Q+A-What does China’s labour unrest mean for foreign companies?

July 1 (Reuters) – A burst of strikes in China over recent weeks has disrupted production at factories supplying major foreign firms including auto makers Toyota (7203.T) and Honda (7267.T), showing the country’s workers are becoming more assertive. [ID:nSGE65N02Q]

Here are some questions and answers about what this could mean for foreign companies operating in or sourcing from China.

HOW SERIOUS ARE THE STRIKES?

So far the high-profile strikes appear to be spontaneous movements at individual plants, by just a tiny sliver of a vast workforce. The earlier strikes have ended after workers accepted offers of improved pay and conditions, often less than they initially demanded.

Many of the strike-hit factories are parts suppliers for vehicle plants run by Japanese firms and local joint-venture partners, although an electronics maker and a plant producing air conditioning systems for U.S.-listed Ingersoll-Rand Plc (IR.N). have also been affected.

The ruling Communist Party is wary of wider unrest that could erode its grip on power, and would quickly seek to snuff out any signs that these strikes were igniting wider confrontation.

But many striking workers say they took inspiration from hearing about the success of earlier walkouts. The copy-cat chain of strikes shows a workforce that is becoming bolder, and that may prompt some companies to pre-emptively raise wages.

“The strikes have been concentrated in a few areas and companies, but there are broader pent-up problems,” said Chang Kai, a labour relations professor at Renmin University in Beijing who advised workers striking at a Honda parts factory.

“Rather than just focus on the strikes, we need to address the broader problems,” he said.

SO WHAT DO THE STRIKES SHOW?

The strikes are a symptom of a broader trend that many investors will have to consider: a Chinese workforce becoming more assertive and selective, and sometimes inclined to protest by strikes, slow-downs and, most often, quitting. [ID:nTOE64U08D]

Government numbers show that registered labour disputes have been rising. [ID:nTOE65902W]

The recent strikers have mostly been members of China’s 150-million strong migrant labour workforce, which flows from villages to cities and industrial regions looking for work.

Younger migrant workers are becoming more demanding about job conditions. They see their futures in the cities, not in farming, and feel the pressure to save up money despite rising costs.

They are also gaining more bargaining power as the flow of potential job seekers tightens, because of wider opportunities and fewer entrants into the workforce as the population ages.

SO IS THIS THE END OF CHINA AS A CHEAP PRODUCTION BASE? Labour costs in China have been rising anyway and, partly encouraged by a government that wants to turn farmers and workers into more confident consumers, that is likely to continue.

In itself, that trend will not dislodge China as a dominant player in manufactured exports. Labour costs remain a fraction of the cost of goods made in China. [ID:nTOE65G053]

But rising overall costs, and the risk that strikes could force sudden jolts in wage levels, could prompt more companies to move production from crowded coastal regions to cheaper inland parts of China, or to other low-cost manufacturing countries such as Vietnam. [ID:nTOE65K09W]

“China is still an attractive option for most companies looking for an effective manufacturing base, although many companies have been pursuing a China plus one or a China plus two strategy in recent years to diversify their manufacturing operations,” said Geoffrey Crothall of the China Labour Bulletin in Hong Kong, which advocates for improved workers’ rights.

“I really don’t think we’re going to see companies suddenly leaving China en masse.”

WHAT ABOUT SUPPLY CHAINS?

Honda and Toyota have both been forced to temporarily suspend vehicle assembly plants in China, because strikes at suppliers choked off the flow of parts.

Their tight supply chains, modelled on the “just-in-time” system, exposed them to disruption, said Wen Xiaoyi, a researcher at the China Institute of Industrial Relations in Beijing who studies labour relations in China’s automotive sector.

The risk of such disruption may prompt some to reconsider inventories management and diversity of suppliers, said Wen.

Vincent Chen, an analyst at Yuanta Securities in Taipei, said foreign tech manufacturers in China typically have about three to four weeks of inventory, which should last them through a strike.

“The biggest fear right now for brands is what is going to happen if one of their weaker suppliers gets hit,” said Chen.

