Ludhiana: Mandeep tops with 92.2%

LUDHIANA: Even as the city students could not make a place for themselves in the top three Panjab University positions in BSc (medical and non-medical) second year, the results of which were declared on Wednesday, they have scored well. Mandeep Kaur of Guru Nanak Girls’ College has topped the city with 92.2%, Government College for Women student Navneet Kaur has secured the second position with 89.93% and SCD Government College’s Tejinder Singh third with 86.93%.

A resident of Dashmesh Nagar, Mandeep, said, ”I used to study in the kitchen, as that was the only place where I could concentrate well. For, I stay with a joint family and most of the times, there was someone or the other in all rooms.” About her success mantra, she added, ”I would revise my lessons daily, no matter how busy I was. I am not a bookworm and would go for shopping even during my exams. And, I did not opt for tuitions, as I prefer attending classes attentively.”

Navneet, a resident of Guru Arjan Dev Nagar, did not let life’s upheavals affect her performance. Though her mother was diagnosed with cancer, she decided to sit in the exams.

”Hard work and faith in god helped me achieve success. And when I was tired, I would listen to music as it is a great stress-buster,” she said.

Tejinder, a resident of New Amar Nagar, said, ”I am very fond of computer games and I played these even during my exams. I had never expected that I would be third in the city… the results have come as a pleasant surprise.”

UN denies receiving Pak govt’s request to delay Benazir murder report publication

Islamabad, Apr.7 (ANI): The United Nations (UN) has rejected reports in the Pakistani media that the government has sought a further delay in the publication of the investigation report of the UN commission probing the former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s assassination.

“We have received no new request,” UN spokesperson Marie Okabe said, adding that the report would be released next week.

The Pakistani media had flashed reports that the government has requested the UN to further delay the publication of the report until June or even beyond, The Daily Times reports.

It may be noted that the report was due to be published last month, but the UN delayed the process following President Asif Ali Zardari’s request.

The three-member UN commission, headed by Chilean Ambassador Heraldo Munoz, was set up following a request by the Pakistani government to probe the December 2007 attack on Bhutto, and began its work in July 2009. (ANI)

L-1 Identity Solutions Acquires Assets of Retica Systems

Accelerates Time to Market for L-1 to Deliver Sophisticated, Low Cost Biometric
Capture Solutions for Large-Scale and High Volume Civilian Identity Management
Programs
STAMFORD, Conn.–(Business Wire)–
L-1 Identity Solutions, Inc. (NYSE: ID), a leading provider of identity
solutions and services, today announced it acquired substantially all of the
tangible and intangible assets of Retica Systems, Inc. including
iris-on-the-move and iris-at-a-distance product inventory, algorithms and
software, and related intellectual property rights and customer contracts. L-1
expects the acquisition will accelerate its time-to-market in delivering
highly-accurate and lower cost biometric solutions for large-scale civilian
identity management programs that require cost-effective and rapid enrollment of
significant numbers of people, or that need to identify people at a distance and
on the move. These applications are most commonly found in large scale
entitlement and credentialing programs, as well as in border crossing, law
enforcement and other security related initiatives.

The products, technology and intellectual property rights acquired from Retica
are highly complementary to L-1`s existing iris recognition solutions portfolio
that combines the power of L-1`s leading Automated Biometric Identification
System (ABIS) software platform with advanced Daugman algorithms and
state-of-the-art hardware devices such as HIIDE and PIER.

Industry tests affirm the top-tier performance and accuracy of the L-1 Daugman
iris algorithm that is incorporated into the ABIS platform and enables on-board
matching of multiple modalities on the HIIDE and iris capture with PIER units.
By acquiring Retica`s Rapid Match, L-1 obtains a set of iris encoding and
matching tools that may be used as an enhancement tool for L-1`s already
powerful Daugman algorithm to continue to expand and enhance its market lead.

