Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948
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Und ob die Bevölkerung überhaupt Bergbau in Bougainville will, entscheidet sie gerade.
Die Hinweise auf das Zeitfenster gelten nur, wenn die Menschen in Bougainville sich bei ihrer Wahl für Bergbau aussprechen.
Falls sie sich gegen Bergbau entscheiden, akzeptiere ich das kommentarlos, da es sich um ihre Heimat handelt und da es für mich als Anleger zur Zeit genug Möglichkeiten der Anlage gibt - z.B. A1AMGZ
Es hat Tanis viele Mühe gekostet Meekamuis,Landeignerfrauenvereinigung,etc davon zu überzeugen dass die Wiedereröffnung alternativlos ist,wenn man die politische Unabhängigkeit erreichen will.
Das Sprichwort "Geld regiert die Welt" wird sich wohl auch auf Bougainville durchsetzen,zumal die Landeigner ihr Mitspracherecht zugesichert bekommen haben ;-))))))))))))))
Menschen können sehr gut ohne Geld auskommen - soweit es der Nachbar zuläßt.
Wer wirklich glaubt, er würde durch Geld glücklich, hat das Gottes Geschenk des Lebens nicht verstanden - schlimmer noch, er zeigt damit, daß er es im Grunde ablehnt. Wer auf die Scheinwelt der Werbung eingeht, hat die Schönheit und Pracht der Pflanzen, Tiere, Jahreszeiten, ... verpasst.
Für die Menschen in Bougainville ist es jedoch so, daß sie nun einmal über große Rohstoffreserven verfügen.
Das wird bei etwas entfernteren Nachbarstaaten durchaus Begehrlichkeit wecken. Das Beispiel des Rohstoff reichen Tibet mit immerhin 2 1/2 Millionen Einwohnern will ich hier nicht weiter ausführen.
Auch die Begehrlichkeiten gegen den Öl reichen Mittleren Osten spreche ich nicht weiter an.
Und die geostrategischen Aktionen des 2. Weltkrieges auf Bougainville lasse ich ebenfalls bei Seite.
Alles spricht aber dafür - nach dem Leid des Bürgerkrieges - die jetzige einmalige Situation bei den Rohstoffpreisen für die Menschen zu nutzen, um Schulen, Krankenhäuser und Arbeitsplätze zu schaffen.
Und bei diesem Weg gilt : die Sondersituation der wichtigen Welt Währungen ist nur zeitlich begrenzt vorhanden, so daß ALLE Beteiligten gemeinsam mit höchst möglichem Tempo arbeiten müssen.
Vielleicht ist hier mein Vertrauen in die Vernunft der Menschen unbegründet.
Vielleicht übersehe ich auch wichtige Gründe der Menschen vor Ort, falls sie sich gegen Bergbau aussprechen.
Falls die Menschen auf Bougainville sich aber für Bergbau aussprechen, muß ihnen das Zeitproblem unbedingt bewußt sein, um den größt möglichen Nutzen aus ihrem Rohstoffschatz zu ziehen und das heißt : Wenn Bergbau - dann sofort.
hmm.... in diesem Umfeld ob das noch mal was gibt.
Also ich wäre da sehr skeptisch. ;-D
Da ich nicht den Untergang des Euro erwarte - eher den Rückgang des US Dollar und da das Rettungsprogramm der EU geschnürt wurde, halte ich diese Anleihe für interessant.
Meine Strategie :
Rohstoffe ( Gold / Silber / BOC... ) /
Sondersituationen bei Anleihen ( incl. Griechenland ) /
international gut aufgestellte Industriewerte ( z.B. VW / Porsche )
BY ALOYSIUS LAUKAI
Bougainville Police report peaceful polling throughout Bougainville on day four of the ABG elections.
North Bougainville regional commander, Inspector Cletus Tsien, told New Dawn FM that polling had run smoothly since it started last Friday.
