News Gates Blog

July 13, 2009

Officials: Maoists Kill 26 Police in Central India

Filed under: Criminal News, India — Tags: , , , — admin @ 7:13 am

Indian officials say Maoist rebels killed at least 26 police, including a senior officer, in two separate attacks Sunday.

Officials said the attacks occurred in the Rajnandangaon district of the central state of Chhattisgarh, but they did not provide any other details.

Security forces have launched an operation in the area to find the attackers.

Last month, Indian security forces captured a key Maoist stronghold in West Bengal state after battling through landmines and gunfire with the rebels.

The Maoist rebels are part of a wider group of insurgents known as Naxalites who say they fight for the rights of the poor. Indian authorities accuse the rebels of killing at least five members of the region’s ruling communist party, Communist Party of India-Marxist.

India’s central government has labeled the faction a terrorist organization.

The Maoists are active in at least 13 of India’s 29 states. Their violent insurgency has killed thousands of people in the past few decades.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has called the Maoists the gravest threat to India’s internal security.
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July 4, 2009

China steelmakers working on lower ore price-executive

Filed under: World News — Tags: , , , — admin @ 4:55 am

* China steelmakers looking for lower ore prices in talks

* China steel production set to remain high in July

* Annual production could hit 500 million tonnes (For related stories click on [ID:nSP480484])

BEIJING, July 4 (Reuters) - China’s steel industry body is still looking for a lower iron ore price in negotiations with key suppliers, the president of Baosteel (600019.SS) said on Saturday, adding that national output was running high in July.

Xu Lejiang of Baosteel, one of China’s dominant steelmakers, was tightlipped with reporters about the tense negotiations over ore prices. But he said the China Iron & Steel Association (CISA) was still working on a lower price for the nation’s steelmakers.

“CISA is still working on a lower iron ore price,” Xu told reporters on the sidelines of a meeting.

He also said that China’s steel production in July looked set to remain at the high levels in reached in June, and national production for all 2009 could reach 500 million tonnes.

“July is still high, just like June, because steel demand from construction is strong, and also this is the high season for steel demand,” he said.

Demand from building projects and vehicle makers was shoring up the nation’s appetite for steel, he said.

Major Chinese steelmakers under the China Iron and Steel Association reported a total profit of 1.3 billion yuan ($190.3 million) in May, after losing money for seven months, the industry group said early this week.

China’s steel output hit 1.522 million tonnes per day in June 11-20, the highest daily output this year, according to data from CISA earlier obtained by Reuters. [ID:nPEK353445]

Steel prices in China have awaited cues from iron ore price negotiation with global major miners, with China seeking to pay less for imported iron ore this year than other countries.

(For a Q&A about China’s iron ore negotiations with miners, please click on [ID:nSYD475610])

But China’s hard-headed handling of the iron ore price talks may pave the way for more spot deals and fewer annual contracts next year, as frustrated steel mills seek to break with the trade body that has led negotiations to deadlock, analysts have said.

Industry observers have said there was little support for CISA’s hardline attitude, which has stymied talks that started last year, and may prompt the country’s steel mills to quietly sign individual deals with miners this year.

Last month saw a deadline for some annual contracts pass without settlement, but a spokesman for Rio Tinto (RIO.L) (RIO.AX), which has been in the vanguard for this year’s settlements, has said talks with mills continued. (Reporting by Beijing Bureau; Writing by Chris Buckley; Editing by Valerie Lee) ((chris.buckley@thomsonreuters.com; +86-10-66271261)) ((If you have a query or comment on this story, send an email to newsfeedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com))
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June 3, 2009

King Abdullah Greets Obama in Saudi Arabia

Filed under: World News — Tags: , , , — admin @ 9:07 am

By Scott Wilson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 3, 2009; 8:09 AM

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, June 3–American flags are hanging next to the green banner of the Saudi kingdom on the street-light poles of this desert capital, a celebratory nod to the arrival of President Obama, who on Wednesday landed here to begin a five-day tour through the Middle East and Europe.

Obama will hold a day of meetings with King Abdullah on Iran’s nuclear program and the dormant Israeli-Palestinian peace process, among other issues. It is his first presidential visit to the Arab Middle East.

At a tarmac welcoming ceremony, Obama was greeted by the 84-year-old Saudi leader. The two strode down a red carpet lined by ranks of Saudi soldiers, U.S. and Saudi flags flying taut in a brisk, dry wind. A military band then played the Star-Spangled Banner.

The leaders were then scheduled to travel to King Abdullah’s farm at Jenadriyah, not far from Riyadh. The king hosted a dinner there last year for then-President Bush featuring an Arabian horse show and a falconry exhibition.

This stop was a late addition to Obama’s itinerary, the centerpiece of which is his Thursday address in Cairo to the Islamic world.

It comes as Obama is pushing for early progress on Middle East peace efforts and reaching out to Iran’s leaders over their nuclear program - two major and intertwined foreign policy gambits that so far have yielded few results.

With its vast oil wealth and supreme religious importance in the Islamic world as the site of Mecca and Medina, Saudi Arabia has long been a leading Sunni Arab player in the region, an influence Abdullah has sought to deepen in recent years.

Abdullah has asserted Saudi diplomacy aggressively in Lebanon and in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He was the first to propose broad Arab recognition of Israel in return for its withdrawal from all territory occupied in the 1967 Middle East War, and he has sought in the past to broker unity government agreements between rival Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah.

Obama has suggested that Abdullah’s peace proposal, adopted by the Arab League in 2002 and now known as the Arab Peace Initiative, may serve as a way to revive talks between Israelis, Palestinians and Arab countries, only two of which now recognize the Jewish state.

After a meeting with Obama last month, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu indicated that he would welcome more regional participation in future Israeli-Palestinian negotiations. He said he “would like to broaden the circle of peace to include others in the Arab world, if we could.”

Those talks are being held up now by Palestinian concerns over Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank and Netanyahu’s refusal to endorse the creation of an independent Palestinian state as the best way to achieve peace.

The Obama administration may be taking more of an outside in view of the conflict, hoping a gesture from Arab nations such as this one might push Israel toward peace with the Palestinians.
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