SCENARIOS-Fate of Japan climate bill uncertain after election

TOKYO, July 12 (Reuters) – Japan’s climate bill, which backs the creation of an emissions trading scheme, faces an uncertain fate after the ruling Democratic Party and its ally lost their majority in a weekend election for parliament’s upper house.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan’s Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) stays in power because it controls the more powerful lower house, but will need to seek new partners to control the upper chamber and pass bills smoothly.

The ruling bloc at present does not have a two-thirds majority in the lower house that is needed to override decisions made in the upper house.

Japan is the world’s fifth-biggest greenhouse gas emitter and has pledged to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent from 1990 levels by 2020.

The target is among the most ambitious of all rich nations but has also sparked nationwide debate over how to attain it without hurting the world’s No.2 economy. [ID:nTOE63I04R]

The climate bill, shelved last month after parliament ran out of time to finish debate, would make the target legally binding and set a one-year deadline for the government to design a compulsory emissions trading system. Other measures to help Japan meet the target are also part of the bill. [ID:nTOE65L09F]

Below are some scenarios for the climate bill, which the government plans to resubmit to the next session of parliament.

BILL PASSES IN CURRENT FORM

Prospects: Possible

The government plans to resubmit the climate bill in its current form in the next session of parliament, for which a start date has not been decided.

The DPJ could, in the meantime, woo one or more smaller parties into the ruling coalition to cobble together an upper house majority, clearing the way for smooth passage of the bill.

Even without joining the coalition, some opposition parties who favour tougher climate policy to boost the clean-energy sector could agree to help the DPJ pass the bill, although they could drive hard bargains and stall debate.

The climate bill calls for the government to draft separate legislation to design a mandatory emissions trading system within a year, so any delay could stall those plans.

Currently, Japan only has a voluntary carbon market at the national level based on companies’ pledged goals, which are mostly caps on emissions per unit of production and leave room for rises in emissions when output grows.

When trading under the new scheme will actually start has been unclear, with analysts divided between 2012 and 2013.

BILL PASSES, BUT WATERED DOWN

Prospects: Possible

The DPJ could be forced to water down the bill in exchange for help from the opposition to implement strategically more important policies such as fiscal reform and overhauling the social security system.

Climate policy has not been a big focus for voters, so the DPJ might want to spend its energy making progress on other issues to build up public support ahead of a general election that must be held before late 2013.

The weekend’s weak election outcome could also force the DPJ to listen more to demands from industry and labour groups which are against tougher climate policies because of the possible impact on jobs.

The bill has already been watered down from earlier drafts compiled by the Environment Ministry. The latest bill calls for the emissions trading system to set volume caps in principle but also “consider carbon intensity”, which leaves room for the scheme to allow companies to emit more when output grows.

BILL STALLS

Prospects: Possible

If the DPJ fails to pass the bill in the upper house, the bill will stay stuck in parliament.

The government will likely stick to its tough 2020 emission reduction target but it would lose political momentum for a mandatory emissions trading scheme, which analysts say is key for Japan to achieve deep cuts in domestic emissions.

Failure to pass the bill could also weaken Japan’s bargaining power at a U.N. climate meeting in Mexico from Nov. 29-Dec. 10 that aims to try to seal a tougher global agreement on fighting climate change. (Editing by David Fogarty)

EU considers deepwater oil restrictions: report

(Reuters) – The European Union could consider limiting the depth of deepwater oil drilling as part of new rules following BP’s spill in the Gulf of Mexico, Europe’s energy chief said in an interview on Saturday.

European Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger told La Stampa newspaper the 27-nation bloc could evaluate if it needed another agency to oversee offshore exploration or if the European Maritime Safety Agency could take action on deepwater rigs.

“One decision could be that of saying that you cannot go beyond a certain X depth. Another is that of giving a time limit on drilling licenses,” he said.

Some rigs were very old and a standard was needed to modernize them, he said.

La Stampa said Oettinger would meet with European oil company executives on Wednesday to discuss drilling and safety rules.

Oettinger repeated his suggestion for a moratorium on new deepwater drilling permits until more secure rules were in place.

