BOUGAINVILLE (852652)
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Kommentar: Basherversuch, Provokation, Unterstellung, jetzt ist das Maß schon wieder ziemlich voll,.....
Zeitpunkt: 28.07.07 23:21
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Kommentar: Basherversuch, Provokation, Unterstellung, jetzt ist das Maß schon wieder ziemlich voll,.....
Deswegen denke ich auch an einen Australier der eben kein Konto in D hat und darum den Umweg über die USA geht.
Sollte es sich bei der heutigen VK Order von 150K a 0,88 AUD in AU tatsächlich um die in USA a 0,72 USD gekauften ADRs handeln,so müsste er einen Trick gefunden haben,die ADRs ohne Zeitverlust in Aktien zu konvertieren,es sei denn es handelt sich um eine ADR emittierende Bank.(jedenfalls blieb dann dabei ein Gewinn von rd.8000 AUD hängen)
Viel wichtiger erscheint mir jedoch dass letzte Nacht ein Käufer in AU mal eben eine Kauforder von 300.000 St a 0,88 aufgegeben hat, was immerhin dem Gegenwert von über einer Viertel Million Aussidollars entspricht.
Dabei handelt es sich wohl nicht um einen Kleinanleger der mal eben mit seinem Taschengeld rumspielt.;-)))
Wenn du darin einen Pushversuch siehst müsstest du mir aber im Detail erklären können worin der genau bestehen sollte.
Wenn ein rentner in dem Post einen regelverstoss meint zu erkennen heisst das schliesslich noch lange nicht dass es auch einer ist.
Friday July 27, 10:43 AM
Chan not sorry over Sandline affair
Former PNG prime minister Julius Chan has refused to apologise to the people of Bougainville for hiring mercenaries to suppress secessionist rebels on the island in 1997.
Bougainville President Joseph Kabui this week congratulated Chan on his re-election to PNG's parliament after a 10-year absence but called on him to reconcile with Bougainvilleans and apologise over the so-called Sandline affair.
But Chan, re-elected as New Ireland Governor, told reporters in Port Moresby that Kabui should apologise to him and to the families of Bougainvilleans and PNG soldiers killed in the Bougainville fighting.
Chan was forced to step down as prime minister in 1997 after his plan to use mercenaries organised by British-based Sandline International to quell the secessionist conflict in Bougainville was thwarted.
PNG Defence Force commander Jerry Singirok turned against the government plan, ordering troops to seize the mercenaries and surround parliament, receiving widespread public support for his actions.
The mercenaries, led by former British Army officer Tim Spicer, were deported and the emphasis shifted to forging a peace deal in Bougainville.
The retired Major-General Singirok stood for election this year but lost his bid to win the Sumkar Open seat in Madang Province.
Kabui told reporters in Buka this week that Bougainvilleans were willing to make a fresh start if Chan apologised for trying to bring in mercenaries to kill them.
"We, the people of Bougainville, are owed an apology and Sir Julius must find time to reconcile with us Bougainvilleans."
But Chan said the Sandline deal resulted in no Bougainvillean deaths and he had initiated peace talks during his time as prime minister.
"Kabui calling on me to apologise to the people of Bougainville is erroneous," he said.
"I call upon Kabui to apologise to the families of those soldiers who lost their lives on Bougainville."
Following the 2001 Bougainville Peace Agreement, the island became an autonomous PNG region with its own government and police force and the promise of a referendum on independence within the next decade.
Chan's People's Progress Party has won three seats in parliament and he could play a key role in the horse-trading under way between parties and independents to muster the numbers to form a coalition government.
Prime Minister Michael Somare's National Alliance Party has 15 seats in hand and is expected to pick up more, putting it in the strongest position to forge a coalition.
Erkennst wohl schon nicht mehr Deine Pushversuche,
hier der akt. Chart; HIERBEI HANDELT ES SICH NICHT UM EINEN BASHVERSUCH
wie Nekro immer meldet,
es handelt sich um die Realität, wie man leicht erkennen kann.