“For the tech industry, all the suppliers depend on one another, and it takes just one weak link and companies will then be unable to get their product out to customers.”

But Nissan’s (7201.T) CEO Carlos Ghosn said this week he did not see any reason to change the way inventory is held at Chinese plants. Other vehicle makers have echoed his view, saying strikes are just one of many contingencies that could disrupt supplies.

WILL THE GOVERNMENT STEP IN MORE?

The outburst of labour unrest could prompt the central government, wary of unrest spreading, to become more energetic about wage and labour standards, which have been patchily enforced by local officials worried about deterring investors.

Premier Wen Jiabao has said migrant workers deserved better. [ID:nSGE65E0C6]

The unrest could also boost government efforts to encourage more systematic collective bargaining between workers and managers to determine wages and conditions. Official unions will remain kept under the thumb of the government, but at the factory level they may become more insistent on workers’ demands.

The Communist Party will remain staunchly opposed, however, to the idea of independent unions.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley and Emma Graham-Harrison in BEIJING, Kelvin Soh in HONG KONG, Chang-Ran Kim in TOKYO; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

Clash between Somalia police, soldiers kills 13

MOGADISHU, June 13 (Reuters) – Fighting between Somali government troops and police has killed at least 13 people and injured 14 in Mogadishu after soldiers tried to rob civilians, police said on Sunday.

The clash occurred on Saturday in Hamarjajab district, in the south of the capital.

“The clashes came after some of the government troops started to rob a civilian car and the police were trying to stop it,” Abdullahi Mo`alim Kerow, a police officer, told Reuters.

The clash resulted in the deaths of nine soldiers and four civilians who were not involved the fighting but were caught in the crossfire.

“We have collected bodies of nine government troops … and three unidentified civilians. The injured have been taken to … hospital and the fighting has stopped,” Kerow said late on Saturday.

“This kind of clashes among the government troops is unfortunate and been has repeated so many times, claiming the lives of nearly 100 troops since January.”

Ten civilians were wounded and one of them later died, Ali Muse Abdi, the coordinator of ambulance services in Mogadishu, told Reuters.

Somalia has had no effective central government for 19 years and Western efforts to install one to steer the country back to stability have been hampered by an insurgency by al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab insurgents and another smaller group, Hizbul Islam.

The Transitional Federal Government controls only a few blocks of Mogadishu with the help of African Union peacekeepers.

Elsewhere, al Shabaab regained control the strategic central town of Baladwayne from Hizbul Islam.

While Hizbul Islam and al Shabaab have fought together against the government in Mogadishu, they are rivals in other parts of the country.

“Al Shabaab is in full of control of the town. Their fighters are everywhere. There was no confrontation at all. The Hizbul Islam in town have been disarmed,” Adam Mohamed, a resident of Baladwayne, told Reuters.

Fighting in Somalia has killed at least 21,000 people since the start of 2007 and driven another 1.5 million from their homes, triggering one of the world’s worst humanitarian emergencies. (Additional reporting by Abdi Sheikh, editing by George Obulutsa and Alison Williams)

Nepal parties fail to forge consensus on CA term extension

Kathmandu, May 26 — Nepal seems headed for a crisis with the much-expected meeting of the three main political parties failing to forge a consensus on extending tenure of the Constituent Assembly on Friday evening. The meeting between the ruling Nepali Congress and CPN (UML) and the opposition Maoists failed as both factions stuck to their previous demands.

They have agreed, however, to meet again on Thursday. While the Maoists sought resignation of Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal as condition to support extension of the CA tenure the ruling parties refused and asked the main opposition party to agree on contentious issues like integration of former Maoist rebels first.

“The ruling parties are pushing the country to the brink of confrontation and a conspiracy is being hatched to derail the peace process,” said UCPN (Maoist) vice chairman Narayan Kaji Shrestha after the meeting. The tenure of the Constituent Assembly expires on May 28 and there is no possibility of the new constitution getting promulgated on time.

China again urges calm over Korean peninsula

China’s Foreign Ministry repeated its call for calm and restraint on the Korean peninsula, but refused to be drawn on the sinking of a South Korean ship by a Northern torpedo in March.