He did not give a time limit for a freeze, but said: “We want to be able to put together a catalog of the possible consequences for every new well. And we want it this year.”

Oettinger said oil companies should be obligated to take out insurance to pay for damages. An industry fund would be only a last resort, he said.

A U.S. presidential panel to probe the cause of the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico will hold its first public meeting in New Orleans on Monday and Tuesday, and has six months to do its work.

The U.S. administration had issued a moratorium on offshore drilling to give the commission time for its investigation, but it now hangs in the balance after a federal court lifted the ban. The U.S. government is appealing.

(Reporting by Ian Simpson)

UPDATE 1-Euro zone factory PMI sinks, output growth slows

LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) – Manufacturing in the euro zone expanded in May, but at a far slower rate than April’s 46-month high as cost pressures and tighter margins drove firms to take their feet off the production accelerator, a survey showed on Tuesday.

The 16-nation bloc and its common currency have been hit by waves of investor insecurity churned up by the region’s debt crisis and fears that troubles in Greece may be spreading to other peripheral euro zone economies.

“There has been a slowdown in growth globally and in the euro zone there is subdued domestic demand due to the austerity measure implemented in some countries,” said Luigi Speranza at BNP Paribas.

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For a graphic see: r.reuters.com/quj57k

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The Markit Eurozone Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index for May sank to 55.8 from 57.6 in April, nudged down from an earlier flash estimate of 55.9.

This is its eighth month above the 50.0 mark that divides growth from contraction, but markets were unmoved by the data.

Cost pressures were on the rise, with the price of factories’ raw materials forced up by the weaker euro.

The output index recorded its second fastest slide in the survey’s history — only surpassed in the aftermath of Lehman Brothers’ collapse — to stand well shy of April’s near 10-year high of 61.2 at 56.8. It inched up from a flash reading of 56.7.

“Importantly, however, the pace of growth remained robust, and the slowdown in May no doubt reflects a payback from April’s ultra-strong growth to some extent,” said Chris Williamson at data provider Markit.

In Germany, the bloc’s biggest economy, manufacturing activity slowed from the previous month’s survey’s record high. Neighbouring France, the second biggest, saw growth in its sector slow from April’s near 4-year high.

Spain and Italy also saw a dip in their main indexes. A separate survey on the UK showed manufacturing activity holding on to its strongest pace in 15 years.

Euro zone manufacturers were hit by rising input prices, with that index reaching its highest level since July 2008 at 73.7 last month, compared to 73.4 in April.

The euro has been battered in recent weeks, driving up costs of materials from outside the bloc, on fears that Greece’s debt problems will spread and in spite of a $1 trillion safety net set up by European policymakers earlier this month.

However, the output price index fell from last month, suggesting producers had more trouble passing on price rises to customers.

Flash data released on Monday showed prices in the bloc rose 1.6 percent in May, faster than the 1.5 percent seen in April.

Detailed PMI data are only available under licence from Markit and customers need to apply to Markit for a licence.

To subscribe to the full data, click on the link below: here

For further information, please phone Markit on +44 20 7260 2454 or email economics@markit.com

(Editing by Toby Chopra, John Stonestreet)

Japan PM says wants to keep coalition despite rift

Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said on Saturday he wants to maintain the ruling coalition even after firing the leader of a small allied party from her cabinet post.

Mizuho Fukushima, ousted as consumer affairs minister on Friday, suggested her Social Democratic Party (SDP) was unlikely to stay in the ruling bloc ahead of an upper house election expected in July.

Hatoyama fired Fukushima for resisting a U.S.-Japan deal on a Marine airbase on southern Okinawa island, widening a rift in his coalition as the election draws near.

His decision to give up on a pledge to shift the U.S. Marines’ Futenma airbase off the island has angered Okinawans, upset the leftist SDP, and further eroded support for Hatoyama’s government over perceived mishandling of the issue.

“To have fired me is to abandon the Social Democratic Party,” Fukushima was quoted by Japanese media as saying.

“We need to make an important decision,” she said.