Da erkennt man Qualität ;-)))
http://www.pngec.gov.pg/resultsNat2007/SummaryResults.htm
By AUGUSTINE KINNA
THE delay of vote counting for South Bougainville electorate in the Autonomous Region of Bougainville has raised concerns about prospect of meeting the July 30 deadline.
After count 54 covering three ballot boxes from the Atolls district, counting for North Bougainville Open seat was suspended because the figures for the Open and Regional seat not did not match.
Returning officer for North Bougainville Joe Tarala was forced to call off the count last night to recheck all the ballot papers to ensure that the figures reconcile.
During the re-check a lot of informal ballot papers were found to have been placed in the candidates boxes and were counted as valid votes.
Provincial returning officer Reitama Taravaru said the problem cropped up as some of the counters were new in the job and inexperienced.
“We are running out of time in going through the recheck ... however, it is very important that we have all our figures reconciled,” Mr Taravaru said.
South and Central Bougainville already have their results, with Michael Laimo retaining his seat and newcomer Jim Miringtoro unseating United Resources Party leader Sam Akoitai.
This report is essential reading for any serious investor, providing comprehensive financial information on a company's perfo...
https://commerce.us.reuters.com/purchase/...=BOCOY.PK&symbol=BOCOY.PK
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Zeitpunkt: 29.07.07 23:17
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Mein Tip: Rentnerwegsein
Manche lernen es halt nie ;-)))))))))))))
http://www.thenational.com.pg/073007/nation12.htm
Ogio proclaimed for N. B’ville Open, Semoso for Regional
By AUGUSTINE KINNA
FORMER deputy prime minister and People’s Democratic Movement candidate Micheal Ogio and Independent candidate Fidelis Semoso were both proclaimed as the new member-elect for North Bougainville Open and Bougainville Regional seat respectively.
Mr Ogio and Mr Semoso were both declared at the Hutjena counting centre by returning officer Joe Tarala at noon last Friday.
Mr Ogio polled 9,985 votes to defeat National Alliance candidate James Togel who only collected 8,774.
In the Regional seat, Mr Semoso polled 23,963 votes to comfortably hold off National Alliance candidate Leo Hanette with 20,007.
Mr Semoso, as a first-timer to represent the people of Bougainville in the national level, shed tears of joy when he addressed the crowd after being proclaimed.
“My victory is not for my own good or even for my family. I would like to make it clear that my victory is for the good of all Bougainvilleans,” Mr Semoso said.
He added that he and the other elected members would be servants for the ABG in Parliament.
“I am prepared to work along side with the ABG to push for the draw down of powers at the national level where we can have the power to provide services to our people,” Mr Semoso told the cheering crowd at the Hutjena counting centre.
He challenged the ABG to provide for four offices at the House of Representatives for the elected members where they could work alongside to develop and deliver services to the people.
Rentnerdasein 29.07.07
Du bist ja wohl ein RIESENARSCHLOCH oder??
DUMMDEI
Chief herds his ‘flock’ to Kokopo
COURTING: East New Britain Governor-elect Leo Dion, left, and Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare welcome Bougainville’s new regional MP Fidelis Semoso to Kokopo. INSET: Contender for PM’s job, Don Polye and Bogia MP John Hickey step off the plane at Tokua to join their National Alliance colleagues and possible coalition partners.
Pictures: ANNETTE SETE.
Momentum picks up for mining boom
The strength of Papua New Guinea’s recovery in mineral exploration and development provides one reason why Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare deserves his latest victory in the national elections.
The strength of Papua New Guinea’s recovery in mineral exploration and development provides one reason why Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare deserves his latest victory in the national elections.
Soon after taking office in August 2002, Sir Michael was personally determined to fix tax structures that had led to a long-term decline in mining with grassroots exploration almost becoming non-existent.