Vice Foreign Minister Zhang Zhijun said China had no first-hand information on the sinking of the South Korean ship Cheonan in March, which international investigators officially ruled last week was due to a North Korean torpedo.

China was still evaluating the information, Zhang said.

“We have always believed that dialogue is better than confrontation,” Zhang said, the day after North Korea said it would cut all ties with the South.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Writing by Lucy Hornby; Editing by Nick Macfie)

All issues with SC to be resolved amicably: Pak PM

Lahore, May 21 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilaniis hopeful that all issues with the Supreme Court will be settled soon.

Gilani denied any rift between his government and the judiciary on the issue of upholding the sentence of Interior Minister Rehman Malik by the Lahore High Court and awarding of the presidential remission soon after.

He said the government would accede to and act upon the Supreme Court verdict whatever it was in the original case, adding that all issues with the apex court would be resolved amicably.

Replying to o a question, he said there was no confrontation among the two state institutions.

Gilani said his government would look into the matter of extension in the service of Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Kayani, as and when the time comes, the Daily Times reported.

During the meeting with senior journalists, Gilani shared his opinion on a number of national and international issues and also discussed policies of the coalition government. (ANI)

13 students injured in knife attack in China’s Hainan province

New Delhi, May 20 (ANI): More than 10 men, armed with knives, burst into two dormitories at a vocational college in Hainan and slashed nine students, two of them seriously.

The pre-dawn attack took place in Haikou, the capital of South China’s island province of Hainan at the Hainan Institute of Science and Technology.

The new attack has sparked fears in China, which is already on edge following a series of such horrific assaults.

Four students had been wounded in an earlier confrontation between the two groups, bringing the total number of injured to 13, according to local authorities.

The assailants attacked a guard and disabled a security camera before gaining access to the dormitories, The China Daily reports.

Among the wounded, two were severely injured, with one student having his hand cut off. Following eight hours of surgery at the Haikou City People”s Hospital, their conditions were not considered to be life threatening.

Students from the school, who accompanied the injured to the hospital, said the violence began late on Tuesday when a confrontation took place at a food stall outside the campus with some men from surrounding villages, The China Daily reports.

Four students were attacked with knives in the incident and the police were called, they said, but left after questioning the students.

The villagers then called for reinforcements and attacked the school at about 2:30 am on Wednesday, witnesses said.

The violence has resulted in security being tightened at schools across China. (ANI)

When Lily Allen discovered a tarantula in her bed

London, May 14 (ANI): Singer Lilly Allen has revealed how she was terrified after discovering a tarantula in her bed during her recent trip to the Amazon rainforest.

The songstress spent a week in the Brazilian state of Acre filming a documentary for the World Wildlife Fund charity in a bid to publicize the need for conservation efforts.

But the British singer admits she wasn”t a fan of the area”s scary populace.

“I”ve been there (Brazil) a few times on tour but only to like Rio and Sao Paulo,” the Daily Star quoted her as telling Sky news.

“It was really nice to go up to the rainforest – even though there was a tarantula in my bed one evening, which was slightly terrifying. I just screamed and ran out of the room.”

A report in The Sun newspaper documents Allen”s terror at her confrontation with the critter – she sprinted from the hut, screaming: “There”s a f**king tarantula in my room! It”s about the size of my hand.” (ANI)

Zardari’s ‘Eureka’ moment to see end of troublesome Swiss graft cases

Islamabad, May 13 (ANI): Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has directed his team of legal eagles to tell the Supreme Court that there were never any money laundering cases pending against him in Swiss courts, so the question of reopening them does not arise.

While Presidential spokesperson Farhatullah Babar refused to comment on the issue, insiders said Zardari has asked his legal team, consisting Attorney General Justice Maulvi Anwarul Haq, Additional Attorney General K K Agha, and acting law secretary Sultan Shah to counter demands of reopening the corruption cases by stressing that there were no such petitions pending against him.