An SPD departure would be ill-timed for Hatoyama’s Democratic Party ahead of the upper house election, which the Democrats must win to avoid policy stalemate.

But it would not topple the government because the Democrats have a huge majority in parliament’s more powerful lower house.

“I would like to ask the SDP for continued cooperation,” Hatoyama told reporters when asked about Fukushima’s comments.

“I would like to maintain the ruling coalition. But it is up to the SPD to decide, so we need to wait for the meeting of their local leaders,” he said.

Some Social Democrats want the party to leave the coalition, others want to stay in power to influence policy. The party will hold a meeting of representatives of local leaders on Sunday.

Hatoyama is in Seogwipo, a honeymoon resort on the South Korean island of Jeju, to attend a regional summit with leaders from China and South Korea.

(Reporting by Yoko Nishikawa; Editing by Paul Tait)

Developing nations want 2011 climate pact deadline

(Reuters) – A group of developing countries, among the world’s fastest-growing carbon emitters, said on Sunday a legally binding global agreement to limit climate change needed to be completed by 2011 at the latest.

Green Business | COP15

Environment ministers of the so-called BASIC bloc — Brazil, South Africa, India and China — met in Cape Town to look at how to fast-track such a deal to curb global warming.

“Ministers felt that a legally binding outcome should be concluded at Cancun, Mexico in 2010, or at the latest in South Africa by 2011,” the ministers said in a joint statement, referring to U.N. climate talks.

Jairam Ramesh, India’s environment and forestry minister, told reporters: “Right now it looks as if we will have to come back to Cape Town in 2011. There is no breakthrough in sight … we have a long way to go.”

The Kyoto Protocol, which the United States did not ratify, binds about 40 developed nations to cutting emissions by 2008-12. U.N. climate meetings have failed to reach a legally binding agreement on what happens post-2012.

More than 100 countries have backed a non-binding accord, agreed in Copenhagen last year, to limit global warming to below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times, but it did not spell out how this should be achieved. It included a goal of $100 billion in aid for developing nations from 2020.

The United States supports the Copenhagen Accord but many emerging economies do not want it to supplant the 1992 U.N. Climate Convention, which more clearly spells out that rich nations have to take the lead in cutting emissions and combating climate change.

The BASIC ministers on Sunday proposed to use $10 billion of “fast-start funding” this year to test and demonstrate ways of adapting to and mitigating climate change.

They said the world could not wait indefinitely for the United States, the second-biggest carbon emitter after China, to pass domestic legislation needed to conclude negotiations.

A bipartisan working group on Saturday delayed a compromise climate change bill, a top priority of President Barack Obama that has been closely watched by other nations skeptical of U.S. commitment to fight global warming.

“Of course there is no way to fight climate change without the United States and we believe that we can be able to build an agreement that (would enable) the United States to come on board,” Izabella Teixeira, Brazil’s environment minister, told journalists.

Her South Africa counterpart, Buyelwa Sonjica, said if the United States did not soon pass necessary domestic climate laws, “that would impact on vulnerable countries, making them remain at risk.”

Emissions from industrial countries fell by 2.2 percent in 2008 as the world fell into recession, the sharpest fall since the break-up of the Soviet Union. Experts say there is no basis for believing the decline was the result of a coordinated effort to tackle emissions.

Industrialized nations have been unwilling to take on new commitments beyond 2012 unless major emerging nations, such as India and China, also sign up.

(Reporting by Wendell Roelf; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Developing nations want 2011 climate pact deadline

CAPE TOWN, April 25 (Reuters) – A group of developing countries, among the world’s fastest-growing carbon emitters, said on Sunday a legally binding global agreement to limit climate change needed to be completed by 2011 at the latest.

Environment ministers of the so-called BASIC bloc — Brazil, South Africa, India and China — met in Cape Town to look at how to fast-track such a deal to curb global warming.

“Ministers felt that a legally binding outcome should be concluded at Cancun, Mexico in 2010, or at the latest in South Africa by 2011,” the ministers said in a joint statement, referring to U.N. climate talks.

Jairam Ramesh, India’s environment and forestry minister, told reporters: “Right now it looks as if we will have to come back to Cape Town in 2011. There is no breakthrough in sight … we have a long way to go.”