Inspector Tsien said polling in Kunua will start this week, once a murder case in the area is settled. There was also some confusion in Tinputz, which had been settled, regarding the security of ballot boxes.
Polling started in Tinputz yesterday morning.
Mr Tsien said polling was stopped temporarily in Wakunai but started again after minor problems had been settled.
Polling in South Bougainville started without problem on Monday.
Inspector Tsien said police manpower has been stretched fully during the general election.
He appealed to people to continue with this good attitude so polling can be completed without incident and on time.
Posted at 08:56 PM | Permalink
By ERIC TAPAKAU
PAPUA New Guinea remains attractive to the mining world despite the sentiments held by many critics as being “one of the worst countries to invest in”.
To September last year, 79 mining companies from seven countries including Papua New Guinea, owned tenements in the country.
According to the Mining and Exploration Bulletin published by the Mineral Resources Authority, up to September 2009, a total of 165 tenements were processed, 33 new exploration licences granted, 46 new exploration licences applications, 29 renewals lodged, one alluvial mining licence application and one mining licence granted.
Countries with companies linked to PNG’s mineral sector include Australia, Canada, China, South Africa, Japan, Singapore, Switzerland and the USA.
Total mineral export receipts to the March quarter of 2009 was about K2 billion, 31 per cent lower than the corresponding period of 2008. The lower income was due to lower commodity prices on the world market. According to the MRA Bulletin, significant changes to the fiscal regimes (since 2003) which are more investor friendly include income tax rate of 30 per cent, dividend withholding tax of 10 per cent, royalty of 2 per cent on net smelter returns, fiscal stability is now available for financing period, no additional profits tax, no capital gains tax, 100 per cent foreign company ownership allowed through exploration whereas in the past only PNG registered companies participated. “Despite the long history, geology and mineralisation of the country is not yet fully understood,” MRA said in its bulletin.
“It is good to know that, as companies explore more in their tenements, they discover new prospects not discovered by previous exploration programs. The Government will support any activities towards understanding the geology and discovery of minerals”.
PNG has the potential to earn up to K600 million every year from alluvial mining.
BY ALOYSIUS LAUKAI
A serious election fraud may have been intercepted in Central Bougainville.
According to the New Bougainville Party, a scam has been uncovered in which election officials brought in ten ballot boxes even before the official boxes were moved into Central Bougainville.
A New Bougainville Party official, Frank Nigu, who says he witnessed the transportation of the ten extra boxes on 27 March was not concerned by this until after he sighted an unofficial polling schedule that included the extra boxes.
He told New Dawn FM that the Party has asked the Electoral Commissioner to investigate these polling officials.
Mr Nigu said the Arawa District manager denied producing an unofficial polling schedule for Central Bougainville. Bougainville Police have also been notified of this incident.
Meanwhile, presidential candidate John Momis has called on the Electoral Commission to investigate the allegations and make sure the unofficial schedule is not used.
He said election officials and police who may have collaborated to sabotage the election process in Central Bougainville must be investigated and prosecuted if these allegations are true.
Mr Momis said similar incidents occurred in the 2005 ABG elections, in which persons not on the common roll voted and the actual votes exceeded the eligible voters.
He warned that if these allegations are true, then the people involved should face the full force of the law.
He also called on the Electoral Commissioner to make sure counting is done transparently.
Acting Bougainville Electoral Commissioner, Reitama Taravaru, remains tight-lipped until his own probe is completed.
He told New Dawn FM that he had already started investigations and left for Arawa to complete the investigations.
He said he will respond to any allegations after his work has been completed.
On the question of producing extra polling schedules, Mr Taravaru said polling schedules are gazetted however, depending on the situation, election officials can adjust them. However, a public notice must be given to make sure all concerned are made aware of any changes.
Die ESBC haben auf der News-Seite von www.bougainville-copper.eu einen exklusiven Report zum Thema:
U.S. Department of State heading for peace in Bougainville!
veröffentlicht !