“ The strategy has been prepared in the light of guidelines given by President Asif Ali Zardari. Its main element is to stress the theme that no cases could be revived against the president because these never existed and additionally Zardari enjoys immunity from criminal prosecution under Article 248 of the Constitution,” The News quoted officials, privy to the issue, as saying.

It may be noted that during the last hearing on a case concerning the implementation of the Dec 16, 2009 judgment of Supreme Court against the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO), a five-member apex court bench had expressed its dismay over Haq’s statement that the Swiss cases were a ‘closed chapter.’

A senior Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) leader, who spoke on conditions of anonymity, said Zardari has particularly told his legal team not to be provoked which could result in confrontation between the government and the superior judiciary.

“Some people want a collision between the executive and the judiciary,” the PPP leader said. (ANI)

Brown subjects Clegg to telephone ‘rant’

London, May 8 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown reportedly got angry and launched a “diatribe” and a “rant” at Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg during a telephone call over suggestion that he should step down from his post.

The BBC reported the confrontation based on remarks by a “very senior Liberal Democrat source who is involved in the negotiations with the Conservatives”.

The source told the BBC’s Jon Sopel that during the leaders’ conversation last night, the tone went “downhill” at the mention of resignation.

Labour Party leader Brown’s approach was threatening towards Clegg.

Clegg was said to have came off the phone assured that it would be impossible to work with Brown because of his attitude towards working with other people, The Telegraph reports.

The Prime Minister’s office has denied the report of Brown’s aggression, describing the chat as constructive.

In contrast, the Lib Dem source said discussions between Clegg and David Cameron, the Conservative leader, had been warm

In an official statement the Lib Dems denied there had been a row, insisting: “Any suggestion that it was in any way angry or hostile would be wrong. It was perfectly amicable and both men just set out what they said in their public statements.” (ANI)

Pak law secretary resigns over Zardari Swiss cases controversy

Islamabad, May 8 (ANI): In an apparent bid to avoid confrontation with the Supreme Court, Pakistan Law Secretary Justice (retired) Muhammad Aqil Mirza has resigned from his post.

Mirza cited health reasons for his resignation, however sources said the main reason behind him stepping down was that he didnot want to appear before the apex court in the sou motu hearing of a case concerning the Swiss graft cases against President Asif Ali Zardari.

The hearing is scheduled to take place on May 13, The Daily Times reports.

Earlier this week, Attorney General Maulvi Anwar-ul-Haq had told the Supreme Court that Mirza had made it clear that the Swiss cases had been closed and that there was no need for any communication with the Swiss government to reopen the multi-million dollar money laundering cases.

Cases against Zardari and 157 others were reopened after the Supreme Court declared the controversial amnesty law, the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) as ‘unconstitutional’ last December.

Zardari and and her assassinated wife Benazir Benazir , were convicted by a Geneva court in 2003 of laundering 13 million dollars linked to kickbacks, but that verdict was overturned on appeal. In 2008, Swiss judicial authorities said they had closed the file related to the case. (ANI)

Thai soldier killed in Red Shirts-security forces clash

Bangkok, Apr 29(ANI): One soldier was killed and at least 18 people were injured during a standoff in Thailand between security forces and the anti-government demonstrators, also known as the Red Shirts.

The soldier was reportedly killed by a shot fired by a member of the security forces.

Violence took place 40 kilometres from Bangkok, where thousands of Red Shirts, supporters of exiled former Premier Thaksin Shinawatra, arrived in a convoy of pick-up trucks and motorbikes to stage a rally as part of the opposition leadership’s attempts to widen protests across the city.

The army said it used real bullets during the standoff, as protesters hurled rocks at soldiers and tried to remove razor wire blocking their access.

Security forces said they had also seized 62 M79 grenades from suspected Red Shirts riding a motorcycle towards the area where the confrontation occurred, The Sydney Morning Herald reports.

The Red Shirts want Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to stand down and declare elections, saying he took power without any legitimate mandate.

Thaksin was ousted by a military coup in 2006 and Abhisit was installed a few years later after army-engineered parliamentary machinations removed political parties supportive of Thaksin.

Abhisit insists he wants to end the conflict peacefully, but there is no clear indication of how he plans to do this, particularly since he called off negotiations with the Red Shirts days ago.