The Kyoto Protocol, which the United States did not ratify, binds about 40 developed nations to cutting emissions by 2008-12. U.N. climate meetings have failed to reach a legally binding agreement on what happens post-2012.

More than 100 countries have backed a non-binding accord, agreed in Copenhagen last year, to limit global warming to below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times, but it did not spell out how this should be achieved. It included a goal of $100 billion in aid for developing nations from 2020.

The United States supports the Copenhagen Accord but many emerging economies do not want it to supplant the 1992 U.N. Climate Convention, which more clearly spells out that rich nations have to take the lead in cutting emissions and combating climate change.

The BASIC ministers on Sunday proposed to use $10 billion of “fast-start funding” this year to test and demonstrate ways of adapting to and mitigating climate change.

They said the world could not wait indefinitely for the United States, the second-biggest carbon emitter after China, to pass domestic legislation needed to conclude negotiations.

A bipartisan working group on Saturday delayed a compromise climate change bill, a top priority of President Barack Obama that has been closely watched by other nations sceptical of U.S commitment to fight global warming. [ID:nN2413665]

“Of course there is no way to fight climate change without the United States and we believe that we can be able to build an agreement that (would enable) the United States to come on board,” Izabella Teixeira, Brazil’s environment minister, told journalists.

Her South Africa counterpart, Buyelwa Sonjica, said if the United States did not soon pass necessary domestic climate laws, “that would impact on vulnerable countries, making them remain at risk”.

Emissions from industrial countries fell by 2.2 percent in 2008 as the world fell into recession, the sharpest fall since the break-up of the Soviet Union. Experts say there is no basis for believing the decline was the result of a coordinated effort to tackle emissions. [ID:nLDE63J1T3]

Industrialised nations have been unwilling to take on new commitments beyond 2012 unless major emerging nations, such as India and China, also sign up.

(Reporting by Wendell Roelf; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

EU deal sends message no one can play with euro-Greek PM

ATHENS, April 11 (Reuters) – The euro zone showed on Sunday that no one can play with its single currency, Greece’s Prime Minister George Papandreou said after the bloc’s finance ministers approved details of a giant aid mechanism.

Bonds

“With today’s decision, Europe sends a very clear message that no one, any longer, can play with our common currency, no one can play with our common fate,” Papandreou said in a statement.

“It is a significant decision both for Europe and the European Union.” ($1=.7477 Euro) (Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)

EU deal sends message no one can play with euro-Greek PM

ATHENS, April 11 (Reuters) – The euro zone showed on Sunday that no one can play with its single currency, Greece’s Prime Minister George Papandreou said after the bloc’s finance ministers approved details of a giant aid mechanism.

Bonds

“With today’s decision, Europe sends a very clear message that no one, any longer, can play with our common currency, no one can play with our common fate,” Papandreou said in a statement.

“It is a significant decision both for Europe and the European Union.” ($1=.7477 Euro) (Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Saddam links haunt Iraq election candidates

Iraq’s election result has been thrown into confusion with several winning candidates facing disqualification because of links to Saddam Hussein’s Baathist party.

A special committee has been set up to vet and disqualify election candidates found to have links to Hussein’s regime.

One official is recommending at least four winning candidates be barred.

Some reports say all four were elected on the winning ticket of the former prime minister Iyad Allawi.

Mr Allawi’s Iriqiya bloc won a two-seat victory over the alliance of incumbent prime minister Nouri Al Maliki, but it is not certain whether the potential disqualifications could shift the balance of power.

It is now up to the courts to decide whether the candidates are removed.

There are also fears their disqualification could fuel further sectarian tensions in Iraq.

Iraq’s Allawi says open to all in coalition talks

Iraq election winner Iyad Allawi said on Saturday he was open to alliances with any faction and wanted quickly to form a government that would build strong relationships with its regional neighbours.

Allawi’s secular, cross-sectarian Iraqiya bloc won by a two-seat margin in preliminary results released on Friday over the State of Law coalition led by Shi’ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, who said he would challenge the results.