Through the acquisition of Retica`s Mobile Eyes, a low cost, portable camera
that captures dual irises simultaneously, and Eagle Eyes, a device that
definitively identifies individuals within randomly moving crowds at variable
distances through the incorporation of surveillance video and dual-iris
recognition, L-1 adds new capabilities to its already robust portfolio of
multi-modal solutions.

“This asset acquisition gives us a greater range of solutions to address a wider
set of opportunities more quickly within the growing market of high-volume and
large-scale civilian identity management programs,” Robert V. LaPenta, Chairman,
President and CEO of L-1 Identity Solutions. “Our existing solutions continue to
dominate high-end identity management applications, such as those used by
military and foreign military services in areas of conflict. With the Retica
assets, we incorporate a solution that addresses broader market applications
requiring lower cost solutions without compromising speed or accuracy. The
Retica assets also open up new opportunities for L-1 outside of the government
market, particularly in commercial identity management applications used by the
gaming, hospitality, healthcare, and other industries.”

About L-1 Identity Solutions

L-1 Identity Solutions, Inc. (NYSE: ID) protects and secures personal identities
and assets. Its divisions include Biometrics / Enterprise Access and Secure
Credentialing solutions, as well as Enrollment and Government Consulting
services. With the trust and confidence in individual identities provided by
L-1, international governments, federal and state agencies, law enforcement and
commercial businesses can better guard the public against global terrorism,
crime and identity theft fostered by fraudulent identity. L-1 Identity Solutions
has more than 2,200 employees worldwide and is headquartered in Stamford, CT.
For more information, visit www.L1ID.com.

Forward Looking Statements

This news release contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and
uncertainties. Forward-looking statements are made pursuant to the safe harbor
provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and reflect
the Company’s current views based on management’s beliefs and assumptions and
information currently available. Forward-looking statements concerning future
plans or results are necessarily only estimates; actual results could differ
materially from expectations. Certain factors that could contribute to such
differences include, among other things, the availability of government funding
for L-1′s products and solutions, the unpredictable nature of working with
federal, state and local government customers, and general economic and
political conditions. Additional risks and uncertainties are described in the
Securities and Exchange Commission filings of L-1 Identity Solutions, including
its Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2009. L-1 Identity Solutions
expressly disclaims any intention or obligation to update any forward-looking
statements.

ID-V

L-1 Identity Solutions
Doni Fordyce, 203-504-1109
dfordyce@L1ID.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

North Korea’s Kim: Mentored, paid, “betrayed” by China

(Reuters) – North Korean leader Kim Jong-il first went to China as a child for safety during the Korean War. He may soon be heading back for a trip seeking to shore up the support that keeps his destitute and derelict state alive.

China | North Korea

The North has a long, deep and troubled relationship with China that some experts liken to a marriage of convenience, where both parties must endure the pain of being together because they would be worse off apart.

“China’s food and energy assistance can be seen as an insurance premium that Beijing remits regularly to avoid paying the higher economic, political and national security cost of a North Korean collapse, a war on the peninsula, or subsuming of the North into the South,” the U.S. Congressional Research Service said in a report earlier this year.

Kim’s expected trip will likely lead to a return to stalled international talks hosted by Beijing on ending Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions, analysts said, while he will try to win sweeteners from China for heading back to the table.

Kim may also be taking his youngest son Jong-un, the likely heir to the family dynasty that has ruled the North for more than 60 years, to introduce him to Beijing’s leaders and win their understanding for his succession plans, they said.

TWO ROADS DIVERGED

North Korea and China began an alliance as Leninist-socialist brothers that was forged in blood when they fought together during the 1950-53 Korean War and strengthened by numerous visits Kim made to learn from Beijing’s leaders while he being groomed to take over the state founded by his father Kim Il-sung.

For Kim Jong-il, China also represents the road not taken in economic reforms. For decades, China’s leaders had encouraged the two Kims to open up their economy and form their own brand of socialism that had room for markets.

“Kim has become very interested in the China model for development and expressed admiration for it but we have seen that North Korea’s leaders are not willing to take the course that China has taken,” said Peter Beck a researcher at Stanford University who is a specialist in Korean affairs.