Thailand is reeling from its worst political violence in almost two decades in the capital, where 27 people have died and almost 1,000 have been injured this month in a series of bloody confrontations. (ANI)

‘Hostile’ Musharraf never wanted Bhutto to return to Pak in 2007 for elections

Lahore, Apr.24 (ANI): Former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf had a confrontation with slain Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto over the telephone days before she returned to the country in 2007, Bhutto’s close friend and adviser Mark Siegel has disclosed.

According to Siegel, Musharraf had called Bhutto when she was in the United States to discuss her plans to return to the country and take part in the elections.

An agitated Musharraf advised Bhutto against returning to Pakistan, however, she made it clear that she would go ahead with her plans,a private television channel said.

“It wasn’t a very good conversation. He was very confrontational. He seems to be very hostile. He didn’t want her to return. She made it clear that she was returning and the preparations were underway for her return,” The Daily Times quoted Siegel, as saying.

Siegel also sensationally revealed that after the 2002 general elections, Musharraf had offered Bhutto a deal according to which all cases against her husband, incumbent President Asif Ali Zardari, would be dropped, and he would be released from prison, and given a ministry of his choice if she agrees to alienate herself from the country’s politics for the next 10 years.

“He (Zardari) said he won’t accept the deal under any conditions and would rather spend the rest of his life in jail,” Siegel said.

Siegel said that after the suicide attack on Bhutto on October 18, 2007 in Karachi, in which she had a narrow escape, the former prime minister had sent him an e-mail asking what to do and to whom hold accountable is something happened to her in future.

“Even though I was stunned at her death, I knew I had to continue doing what she told me to. No matter how devastated I felt, I had to go forward and that’s when I released that email to CNN,” Siegel said, but refrained from disclosing details of the mail.

He, however, said that the e-mail asked him to hold Musharraf and others responsible for any untoward incidents. In her mail, Bhutto had also talked about impending threats to her life and how she was denied proper security cover by the authorities. (ANI)

Oman army all set to use India’s INSAS rifles

Kolkata, April 22 — Assault rifle INSAS (Indian Small Arms System), built by the state-run Ordnance Factory Board (OFB), will soon be used by the Royal Oman Army. The indigenously built rifle was sent to Muscat in March and is currently undergoing trial for the Oman army. “Oman has informed us that the rifles have successfully passed the trial run. INSAS will, in all likelihood, be the standard assault rifle of the Royal Oman Army,” said an OFB deputy director-rank official, who spoke on condition of anonymity as he is not authorised to speak to the media. The rifles were subjected to endurance tests for extreme desert temperatures and sandstorms and performed well in both conditions, sources in OFB and Ministry of Defence told Hindustan Times. Developed in OFB’S Ishapore factory, 45 km north of Kolkata, in 1998, it has three variants – an assault rifle, a light machine gun and a carbine. India will be supplying the 5.56 mm assault rifle to Oman. The weapon has been sent as part of the India-Oman comprehensive defence agreement of 2003. “If a deal is struck with Oman, the quantity and size of the deal will not be made public,” said Major General V.K. Narula, additional director general (public relations) of the Indian Army. Equipped with 20 or 30-round transparent magazines, the rifle has an effective range of 450 metres. The loaded weapon weighs around four kilograms.

In 1999, it served the army against Pakistan in the Kargil confrontation.

Transparency missing in ATO system upgrade

Most Australian workers pay their taxes. Many will grumble about it – but most pay it without question and will declare everything they ought to, to avoid a confrontation with the dreaded tax man.

And some Australians go to extraordinary lengths to avoid paying it.

In a famous and testy appearance before a parliamentary inquiry, the late Kerry Packer said “Of course I am minimising my tax. And if anybody in this country doesn’t minimise their tax, they want their heads read, because as a government, I can tell you you’re not spending it that well that we should be donating extra!”

If he was still around, this week I think he’d be asking for a refund of the tax he’s paid.