Last Updated: Thu, 13 May 2010 15:24:00 +1000
Almost one week after polling booths opened for elections in the Autonomous Region of Bougainville, it's been revealed there were not enough ballot papers.
It's the second election since the end of the violent civil war with Papua New Guinea, which claimed thousands of lives.
The poll marked the first time rebel leaders have allowed voting in the centre of the region around the former Panguna Copper Mine, whose operation triggered the war in the late 1980s.
Manager of the New Dawn Community radio station in Bougainville's capital Buka, Aloysius Laukai, says it's been revealed the election commission under estimated how many would cast a vote.
"The election commission people should know that there were many voters and they should have catered and the election in most part of Bougainville is complete and now we are hearing from central that the election they are short of ballot papers."
Haben sie zumindest eine kleine Entschädigung gezahlt ?
nekro frage dazu doch einmal deine Bekannten in Bougainville .
Der Hintergrund ist, daß der 2. Weltkrieg Konflikte in Bezug auf die Kämpfe in Bougainville noch heute aktiv in den USA "nachgespielt" wird.
Wie selbstverständlich nehmen daran US Soldaten und Japaner teil. Die Opfer der Bougainville Zivilbevölkerung oder deren Nachfahren sind nicht einmal Statisten oder Zuschauer.
Den Politikern in Bougainville zeigen diese Videos aus dem May 2010, wie wichtig es ist - gerade für ein kleines Land - zumindest die Jugend optimal auszubilden, um nicht immer nur Opfer der Großen zu sein.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ms7357HdgY&NR=1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SyMYlghya_E&feature=watch_response
Aus dem Alter bin ich raus ;-)))))))))))))
Election commissioner says there was no fraud
BY ALOYSIUS LAUKAI
Acting Bougainville Electoral Commissioner, Reitama Taravaru, has rejected allegations of electoral fraud in Central Bougainville after completing his investigations.
Returning from Arawa, Mr Taravaru told New Dawn FM that his investigations did not find any malpractices.
He said that candidates who want to take this matter further can do through the courts so after the elections.
"This is a very exciting possibility for investors," Briggs said.
But both the company and its sponsor, the JSE said, failed to provide the name of the competent person who oversaw the drilling and whether or not the competent person had consented to the announcement being made.
JSE GM corporate finance Annalie De Bruyn told Mining Weekly Online that Harmony was accountable and sponsor JP Morgan responsible for the non-disclosure and therefore the non- compliance.
Harmony investor relations officer Esha Brijmohan referred Mining Weekly Online to JP Morgan, whose Ruben Govender described the failure to disclose the name of the competent person and his consent as "an oversight on our part".
"It's something that slipped through the cracks. We had a discussion with the JSE and we said, 'oops, we're sorry'," Govender said.
De Bruyn said that the former JSE practice of vetting all announcements prior to their release was terminated two years ago, when that responsibility was passed on to sponsors.
"It's now the responsibility of the sponsor to see that all the announcements comply with the listing requirements. We're all human and they obviously let that one slip through."
In Thursday's make-good announcement on Sens, Harmon named Greg Job as the competent person who had gone unnamed and added that Job had given his consent to the announcement.
Job is Harmony's South East Asia new business executive with overall accountability for the Golpu project's South African code for the reporting of exploration results, mineral resources and ore reserves (Samrec) compliance.
Golpu is situated in the 3 000 km2 Morobe area of PNG, which already hosts the Harmony-Newcrest Hidden Valley mine, which, at full production, is set to produce 255 000 oz of gold and four million ounces of silver a year.