With neither of the leading blocs close to the majority needed to rule alone, the tight race portends lengthy and divisive negotiations to form a government as Iraq seeks to escape years of sectarian warfare and U.S. troops prepare to pull out.

“The Iraqiya list’s decision is to be open to all powers starting from the State of Law headed by the prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki,” Allawi said at a news conference.

“Iraq does not belong to anyone or any party but it belongs to all Iraqis.”

Allawi, a secular Shi’ite who served as prime minister in 2004-05 after the U.S. invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein, and his Iraqiya partners took 91 seats in parliament to 89 for Maliki’s State of Law coalition in a vote that exposed the depth of Iraq’s sectarian divide.

Violence erupted when Iraq’s political leaders took five months to form a government after the last parliamentary vote in 2005. Allawi appeared to try to allay fears of a repeat.

“We hope … to form the government as quickly as possible. A government that is capable of providing security and to offer the appropriate services to its people,” he said.

But perhaps signalling the difficulties ahead, Allawi said the road to a new government led through Iraqiya, an apparent reference to Maliki’s declaration on Friday night that he was on his way to forming the biggest bloc in parliament.

“The Iraqi people chose the Iraqiya to be the base to start talks with the other parties according to the constitution,” Allawi said.

Officials with Maliki’s coalition and from the third-place finisher, the Iraqi National Alliance, a bloc with close relationships with Shi’ite neighbour Iran, have said they are working toward a merger. The two combined would hold 159 seats, close to the majority needed to form a government.

INA includes the Sadrist political movement of anti-American Shi’ite Moqtada al-Sadr, who is studying in Iran and is shaping up to be the new kingmaker of Iraqi politics.

His party performed beyond expectations in the election, outpolling its INA partner, the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, which was formed in exile in Iran.

In a sign of Sadr’s newfound muscle in Iraqi politics, representatives of State of Law and the Sadrists travelled to Iran on Friday to meet with Sadr, according to INA sources.

But any attempt by the major Shi’ite blocs to sideline Allawi could lead to resentment among Sunnis pushed to the side when the majority Shi’ites rose to power following the U.S. invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

While Maliki and the INA are seen as having close ties to Iran, Allawi is viewed as having better relations with Arab states. At one time he was highly critical of Tehran for supporting Shi’ite militias in Iraq, but is reported to have sought to mend fences.

Allawi said on Saturday that the new government should work on strengthening political and economic ties with its neighbours and end long-running disputes over borders with countries such as Iran and Kuwait.

“We should not forget that the stability of Iraq is from the stability of the region… The coming government should work to deepen this concept,” he said.

Underscoring Iraq’s fragile security and the tensions caused by the election, two explosions in the town of Khalis, in Iraq’s mainly Sunni northern Diyala province, killed at least 42 people and wounded 65 just hours before the release of the results on Friday.

(Additional reporting by Khalid al-Ansary, writing by Jim Loney; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Analysts’ first take on Iraq election

Former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi’s coalition won the most seats in Iraq’s March 7 parliamentary election, according to full preliminary results released on Friday.

The bloc with the most parliamentary seats is given the first opportunity to form a new government.

Here are some initial reactions to the results:

GALA RIANI, ANALYST WITH IHS GLOBAL INSIGHT

“Allawi has achieved what Maliki had hoped and aimed to do. The mission he had was to run a coalition on a non-sectarian platform and secure an election victory on that platform.

“Iraqiya (Allawi’s bloc) has fared much better across the board than State of Law (Maliki’s bloc) has, much better in the southern provinces than State of Law did in the north. It puts Allawi in a better place to secure better credibility across the county.

“What Allawi has achieved is hugely significant. It’s a massive blow to Maliki, to his credibility and to the type of platform he has tried to run.”

TONY DODGE, READER IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON:

“That’s an amazing result. The fact that Allawi is leading means that he has the first chance at forming a government. Technically this gives him the lead.”

The result is “a damning indictment of the ruling party, the insiders that have dominated Iraqi politics for the last five years. We just have to see if Allawi has the wherewithal to form a government.