For months, the Australian Tax Office (ATO) has been dealing with glitches with its new computer system, which have led to lengthy delays in processing tax assessments. And for some taxpayers, that’s meant waiting months longer for their refund cheques. In some cases, they’ve waited more than four months.

For the likes of Kerry Packer, that’s not a great imposition – as they have large cash reserves from which to keep paying their employees, their power bills etc.

But for small businessmen and women the “change program” – as the Tax Office quaintly terms it – has led to huge delays in processing refunds, and this has had an enormous impact on their lives.

Some have had to retrench staff, some tax agents say they’ve lost clients – because those customers have lost faith, believing the tax agent has been responsible for the blunders, or hasn’t been truthful about the protracted delays.

An internal tax document given to the ABC this week revealed that hundreds of people are calling the tax office in desperation, to say they were in danger of losing their homes, and in one case, a taxpayer had cancelled surgery for their daughter.

One taxpayer the ABC spoke to said an ATO officer rang him this week and said there was no point in calling the office again to ask when his return was going to be processed, because “there was nothing the tax office could do about it, and when the problem was fixed, everyone would get their money”.

The ATO says in defence, that it has updated its website about progress. But many politicians who’ve been following this saga say they believe the ATO has not been fully up front in declaring the extent of the problems, or the lack of progress in fixing them.

The Opposition’s Sussan Ley says she feels she’s been misled at the highest levels in the ATO about it. She was assured in March, it would be fixed within weeks.

The Independent Senator Nick Xenophon says there should be an Auditor-General’s investigation, as well as an inquiry by the Inspector General of Taxation.

Belatedly, the Government has called in the tax inspector, that development was announced on talkback radio. In an illustration of how hasty the Government’s now moving on this, the terms of reference for that investigation are still being worked out.

Earlier in the week, the ATO asserted it was being transparent about the problem. Yet on the same day this assurance was given the ATO had already sent out an advisory hours before, to tax agents only, informing them that 140,000 assessments had been sent that day, but in error the refund cheques weren’t attached to these letters. This information had not been published on the ATO’s website.

The Minister responsible, Nick Sherry, says the problems should be sorted out within the next fortnight. And the ATO says it’s hiring an extra 800 temporary personnel to process cheques, and that it’s asking full-time staff to commit to overtime to help clear the backlog.

If the cheques are sent in the next 14 days, those waiting for the money will rejoice.

But what all taxpayers are owed from the ATO, is what the office expects of taxpayers: transparency.

Its public declarations must be honest and accurate.

It should also be honest about whether this computer system (which has now doubled in cost to $889 million) will cope when the 2009/10 financial year ends.

Thai military, riot police deployed to thwart Reds from entering financial district

Bangkok, April19 (ANI): Fears of a standoff between the Thai government and the opposition ””Red Shirts”” has prompted the former to deploy hundreds of troops in Silom financial district.

Armed soldiers are patrolling both streets and overpasses with shotguns, assault rifles and riot shields. They have also stacked barbwire on the roadside. According to the acting government spokesman, Panitan Wattanayagorn, “There are several units currently armed to defend themselves from attacks by terrorists who are hiding among the protesters.”

Wattanayagorn, however, declined to comment on whether a crackdown was imminent against the protesters demanding the ouster of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and his government. “The plan to retake the area remains, but operational units will analyze how and when to avoid confrontation and clashes,” he said.

This is the first such deployment since a failed crackdown on anti-government protesters on April 10 that left 25 people dead and over 800 injured.

Weng Tojirakarn, the leader of the Reds””, said protesters would not mobilize in the financial district because soldiers would resort to force there. He said they would rather go to the UN office to seek justice and protest peacefully. (ANI)

Brown ends up last in first UK TV poll debate

London, Apr.16 (ANI): Prime Minister Gordon Brown finished in last in Britain’s first ever television election debate last night.

According to The Sun, Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg, the bookies’ favourite, convincingly clinched top spot – with Conservative chief David Cameron came a comfortable second.

A YouGov snap poll for The Sun put the Lib Dem leader clearly ahead of his rivals, winning just over 50 percent of the full vote.

The results came last night as Brown was accused of using dodgy police figures during the live debate.