Edited by: Creamer Media Reporter
http://www.miningweekly.com/article/...golpu-slap-on-wrist-2010-05-13
" BOC in Stu +13,97%
09:16
#3442 downup
Da kann man sich leicht vorstellen welche Sprünge unsere Bouggies erst machen wenn die offizielle Meldung zu den Verhandlungen des neuen Bougainville Copper Agreements publiziert wird ;-))))))))))))) "
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"BOC 0,2 ct vom Jahreshoch entfernt ;-)))))
15:38
#3444 downup
The Trend is your friend ;-)))"
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also wirklich,
was erzählst Du denn hier,
Du könntest genauso gut schreiben, BOC nur noch 50 % vom Zweifahreshoch entfernt, oder war es das Dreijahreshoch,
und die Börse Stu wurde stets von Dir wegen exorbitant niedriger Kurse gescholten - was sicher auch korrekt war - und dann springst Du auf den Zug auf,
Ich hatte eigentlich geglaubt, mit Deinem Austritt aus den ESBC hättest Du Dich mehr zu einem Realisten entwickelt,
sei es darum,
der einzige Vorteil Deiner Einschätzung bezüglich der Kursprognosen liegt genau in dem falschen Bezug zu den Exploren,
ich hatte schon vor 2 oder 3 Jahren schon einmal den Vergleich der Rio (CRA)- Aktien und BCL aus den Achtzigern hier angeregt,
und das Pontential dementsprechend verglichen,
da geht der Weg hin,
wenn nicht, und da stimme ich 1alpha komplett zu, die Menschen dort anders entscheiden,
aber das haben wir denn auch so hinzunehmen,
auch wenn Meister Axel wahrscheinlich lieber Geld für die nächste Sandline-Truppe sammeln würde,
Gruß joebo
Wenn schon eine Nachfrage in AU von mickrigen 49K für einen Kurssprung von 9,8% "gut ist",was glaubst du denn was mit dem Kurs passiert wenn zu Beginn der Verhandlungen zum neuen BCA die Nachfrage auf etliche 100K ansteigt und die ADR Emittenten aus dem Markt verschwunden sind?
http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/pacbeat/stories/201005/s2899195.htm
Updated May 14, 2010 09:52:37
Voting is underway for the Bougainville elections the second for the province since a peace agreement ended a decade-long civil war in 2001. A referendum on independence from PNG may be held sometime in the next five years. But, there has been a slow start to voting in the PNG Autonomous Region of Bougainville.
Presenter: Geraldine Coutts
Speaker: Liam Fox, Papua New Guinea correspondent
FOX: Well, I guess I came to Bougainville expecting the usual PNG craziness at election times, like lots of colour, movement, literal pork barrelling, where pigs are being handed out left, right and centre, seeing that fear and a lot of tension between supporters of rival candidates. But it is the exact opposite here in Bougainville. It has all been very peaceful and calm and orderly and relaxed. We heard just before about problems with the shortage of ballot papers, there have also been problems with people not being on election rolls. I understand there are two election rolls, and old one and a new one out at the polling booths, and some people are not on one and they have to be asked to move onto another polling booth. But people have all been taking it in their stride. There has been no tension, no frustration. It's all been very peaceful. And the first few days, it was also quite slow. There was a low turnout of voters in those early days.
COUTTS: Now, why do you think that it is quiet and calm as distinct from its history, is it because this is what the people really want?
FOX: Yes, and I think locals have told us that that is not just the way the usual stereotype we have at PNG elections, it's not just the way it is done here in Bougainville. There isn't that great deal of tension between rival supporters or tension that can flare into violence anyway. They do it their own way and that seems to be a very calm and peaceful way.
COUTTS: And there have been unconfirmed reports of ballot boxes being hijacked. Are you seeing any evidence of that or hearing about that?
FOX: I spoke to a senior police officer who is involved in providing, ensuring security during the election and he said basically the same thing that a fellow from Yadoun said that no, that is not true, that is the claim made by one of the presidential candidates and these things can always be investigated afterwards and taken to disputed returns.
COUTTS: Now you have been to Panguna, which is the seat of the problems for Bougainville. What did you see there?