“Iran backed the INA (the mainly Shi’ite Iraqi National Alliance) and half-heartedly backed Maliki. Now that Allawi is moving through Baghdad trying to build a coalition, Iran will be going through Baghdad with a lot of money trying to build a coalition.

“It would not be too harmful to suggest that Washington and Tehran have opposing objectives in the formation of the next government … Allawi for the Americans and whoever Tehran thinks will be the most effective representative of the Shia Islamist party.

“The big points are that Allawi represents an anti-incumbent vote. The people who voted for Allawi voted against the last five years. This is potentially destabilising, but very important.

“Let’s hope that the army stays in its barracks, I think it will. But we will see some rocky times before the formation of the next government.”

DR. AMI M. ANGELL, VISITING RESEARCH FELLOW, INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR POLITICAL VIOLENCE AND TERRORISM RESEARCH

“There are going to be a significant number upset about the outcome, no matter what it is. But they will support the outcome, if positive changes in policy are rapidly introduced. … (Iraqis) are tired of the violence, tired of the corruption and tired of the fighting. I don’t know how eager they are going to be to pick up arms and join another fight. I honestly believe that the populace will follow anyone – at this point – who follows through on his word.”

(Reporting by Ian Simpson and Jim Loney; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Iraq PM says on way to form biggest parliamentary bloc

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said on Friday his coalition was on the way to forming the biggest bloc in parliament despite finishing behind secularist challenger Iyad Allawi’s alliance in full preliminary election results.

The results of the March 7 elections had shown “many problems”, Maliki said in a televised address after the tallies were released. He added that he believed the results were still not final.

Japan accused of scare tactics at tuna talks

Japan was accused of scare tactics at world talks on wildlife protection on Monday as it campaigned against a proposal to curb trade in bluefin tuna, the succulent sushi delicacy.

The 175-nation Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), meeting in Doha until next week, is gearing up to vote on banning trade in bluefin tuna from the Mediterranean and eastern Atlantic, a motion that requires a two-thirds majority to pass.

“It is very much up in the air. There’s a lot of jockeying,” said Patrick Van Klaveren of Monaco, which is leading the charge.

“Japan’s lobbying is formidable. Three or four people from the Japanese delegation are constantly criss-crossing the convention, arranging meetings.

“They are targeting developing countries, scaring them about what could happen to their [own tuna] stocks, along the lines of ‘your turn will come’.”

Monaco’s proposal, backed by the US and the European Union, would not affect bluefin tuna caught in the Pacific.

Even so, “the Pacific island nations and Asia are also quite sensitive” to Japan’s arguments, Mr Van Klaveren added.

Tunisia, with major bluefin fisheries in the Mediterranean, is also working the halls hoping to muster the support of Arab nations against the proposal, he said.

Mr Van Klaveren voiced regret that the EU had not taken a stronger stand.

The 27-nation bloc last week came out in favour of the ban amid mounting evidence that stocks of the precious species had crashed over the past 30 years.

But it has asked for implementation to be postponed until a November meeting of ICAAT, the inter-governmental fishery group that manages tuna stocks in the Atlantic and adjacent seas.

- AFP

EU in trade deal with Colombia, Peru – sources

BRUSSELS, March 1 (Reuters) – The European Union has reached a free trade agreement with Colombia and Peru, sources close to the negotiations said on Monday.

The European Commission, the EU executive in charge of trade policy in the 27-nation bloc, held the ninth round of negotiations with the two Latin American countries over the past week.

“Yes, there has been a deal (reached) with both countries, Colombia and Peru,” one of the sources said, adding that details would be announced later on Monday. (Reporting by Bate Felix, editing by Dale Hudson)

A Q Khan’s nukes to Iran claims hold no ‘official status’: Pak diplomat

Washington, Sep.10 (ANI): Hours after disgraced Pakistani nuclear scientist Dr AQ Khan claimed that Pakistan had helped Iran acquire the nuclear technology with the aim to jointly emerge as a ‘strong bloc’ in the region, a Pakistani diplomat has out rightly rejected Khan’s claims.