The rift over economic openness began in the 1980s and led Kim Jong-il and the North’s media to question whether China was betraying socialist ideals.

In 1992, when an emerging China forged formal diplomatic ties with a surging South Korea, the North lashed and against “the unfaithful actions of some traitors of the revolution.”

North Korea’s economy, meanwhile, turned into a basket case following the collapse of the Soviet Union, its main benefactor.

But Kim has painted himself into a corner. Any economic reforms would open his isolated state to the outside world and could undermine his “military first” ideology, which justifies economic hardships at home to build an military strong enough to prevent foreign invaders from attacking.

“They made a critical decision that the market was a threat to the regime and not an opportunity. That is a source of frustration for China that North Korea has not been able to break free of the ideology that they left behind,” Beck said.

Late last year, Kim attacked a burgeoning merchant class with a currency revaluation designed to knock out their cash holdings. It also banned their foreign exchange transactions and set up state institutions to take over their private business.

The moves led to rare civil unrest and raised questions about the stability of the Kim regime.

“There should be no doubt that the North Korean economy has basically collapsed,” said Zhu Feng, a Peking University international studies professor, at a seminar in Seoul last week.

“The big question is whether increasing economic hardship will cause social unrest and political disorder.”

STABILITY ON THE BORDER

China supports Kim because it is worried what could happen if Kim family rule collapses, which could brings chaos to its 1,416-km (880 miles) border and a flood of refugees.

It is also worried about the South taking over the North and bringing its U.S. military ally to the Chinese border.

Kim will likely try to seek Chinese investment during his trip. Beijing may be willing to help, seeing it as money spent to buy stability for its border provinces, experts said.

In 2009, bilateral trade between China and North Korea, with an estimated GDP of $17 billion, was worth $2.7 billion. As the North’s economy has grown weaker since Kim took over power in 1994, China has supplied more food, oil and goods that serve as a lifeline for his broken state.

Kim, knowing that he will receive aid even if he defies his neighbor, has not bent to many of China’s wishes, particularly to end his boycott of six-country nuclear disarmament talks.

“However unpredictable and annoying the North Korean government may be to Beijing, any conceivable scenario other than maintaining the status quo could seriously damage China’s interests,” the Congressional Research Service report said.

(Additional reporting by Christine Kim in Seoul and Chris Buckley in Beijing; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Over 100 believed alive after week in flooded China mine

XIANGNING, China, April 5 (Reuters) – More than 100 miners are expected to emerge alive from a flooded coal mine in north China after more than seven days trapped in pitch dark, rescue and government officials said on Monday.

China has the world’s deadliest coal-mining industry, with more than 2,600 people killed in mine floods, explosions, collapses and other accidents in 2009 alone.

Some 108 survivors were pulled out last Sunday when water surged into the pit that was under construction in Shanxi province. (Reporting by Jacqueline Wong; Editing by Nick Macfie)

UPDATE 1-Japan MOF’s Noda denies extra budget

TOKYO, April 5 (Reuters) – Japan’s government will use budget reserves to support the economy rather than compiling an extra budget, deputy finance minister Yoshihiko Noda said on Monday.

“The government is ready to respond flexibly if the economy shows some changes,” Noda told a news conference.

He stressed that the government has budget reserves worth about 1 trillion yen ($10.60 billion) available for fiscal 2010/11, which started on April 1, and further reserves of the same amount for use in case of emergency.

“The government will use the reserves first,” he said, adding that there had been no discussion of a supplementary budget for fiscal year.

By tapping the reserves, the Democratic Party-led government would avoid the need to issue new bonds on top of a record 44.3 trillion yen ($469.4 billion) in annual issuance already in the budget.

“The DPJ is worried about the election as polls show their popularity is declining,” said Satoru Ogasawara, an economist at Credit Suisse in Tokyo.

Media polls show the Democratic Party of Japan’s lead over the opposition Liberal Democratic Party is narrowing ahead of an election expected in July for parliament’s upper house.

