNG government for letting civilians die.

So it came as a shock to peace activists in 1999 when Regan suggested to an Australian parliamentary inquiry that the positive health effects of the military blockade may have in fact outweighed the deaths resulting from untreated illness or injury. Here is the quote:

   “… [T]here is some evidence that deaths from untreated illness or injury may well have been offset to a significant degree – or even outweighed – by the improved general health of the population in areas under blockade. There are numerous reports from people who lived in such areas to the effect that improved general health standards were related to two main factors. The first was a diet far more healthy than before the conflict. It was free from most processed foods, fats, high salt and sugar contents, and without alcohol. The second was much increased physical exercise than prior to the conflict. This was due to such things as the need for subsistence gardening and increased walking due to lack of motor vehicles.”

To my knowledge there is no method in the social sciences that would offset the general health “benefits” of forced work and exercise, against deaths resulting from the denial of medicines and surgical equipment.

It is perhaps not surprising, in light of the above positions, that Regan’s AusAID advisory role on Bougainville has been criticised by major power brokers on the island.

Exacerbating tensions is last month’s announcement that O’Faircheallaigh and Regan will receive a $613,267 grant from AusAID to research “illegal mining” on the island. According to Griffith University:

   “The research materialised as a spin-off from Professor O’Faircheallaigh’s involvement with the Autonomous Bougainville Government (ABG) in preparing for negotiations to re-open a once profitable Rio Tinto copper mine closed after an armed rebellion by the Bougainville Revolutionary Army in 1989.”

Leaving aside that the Australian Government has ignored Rio Tinto’s well-documented criminogenic role on Bougainville, this announcement is already inviting strong criticism by Bougainvilleans in popular social media forums. One Bougainvillean commentator reported, “If they want to study illegal miners on  Bougainville there is no better place to start than with the illegal establishment of the Panguna Mine itself”, while another noted, “Bottom line, Australia, as always since colonial times, is only trying to protect its interest in Bougainville”.

While this AusAID research project might indeed have laudable ends – the summaries provided thus far certainly suggest this may be the case – nevertheless, the study is almost certainly going to be politicised owing to the investigators’ links and public position on the war.

In this respect AusAID cannot ignore public perception on Bougainville, or for that matter in Australia. Strong feelings of injustice remain. And rather more palpably, from a security perspective, significant actors on Bougainville resent the enduring role Rio Tinto and the Australian Government play in the island’s political economy.

Using Australian taxpayer dollars to fund advisors and organisations who are either linked with Rio Tinto or who have made divisive statements on the war, is not going to play well in this tense environment. Moreover, funding research into “illegal” mining by local alluvial prospectors is bound to prove similarly controversial while the likes of Rio Tinto, and indeed former Australian governments, escape formal scrutiny over their egregious role in the hostilities.

Consequently, AusAID’s celebrated contribution to the peace process on Bougainville may well unravel and be forgotten, if it continues to fumble about much less capably with the mining question.

15644 Postings, 6499 Tage nekro#15672

 
  
    #15673
3
24.04.13 05:18
Obwohl die Personalie von Professor Ciaran O"Faircheallaigh etwas unklug gewählt war, zeigt dieser Artikel deutlich auf wie vehement sich RIO hinter den Kulissen für die Wiedereröffnung der Pangunamine einsetzt und welche Mittel (auch finanzielle) mit aktiver Unterstützung der AU Regierung dazu über AusAid eingesetzt  werden.

Hätten die Civellis nicht mit Morumbi dazwischen gefunkt,so wäre der Startschuss für das neue BCA wohl schon gefallen.

Wird die "Momis Mining Policy" umgesetzt so bedeutet das das Aus für Morumbis Miningträume auf Boug.

15644 Postings, 6499 Tage nekro"In favour to re-open the Panguna mine."

 
  
    #15674
5
24.04.13 10:48
http://www.postcourier.com.pg/20130424/wehome.htm

Ex-rebel supports Momis

A SOUTH Bougainville Chief has expressed strong support for Bougainville president Dr Chief John Momis.
Chief John Taipa Tauria, an ex-combatant, said the president was an honest leader who had a heart for his people.
“I feel very sorry that a small group of people are questioning his leadership,” said the Chief in Tok Pisin. “It would be good if they could instead work together with him for the good of Bougainville.”
Mr Tauria added that the Autonomous Bougainville Government was the legitimate government in Bougainville and must be given support.
He said that he was in favour of the president’s vision to re-open the Panguna mine.
“Why is there money full up in the ground and we are not benefitting?” he asked. “All of Bougainville went to war because of the trouble at Panguna. Men and women died, businesses were destroyed, people’s belongings were torched and plenty of men, women and children still feel the pain,’’ he said.
“Who will compensate them all? The Panguna mine – that’s all! Bring BCL (Bougainville Copper Limited) and they can compensate us to bring some good back from what they destroyed. If you bring other people in to re-open the mine then they will say ‘we didn’t cause the problem, it was BCL’.”
The chief said he believed that if BCL came back they would straighten out what happened to the people of Bougainville.
“Panguna is now for all the people of Bougainville, we all fought and some died because of it.”
Mr Tauria also asked people to stop criticising Mr Momis over the Chinese in Bougainville operating retail outlets.
“President Momis said that foreign business people can come in partnership with Bougainvilleans. But they can’t operate the small businesses that Bougainvilleans can operate.”
He said it was the people themselves, not the ABG, who had brought the Chinese in to partner with them in retail outlets. He also said that the Chinese paid their taxes, whereas most Bougainvilleans did not.
“I don’t want Chinese people coming here and selling tinned fish and rice like they do in other parts of the country. But I don’t blame the ABG, I blame us Bougainvilleans,” he said.

1025 Postings, 4820 Tage antares0650#15674

 
  
    #15675
2
24.04.13 11:58
"Who will compensate them all? The Panguna mine – that"s all! Bring BCL (Bougainville Copper Limited) and they can compensate us to bring some good back from what they destroyed. If you bring other people in to re-open the mine then they will say "we didn"t cause the problem, it was BCL"."

Also wenn diese Lobhudelei so weiter geht, dann MUSS die Mine morgen eröffnet werden...
Die Gedanken dieses Mannes lassen für M...das Licht ausgehen....rette sich wer kann....  

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