On the subject of law and order, he claimed cops would have to spend 80 per cent of their time on the beat under Labour.

In a direct confrontation with Cameron, he also claimed Labour was guaranteeing a rise in police funding.

The leaders of the main political parties went head to head in the first of three televised debates.

Brown said he could cut immigration by training young Brits to fill skills gaps.

Cameron attacked Labour’s hated National Insurance tax rise, calling it a “dark cloud”.

He also hammered the PM on wasting taxpayers’ billions and demanded: “Why should our taxes pay for government waste?”

On defence, all three leaders heaped praise on Britain’s brave armed forces.TV bosses took an on-the-spot decision to allow the debate to overrun by more than five minutes as the leaders had so much to say.

Brown was tetchy in his reactions and responses, while Cameron tried hard to come across as humble throughout. (ANI)

Parliament demands Karzai fill Afghan cabinet posts

(Reuters) – Afghanistan’s parliament has given President Hamid Karzai ten days to name candidates to fill 11 cabinet vacancies, the latest sign of the once-docile body’s increasing tendency to challenge the president.

World

Karzai has left acting ministers in charge of nearly half of his cabinet ministries since January, when parliament twice voted to reject large numbers of his nominees.

He has also had a stand-off with the body over election rules, which precipitated a confrontation with the West and a feud with the White House this month.

A resolution passed by the lower house on Saturday gives Karzai 10 days to name the missing ministers, 20 days to appoint a commission to interpret the constitution and a month to give an outline of state policy, a secretary for the body said on Sunday.

Lawmakers had acted in part in response to anti-Western comments made by Karzai in recent days, parliament secretary Mohammad Saleh Saljogi said.

“The policy outline will clarify our position with regard to foreigners and our neighbors and show us where we are heading. And one individual should not be able to take a historic decision without the approval of the people’s delegates,” he said.

A spokesman for Karzai said the government respected the house’s decision and was trying its best to positively reply to the demands.

Karzai has taken steps in recent days to smooth over a feud with the White House that erupted at the start of this month when he accused the West of carrying out election fraud.

Karzai made those comments after parliament tried to overturn a presidential decree that would strip the United Nations of the power to name the majority of an election watchdog which threw out nearly a third of Karzai’s votes in an election last year.

On Sunday, Karzai appeared at a meeting with elders alongside the commander of U.S. and NATO troops. The White House said on Friday it believed the quarrel with Karzai was over.

(Editing by Peter Graff)

Army ordered to pull back after Bangkok clashes

The Thai government has ordered the army to retreat to its barracks in an effort to avoid further bloodshed on the streets of the capital Bangkok.

Opposition ‘Red Shirt’ protesters are vowing not to back down even though weekend clashes left at least 21 dead and more than 800 wounded.

One of those killed was Japanese cameraman Hiroyuki Muramoto, who joined the ABC in Asia in 1993 before going to work at the Reuters news agency.

Reuters said Mr Muramoto was shot in the chest and had no pulse by the time he arrived at a nearby hospital.

Soldiers and protesters were also among the dead.

The clashes erupted at the weekend when security forces fired rubber bullets and tear gas as they moved into the old quarter of Bangkok to disperse anti-government red shirt protesters.

The soldiers were met by a barrage of rocks, sticks and even petrol bombs.

Someone then started firing live rounds and bullets were fired into the crowd. Hundreds were injured.

The protesters accuse security forces of opening fire with live rounds, an allegation the government denies.

The show of force failed to budge the Red Shirts from their stronghold in the city’s old quarter, and the demonstrators are now vowing to stay on the streets of Bangkok.

“The army tried to disperse us,” says one protester.

“We had no weapons, so many Red Shirts were injured and killed. Because they have used force, the only option for us is to fight back.”

Having failed to push the protesters back or disperse them in any way, the army has now conceded its tactics are not going to work.

There are reports this morning the army has called for a truce with the protesters, in an effort to restart talks to find some sort of solution through compromise, not confrontation.

Government spokesman Panithan Wattananagorn says the government is now pulling back the troops.