To push through a more conducive framework much opposition had to be overcome within government ranks, particularly in areas such as Treasury and National Planning which are more concerned with perceived losses in tax revenues flowing from various concessions.
For this reason Sir Michael’s similarly bold initiative to promote agriculture ended up falling by the wayside after they were severely watered down by Treasury. The change in direction caused the Malaysian parent company of New Britain Palm Oil, Kulim Plantations, to scuttle some of its innovative plans such as a rubber wood plantation. As a result, the impact of the proposed reforms can now only be a matter for conjecture.
Following implementation of the mining incentives in early 2003, spending on mineral exploration rose from K41 million in 2003 to around K100 million last year. Exploration is the lifeblood of the mining industry, being the equivalent of research and development in the industrial sector. It is also extremely high-risk, as shown by the huge amounts of money spent over the past three decades exploring the Frieda River copper-gold deposit in Sandaun province with no assurance of development yet in sight.
Experts have suggested that only one in about 300 exploration projects turn into a commercial mine, explaining the need for a stable fiscal regime and investor expectations of high returns for such risk taking.
When new pro-mining laws were implemented, PNG was anticipating two of its three major mines – Ok Tedi and Porgera – would both shut down before the middle of the next decade.
There were predictions about the end of most mining activities and these concerns continue to be expressed by academics and some analysts even today.
In fact, thanks to the more sensible fiscal regime, making PNG as attractive a location for exploration as Indonesia, the Philippines or some African countries, it will be more than likely, unless there is a sudden reversal in these policies, that there will be significant mining activities occurring even 50 or 100 years from now.
On current plans, Ok Tedi will shut down in 2013. Porgera will remain in production well after the end of the next decade. Since the closure of the Bougainville mine in the late 1980s, Ok Tedi has been the country’s only copper producer.
But by the time Ok Tedi is shut down, PNG should be producing twice as much copper given the likely start-up of undersea mining by Nautilus Minerals in 2009, Marengo’s Yandera project in 2011 and possible output from Frontier’s Kodu project in Central province.
PNG’s gold and base metals output is likely to be significantly larger than ever before by the end of this decade with Harmony’s like start-up at Hidden Valley next year and the long-life Ramu nickel-cobalt project the year after. In the decade ahead new project names will crop up in various parts of the country, some possibly involving mineral deposits that have yet to be discovered. New discoveries flow almost inevitably from increased exploration.
The National Alliance and its likely coalition partners are meeting in the next few days in Kokopo to determine the structure of the next government and, if they desire a break from intense political lobbying, they could well see the fruits of Sir Michael’s new mining policy even though these are early days considering the long lead times in exploration and mining.
Probably in less than an hour’s drive from their Kokopo meeting place, likely members of the next government could visit the 40,000oz a year gold mine at Sinivit, near Rabaul. Its owner, New Guinea Gold, only recently poured its first gold bar.
If they travel a little bit further out to Simberi Island, just north west of Lihir, they will see another somewhat larger gold mine getting ready for its first gold pour in about three months time.
But as stated earlier the changes implemented in 2003 will be bringing in more taxes, dividends, royalties and exports even 50 years from today despite the still common perception that much of it will disappear in the coming decade.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqJJ3MOFeYs&mode=user&search=
Z.B. ist u. A. auch Kabui als "Junger Bursche" ;-))) zu sehen
Kabui must open up mobile communications
Eine unabdingbare Veraussetzung für jede prosperierende Wirtschaft ;-))
I wish to make an appeal to the ABG President, Mr Joseph Kabui to please reconsider his views in shutting the door for any telecommunication company to provide much needed competition to current provider Telikom.
Recent events have proven that Digicel can provide affordable telecommunication services to average Bougainvilleans.