FOX: Well once again, orderly voting. We went to one polling booth within the mine site and yeah orderly polling, slow turnout. We spoke to one of the candidates for one of the seats that has been set aside for ex-combatants and he said the fact that voting is taking place in Panguna is a real sign that the peace process is working. Interestingly though, we did speak to Chris Uma now he is the self-appointed general of the Mekamui defence force, which is the successor and remnants of the Bougainville Revolutionary Army and he's the man that has opened up Panguna, both in voting and to foreign election observers and he said that it's his preferred presidential candidate. which is James Tanis, isn't re-elected as president, he will shutdown Panguna again and close the Morgan Junction roadblock to outsiders. He believes he has formed a bit of a relationship with James Tanis that has enabled him to come into the peace process over the last few months and he sees eye-to-eye with James Tanis and if he is not re-elected, everything goes backwards.
Source:
By TOM KATHOA
THE Bougainville Electoral Commission has taken speedy remedial action to address an anticipated shortfall of ballot papers in parts of the island.
Acting chief electoral commissioner Reitama Taravaru said the commission was anticipating a shortage of ballot papers for some constituencies in Central Bougainville.
Taravaru attributed the shortage to the transfer of some ballot papers to areas outside of Bougainville such as Port Moresby, Lae and Rabaul.
He said immediate remedial actions had been taken and the National Government Printer had been advised to be on standby incase additional ballot papers were needed.
Taravaru said officials engaged by Bougainville to conduct election in Port Moresby, Lae and Rabaul had been advised to send back excess ballot papers to Bougainville.
He said these ballot papers were expected to arrive in Buka today and would be immediately dispatched to Arawa then to the affected constituencies like Ioro.
He explained that the electoral commission had calculated its voter estimates on the certified roll and not on the supplementary roll.
Taravaru said some candidates had inflated the real number of eligible voters in their constituencies.
However, Taravaru was happy that it has been a trouble-free election starting from the issue of writs to polling.
Polling has been completed in most parts of North Bougainville and is continuing in parts of South and Central Bougainville.
Polling will end on May 21 with counting to start immediately.
Taravaru said counting venues had already been finalised with Hutjena Secondary School hall for North Bougainville, Arawa Telikom House for Central Bougainville and votes for South Bougainville would be counted at Kangu beach warehouse.
A CONTROVERSIAL separatist movement that never recognised the Autonomous Bougainville Government has thrown its support behind President James Tanis, who said he could work with the splinter group if re-elected.
Bougainville has begun its second-ever general election with voting throughout a region still scared by the decade-long civil war with the Papua New Guinean Defence Force that was sparked over an Australian-run gold and copper mine.
From 1987 to 1997, the bloody conflict reportedly claimed 20,000 lives from fighting or disease.
As part of the 2001 peace agreement, Bougainville was granted autonomy from PNG with plans for moving to full independence vote in the future.
Australia was inextricably linked to the conflict by providing military support to the PNGDF and assistance to the PNG government in blocking Bougainville’s secessionist movement, fearing it could lead to the balkanisation of the Pacific.
But years on, Bougainvilleans themselves remain divided on not just whether to re-open the massive Panguna mine on the island’s centre but on more fundamental political, historical and cultural issues surrounding the peace and reconciliation process.
Tanis told AAP in Arawa that he was working with the heavily-armed Meekamui forces, that previously wanted to form their own government, and opposed the reopening Panguna mine and want to take Bougainville back to traditional ways.
“One of the most difficult things I’ve delivered as president is to get Meekamui’s Chris Uma on to the peace process and to convince him that Meekamui must support the Bougainville government,” he said.
“Uma has signed an agreement to work with me and I will find a way to accommodate some of Meekamui’s ideas,” he said.
The Meekamui nationalist movement has kept Bougainville divided and complicated matters with heavily armed splintered militias scattered across the island with many at odds with each other.
“I have secured an understanding with Uma for the last remaining faction on Bougainville to join the peace process and then to ultimately complete total unification for Bougainville and restore peace and security on Bougainville,” Tanis said.
For these elections, the Meekamui defence force, headed by self-appointed general Uma, has lifted the heavily armed no-go zone around the Panguna mine. – AAP