Spokesman of the Pakistani Embassy in Washington, Nadeem Kiyani, said Khan’s statement has no ‘official status’.These are the views of a person who has been rendered ineffective, and his network has been completely shut up,” The Nation quoted Kiyani, as saying.

Kiyani said Islamabad does not want proliferation of nuclear technology in the region and is doing everything to keep a tab on such activities.

Meanwhile, a proliferation expert has said that Dr. Khan has many secrets regarding the transfer of nuclear know-how’s to other countries, but is not willing to disclose the details.

“Khan has ‘always threatened to tell more, perhaps who authorised the transfer of designs and samples of technology, if not more, to several states,” said Stephen Cohen, a proliferation expert at the Brookings Institution.

Referring to the television interview in which Khan had disclosed that he provided nuclear details to countries like Libya and Iran with an aim to counter international pressure and ‘neutralize’ Israeli power, Cohen said: “Khan appeared to hold back a lot in the interview.” (ANI)

PM arrives in Egypt for XVth NAM Summit

Sharm el-Sheikh (Egypt), July 15 (ANI): Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh arrived in Egypt late on Tuesday night to attend the two-day XVth Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Summit.

Issues like global economic downturn, terrorism, climate change and food security are expected to be on top of the agenda at the Summit.

Other summit themes are international solidarity for peace and development and current economic and financial crisis. It would also focus in comprehensive manner on global regional and sub-regional issues, besides issues relating to development, human rights and social issues.

Dr. Singh will address the plenary session of the NAM Summit, and has already underlined India’s commitment to help revitalise the NAM, which had a renewed role to play in the emerging world order following the end of the Cold War.

On the sidelines of the Summit, Dr. Singh will meet his Pakistani counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani on Thursday morning. He will also have other bilateral meetings.

A NAM First Ladies’ Summit would also take place at the initiative of Egypt in which the Prime Minister’s wife, Gurusharan Kaur, would participate. The theme of this meeting would be Women in Crisis Management – Perspectives and Challenges, Best Practices and Lessons Learned.

Egypt’s First Lady Suzane Mubarak would anchor the meeting that would focus on the role of women in the context of the global economic and food, health and humanitarian crises. Heads of UN Agencies: the FAO, the WFP, the WHO, and the ITU are expected to make brief statements during the two separate sessions of the First Ladies’ Summit.

The NAM is an international organization of states considering themselves not formally aligned with or against any major power bloc.

The movement is largely the brainchild of Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, Gamal Abdul Nasser, former president of Egypt and Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito. It was founded in April 1955 and as of 2007, it has 118 members.

The purpose of the organization as stated in the Havana Declaration of 1979 is to ensure “the national independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity and security of non-aligned countries” in their “struggle against imperialism, colonialism, neo-colonialism, racism, and all forms of foreign aggression, occupation, domination, interference or hegemony as well as against great power and bloc politics.”

They represent nearly two-thirds of the United Nations’s members and comprise 55 percent of the world population, particularly countries considered to be developing or part of the third world. By Smita Prakash (ANI)

EU should open energy talks with Turkey, incoming presidency says

EU should open energy talks with Turkey, incoming presidency saysBrussels – The European Union should open talks with Turkey this year on how to bring its energy sector into line with EU laws as part of the country’s accession process, the man who is set to take over the bloc’s rotating presidency in July said Tuesday.

But opposition from some EU member states means that it may not be possible to do so, Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt told journalists in Brussels.

“I would hope” to open negotiations on energy issues, “but I’m not sure if this is possible … It would be wise for everyone (in the EU) to engage Turkey in these energy discussions, but I need broader support to be able open these chapters,” Reinfeldt said.

Turkey has been negotiating towards EU membership since 2005, but progress has been stalled by the row over the Turkish occupation of northern Cyprus and by the reluctance of key EU members such as France and Germany to accept the idea of Turkish accession.

So far, Turkey has opened talks on less than a third of the 35 subjects – the so-called “chapters” – on which it will have to bring its laws into line with EU legislation.

But following January’s row over gas sales between Russia and Ukraine, which hit supplies to the EU, the bloc is desperate to reduce its reliance on imports from Russia by building new pipelines to the Middle East and Caspian Sea through Turkey.