“First we are asking the officers to return to their bases and to be ready for the next operations if it’s necessary,” he said.

Live round denial

The Red Shirts have accused the military of firing live rounds into the crowd, but is an allegation that the government denies.

“There were no live bullets shot at the protesters, as far as we have evidence,” said Mr Panithan.

One woman showed the ABC some bullet casings found on the ground. She alleges these were obviously fired into the Red Shirt crowd.

One of her friends sustained a bullet wound to his upper bicep.

The protest has now been dragging on for four weeks.

There have been calls for the king to intervene as he did in 1992 when the last great eruption of violence hit Bangkok.

But big questions remain over the health of the king and whether he can actually intervene and make any difference.

“It would be really good if the king could step in,” another protester said. “We really want to end this and go home.”

The shadow of the democracy monument in the old part of Bangkok is surrounded by seven armoured personnel carriers (APCs) that the Thai army has just abandoned.

There is tension in the crowd, with some people trying to smash army trucks and the APCs, as others try to calm them down.

The military has pulled right back from this Red Shirt stronghold, and for now it seems like neither compromise nor confrontation is working.

Malthouse sorry for Milne ‘rapist’ slur

Collingwood coach Mick Malthouse has apologised to St Kilda forward Stephen Milne but the AFL could still investigate Friday night’s ugly confrontation.

It is alleged Malthouse called Milne a “f..ing rapist” during a heated quarter-time exchange involving players and officials from the two clubs at Docklands stadium.

Milne apparently made derogatory comments about Malthouse’s age – at 56, he is the league’s oldest senior coach.

The two clubs put out media statements late on Sunday night, with Malthouse making a surprising back down and admitting his comments to Milne were “wrong”.

In return, the Saints said Milne apologised for “inappropriate” comments to Malthouse.

The statements followed a day of sensitive negotiations between the two clubs in a bid to close the matter quickly.

The two clubs were prepared to make complaints to the league before their agreement.

But the controversy and its aftermath dominated an eventful weekend in the AFL and the league could well decide that the Malthouse-Milne exchange still demands an official investigation.

“It was only after the match that I reflected fully on the events and my actions at quarter time,” Malthouse said.

“I apologise to Stephen Milne for comments I made in the heat of the moment, which were wrong and I retract them.

“I accept that after 27 years as a coach I should know better than to respond to incidents like this.”

The Collingwood statement added: “Due to the fact that Stephen Milne acknowledges his comments to Mick Malthouse were inappropriate, Collingwood will not be taking action through the AFL regarding his conduct.”

When asked about the incident immediately after the game, Malthouse said he was not talking to St Kilda players.

Soon after Malthouse’s apology, the Saints declared: In response to the statement issued by Collingwood… St Kilda advise that due to Mick Malthouse’s apology [they] will not make an official complaint to the AFL regarding his conduct.

“Stephen Milne accepts the apology that has been made by Mick Malthouse and acknowledges that his comments to an opposition coach were inappropriate.”

Malthouse’s insult to Milne was in reference to a 2004 police investigation into allegations of sexual assault against Milne and team-mate Leigh Montagna.

No action was taken over the allegations.

On Saturday, the Saints appeared set on lodging an official complaint with the league.

In 2000, the AFL tribunal fined Essendon coach Kevin Sheedy $7,500 for making a throat-slitting gesture to West Coast player Mitchell White at halftime of a match.

Earlier on Sunday, Milne’s former St Kilda team-mate Aussie Jones said on ABC Grandstand that Milne was “ropeable” over the incident.

Jones slammed Malthouse and assistant Paul Licuria, who was also involved in the quarter-time confrontation.

Shots fired outside hotel

Police are still looking for a man after two shots were fired in a confrontation outside a Mildura hotel last night.

The incident happened about 11:40pm (AEST) outside the Gateway Tavern in San Mateo Avenue.

It is believed a man called the victim to his car and fired a shot, then hit the victim with the barrel of the gun.

He suffered minor injuries.

Police say the man pointed the gun towards another man in the area and a second shot was fired but that man was not injured.

Detectives are investigating and want any witnesses to come forward.