Mr Kabui should be championing the cause of the rural Bougainville population rather than restricting such services to elites only in Buka Town and Kokopau. The bottomline is — services are to trickle down to each and every household in the region. Mobile coverage restricted to Buka, Hutjena and Kokopau residents is a joke and a slap in the face for other Bougainville residents.
Telecommunication is a major development tool and will be very useful to the rural farmers especially when copra and cocoa production and business activities in Bougainville are intensifying at an exceptional rate.
It is clear that Pangtel and Minister Somare are trying to cancel Digicel spectrum licence on the grounds of a legislative amendment not yet debated or passed by Parliament.
Digicel currently have swamped New Guinea Islands provinces preparing telecommunication installations right into the heart of the rural communities. Rural people will touch, smell and see such development usually confined to major centres.
What a shame if Bougainvilleans miss out, simply because the ABG President refuses such a service that will make a dream come true for rural dwellers? ABG as an independent government just like Waigani should be in a better position to make decisions beneficial to the majority unlike Waigani politicians who tend to make important decisions based on their own personal conscience and interest.
In a legal point of view, I wonder which Bougainville Telecommunication Act and Bougainville Information Communication Technology policy is Mr Kabui basing his directives on or if there is any? Or whether the ABG Parliament sanctions such directives or it was a one-man decision?
Otherwise Digicel should go ahead and give the people of Bougainville a real taste of its telecommunication recipe.
– Black Pearl
Rural Development Advocator
Lihir
Chan beauftragte in 1997 die englische Sandline Söldnertruppe um den "Aufstand" auf B'ville zu beenden u. die Pangunamine zu "befreien" Man könnte also davon auszugehen dass Chan pro RT ist. ;-))
World news
Ex-PNG PM Chan to challenge Somare
2nd August 2007, 10:04 WST
Former Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Julius Chan has been put up as a nominee for the nation's top post by a rival political camp trying to oust Prime Minister Michael Somare.
Chan is making a return to politics after a 10-year absence, winning the New Ireland regional seat in recent national elections.
He was forced to step down as prime minister in 1997 following his aborted attempt to use mercenaries to quash secessionist rebels in Bougainville.
Following a meeting at Port Moresby's Hideaway Hotel, Chan was backed for the prime ministership by PNG Party leader and former prime minister Mekere Morauta and New Generation Party leader and former treasurer Bart Philemon.
Morauta and Philemon teamed up in the elections to try to oust the 71-year-old Somare, who they accuse of overseeing inefficient and corrupt government.
But their parties and Chan's People's Progress Party have only a combined total of 16 seats against Somare's National Alliance which won 26 seats in the 109-member parliament.
Only three seats have yet to be declared.
The National Alliance is rounding up small party and independent MPs in the town of Kokopo and claims to have more than the 55 members needed to form a coalition government.
Somare said he was confident of forming a government around the National Alliance and taking the top post again.
But Philemon told reporters "the numbers game is still fluid" and their political camp was also talking to other small parties and independents.
Chan said the grouping could offer a better alternative government.
"If we do not get into government, I can assure you of a fiery opposition," he said.
Chan's party won four seats, Morauta's party won eight and Philemon's won four.
Parliament is due to meet on August 13 to decide on a new speaker and prime minister.
Chan's attempt to use a force of mercenaries to crush the Bougainville revolt in 1997, in a venture that became known as the Sandline affair, fell apart after PNG Defence Force commander Jerry Singirok turned against the plan.
He ordered troops to seize the mercenaries, supplied by British-based Sandline International, and surround parliament, receiving wide public support for his actions.
The mercenaries, led by former British army officer Tim Spicer, were deported and the emphasis shifted to forging a peace deal in Bougainville.
The retired Major-General Singirok stood for election this year but lost his bid to win the Sumkar Open seat in Madang Province.
Chan last week turned down a request by Bougainville President Joseph Kabui to apologise to Bougainvilleans over the Sandline affair.
AAP
Nach über 500 K im Juni stieg das VOL im Juli schon auf über 1 Mio ;-)))