Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948
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By DAVID LORNIE
THE Fijian Special Forces soldier at Noel Musingku’s Tonu stronghold in South Bougainville says he is not afraid the PNG Government may try to deport him.
“I’m not afraid of anything,” Maloni Namoli, 57, told this newspaper.
“Because I know what I’m doing and God knows what I’m doing. We are supposed to be not bound by anything like that. We are citizens of this world. We have to go away from that mentality, the visa mentality. No, we don’t need that — especially in the region of the Melanesian group.”
The Fijian, who has previously served in Middle East hotspots, arrived in Tonu’s Kingdom of Papala in 2005 to work for Musingku, who rules Papala as King David Peii.
Namoli says whilst he currently does not hold a PNG Visa he is here at the invitation of ‘His Majesty and the chiefs of Siwai.’
“I was assigned to a contract that I had to come and provide skilled people to his Majesty.”
Namoli initially arrived with other Fijian soldiers.
“There were several of us and we registered our company and were here on a contract. What I’m doing here is that I’m honouring my contract — and trying to help at the same time.”
The other Fijians left due to ‘some kind of misunderstanding and on the pay.’
“We haven’t received our pay. But what we are trying to do is just to help them to set up a system and also a monetary system that will help not only the people here but everybody around the world.
“We are coming up to that day very soon when everybody will benefit from it. Most of the people know that what I am doing here is training them how to fight or whatever — military tactics,” said Namoli. “But they have already been through that — they are expert on that. What I am trying to instill or introduce to them is discipline, the discipline to come out from the mindset of... most of them were traumatised during the Crisis.”
Namoli said he had been to Bougainville before his current stint.
“I was here in 1994 on a peacekeeping mission and again in 1998-99. I’ve been quite some time over here. And not only that — I’m just following our forefathers. Our forefathers came to defend this island in the Second World War. And most of the missionaries that came to Bougainville are from Fiji. So I’m not a stranger here!”
“I’m not here only for myself, I’m here for the clients in Fiji and all those people who also invested (in the Papala U-Vistract money scheme).
“There’s a lot of people who invested and I’m one of their representatives, just to see that all these things are payable to them.”
http://www.tradingroom.com.au/apps/qt/...amp;sy=tpl&code=BOC#tabs
Today: 19-Aug-2013
Trades Volume Value High Low
Today 0 0 0 0.0000 0.0000
This Week 0 0 0 0.0000 0.0000
This Month 109 1,149,818 462,827 0.4600 0.3750
This Year 2,054 15,553,797 8,057,242 0.6550 0.3750
Rolling Year 2,890 20,438,222 11,494,476 0.8000 0.3750
§
Leaked Document Reveals Secret ABG Plan to Reopen Bougainville Mine
by pngexposed
A document leaked to Rio Tinto shareholders lobby group, ESBC, by disgraced landowner leader, Lawrence Daveona, allegedly for cash payments, reveal the façade of democracy surrounding the Bougainville mine’s reopening.
Over the last three years ABG officials have told the public that the mine will only be opened if there is a democratic consensus supporting it. Corporate lickspittle, Jemima Garrett, summarises the official ABG tagline, “discussion and consensus-building are central to Bougainvilleans’ traditional way of doing things”.
Documents recently leaked to PNG Exposed reveal the ABG government’s commitment to the Melanesian way is a sham; for several years the ABG has had secret plans in place to reopen the mine, regardless of public opinion or consensus.
According to MEETING MINUTES taken in November 2011, the Panguna Management Consultative Committee (PMCC) was told by ABG officials that the mine was going to be opened regardless of popular sentiment. The Mining Minister, Michael Oni, informed the meeting “that there was no two ways about [it, the] Panguna mine [is] being opened in the not too distant future”. President Momis in agreement added, the mine “must be opened and there is an important need for a Unified Stand by ABG and Panguna Landowners”.
According to the minutes: “Discussions transpired and the general position on the re-opening was obvious and both ABG and the Executive Committee Members of PMCC fully supported and endorsed that Panguna mine must be re-opened”.
So much for public consultation – it appears the decision to reopen the mine was made years ago in closed door meetings by political elites. Recent consultation forums are nothing more than a fig-leaf, or more accurately a cynical sales pitch – complete with threats of PNGDF reoccupation and forced marriage to mainlanders – designed to manufacture consent for a decision already made by those who stand to directly profit.
Indeed, as the meeting minutes reveal women’s groups are the deeply opposed to the mine reopening – and why not it was women who nursed dying children during the conflict, endured rape as a weapon of war, and picked up the pieces after the many village burnings. No wonder then the landowner ‘leaders’ groups supporting Rio Tinto are dominated by men, and no wonder then that ABG leaders such as Minister for Veteran Affairs would tell women opponents of Rio Tinto that PNG has “hidden plan[s] … that all Bougainville single women will be married by outsiders to own the land”, unless they agree to the mine reopening in time to 'finance independence'.
And like between 1962-1989 the silent majority – especially the women – whose opinion is irrelevant to political power brokers, will bare all the costs of the mine reopening and the subsequent conflict it generates as the conniving behaviour of the political elite, and its corporate allies, is gradually exposed to a new generation of Bougainvilleans.
Sadly it would seem history is repeating itself, the first time as tragedy and the second time as farce.
Es geht wohl langsam richtig los... Denn jetzt wird so richtig dreckige Wäsche gewaschen... Eigentlich ein gutes Zeichen.
Wann genau und wie weit ..... dass steht allerdings in den Sternen.
Wer kann in AU kaufen?
einen schönen Wochenanfang
Carlchen
Letzte Kurse
Handelsplatz (?) Letzter Veränderung Vortag letzte Stk. Tag-Stk.
......gehts in D ja %%% ganz schön zur Sache ;-)))))))
Kursspanne Zeit
Tradegate 0,361 € +17,97%
§0,306 € 150 10.150 0,334 - 0,361 09:29:38
L&S RT 0,35 € +11,11%
§0,315 € - - 0,315 - 0,35 09:58:29
Frankfurt 0,35 € +6,06%
§0,33 € 18.991 38.500 0,34 - 0,35 08:56:11
München 0,355 € +16,78%
§0,304 € 10.000 10.000 0,331 - 0,355 09:53:12
Nach harten Monaten suchen die Börsianer in der Regel nach Chartbildern, die ein Ende der Baisse andeuten. Wenn sich der Wind irgendwann dreht, sollten Anleger wissen, was W-Formationen sind. Denn diese auch Doppelboden genannten Chartbilder kündigen bald wieder steigende Notierungen an.
W-Formationen sind wie die M-Formationen (siehe M-Formationen stoppen jeden Bullen) Chartgebilde, die relativ zügig, das heißt innerhalb von einem Monat, entstehen. Die an den Buchstaben W erinnernden Chartbilder haben außerdem ebenfalls den Vorzug, dass sie sich relativ leicht erkennen lassen. Sie können daher auch von Laien zur Orientierung herangezogen werden.