That has raised the pressure on the bloc to open energy talks with Turkey sooner, rather than later.

Key among the various projects is the so-called “Nabucco” gas pipeline from Azerbaijan via Turkey to Austria. At a summit dedicated to energy transit in Prague on May 8, Turkey and the EU agreed to finalize inter-governmental on the pipeline by the end of June.

While Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul approved that agreement, he also called on the EU to open the energy chapter as soon as possible.(dpa)

Hungary’s jobless rate edges towards 10 per cent

Hungary's jobless rate edges towards 10 per centBudapest – Hungary’s unemployment averaged 9.9 per cent in the February-April period, the worst figure since 1996, the country’s Central Statistical Office reported Thursday.

In the same three-month period last year, the unemployment rate was only 7.7 per cent.

Statistics also revealed that only 55.1 per cent of Hungarians between the age of 15 and 64 are actively employed.

Hundreds of thousands in this age group have taken early retirement or live off invalidity benefits.

Roughly 3.74 million of Hungary’s population of 10 million are employed, the figures show, down 84,500 on the same period last year.

According to data published by the European Union statistics agency Ecostat last summer, Hungary had the third-lowest rate of participation in the labour market in the 27-nation bloc, ahead of only Malta and Poland.

Hungary’s Prime Minister Gordon Bajnai, as he took office last month, identified the low employment rate as Hungary’s single greatest barrier to growth.

Bajnai said he wants to see 65 per cent of Hungarians of working age in jobs. (dpa)

Sri Lanka hails countries that supported UN resolution

Colombo – Sri Lanka, reacting to the UN Human Rights Council adopting a resolution in Geneva commending the government for its commitment to human rights, hailed countries supporting the motion.

Human Rights Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe, speaking on state-run television, said the resolution adopted Wednesday with a comprehensive majority was a strength to the country.

Twenty nine countries – including China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Malaysia and Indonesia – voted in favour of the motion while 12 countries voted against and six abstained, Samarasinghe said.

The resolution, tabled by Sri Lanka and nations including China, Cuba and Egypt, allows the government to let aid agencies have access to camps for the internally displaced “as may be appropriate.”

A bloc of Western nations, whose counter-proposal was defeated, wanted full access for aid groups like the International Committee of the Red Cross and UN agencies.

They also wanted an investigation into alleged human rights violations during the fighting which erupted during the last three years in which the rebels of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were crushed.

According to UN figures more than 7,000 civilians were killed, but there has been no independent evidence to confirm who was responsible for the killings during the clashes between government troops and rebels.

Some 300,000 people have been displaced by the fighting and are living in camps, and the UN agencies, international and local NGOs and the ICRC has been demanding unimpeded access to these camps, but the government has allowed in only a selected number of aid workers.(dpa)

Sri Lanka hails countries that supported UN resolution

Colombo – Sri Lanka, reacting to the UN Human Rights Council adopting a resolution in Geneva commending the government for its commitment to human rights, hailed countries supporting the motion.

Human Rights Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe, speaking on state-run television, said the resolution adopted Wednesday with a comprehensive majority was a strength to the country.

Twenty nine countries – including China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Malaysia and Indonesia – voted in favour of the motion while 12 countries voted against and six abstained, Samarasinghe said.

The resolution, tabled by Sri Lanka and nations including China, Cuba and Egypt, allows the government to let aid agencies have access to camps for the internally displaced “as may be appropriate.”

A bloc of Western nations, whose counter-proposal was defeated, wanted full access for aid groups like the International Committee of the Red Cross and UN agencies.

They also wanted an investigation into alleged human rights violations during the fighting which erupted during the last three years in which the rebels of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were crushed.

According to UN figures more than 7,000 civilians were killed, but there has been no independent evidence to confirm who was responsible for the killings during the clashes between government troops and rebels.

Some 300,000 people have been displaced by the fighting and are living in camps, and the UN agencies, international and local NGOs and the ICRC has been demanding unimpeded access to these camps, but the government has allowed in only a selected number of aid workers. (dpa)