The Democrats need to win an outright majority in the upper house to avoid relying on two small coalition parties.

“At this moment, they may not need to spend more money. Many people are also concerned about the budget deficit, so spending the reserves may not necessarily earn them votes,” Ogasawara said.

Credit rating agencies have threatened to downgrade Japan’s sovereign rating as the government’s ambitious spending plans have fuelled concerns that Japan’s debt burden will continue to grow.

Japan’s public debt is about twice the size of the economy. ($1=94.38 Yen) (Editing by Michael Watson)

Japan Noda: no plan for extra budget

TOKYO, April 5 (Reuters) – Japan’s government will use budget reserves to support the economy rather than compiling an extra budget, deputy finance minister Yoshihiko Noda said on Monday.

“The government is ready to respond flexibly if the economy shows some changes,” Noda told a news conference.

But there has been no discussion on a supplementary budget for fiscal year that started on April 1, he said. (Reporting by Rie Ishiguro)

Intensify diplomacy to ease Indo-Pak tensions: Obama to admin

In a secret directive, President Barack Obama has asked his administration to intensify efforts to make India resolve its tensions with Pakistan, a priority for progress of the “US goals in the region”.

He has also asked his officials to intensify American diplomacy aimed at easing tensions between India and Pakistan, asserting that without detente between the two rivals, the administration’s efforts to win Pakistani cooperation in Afghanistan would suffer, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The directive, issued in December, concluded that “India must make resolving its tensions with Pakistan a priority for progress to be made on US goals in the region,” the US daily said quoting ‘people familiar with its contents’.

According to officials, the Pentagon, in particular, has sought more pressure on New Delhi, it said.

The only specific US request to New Delhi has been to “discourage India from getting more involved in training the Afghan military, to ease Pakistani concerns about getting squeezed by India on two borders”, the journal said quoting US and Indian officials.

The move comes amid continued requests by Pakistan for an intercession by the US in Indo-Pak disputes, despite a longstanding resistance from India to any mediation by a foreign country.

Pakistan has long regarded Afghanistan as providing “strategic depth” or a buffer zone in a potential conflict with India, and does not want India to have a larger influence in the country.

“Current and former US officials said the discussion in Washington over how to approach India has intensified as Pakistan ratchets up requests that the US intercede in a series of continuing disputes,” it said, adding the White House declined to comment on Obama’s directive or on the debate within the administration over India policy.

The directive to top foreign-policy and national-security officials was summarised in a memo written by National Security Adviser James Jones at the end of the White House’s three-month review of Afghan war policy in December, the journal said.

US military officials were circumspect about what specific moves they would like to see from New Delhi, the Journal said.

But according to people who have discussed India policy with Pentagon officials, the ideas discussed in internal debates include reducing the number of Indian troops in Kashmir or pulling back forces along the border, it said.

A 56-page dossier presented by the Pakistani government to the Obama administration ahead of Strategic Dialogue in Washington last month “contained a litany of accusations against the Indian government, and suggestions the US intercede on Pakistan’s behalf”, the journal reported quoting officials as saying.

U.S. expects accelerating job creation – econ adviser

The Obama administration expects U.S. job creation to quicken but economic recovery has a long way to go despite improved trends, White House officials said on Sunday.

“We’re in a very different place than we were a year ago,” White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers told ABC’s “This Week.” “A year ago, we were losing 600,000 jobs a month. Now the process of job creation has started. We expect that it will accelerate.”

The comments by Summers and similar remarks from fellow adviser Christina Romer on another network followed Friday’s Labor Department report that showed the economy created jobs in March at the fastest clip in three years. But the addition of 162,000 jobs was tempered by a stubborn unemployment rate that remained at a 9.7 percent.

Summers, while noting some large businesses were beginning to hire again and negative trends were turning around, said monthly jobless rates can fluctuate and Friday’s report was no reason to become complacent.

Romer added on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that projected economic growth of 3 percent this year is not enough to create a lot of jobs.

“We still face a lot of headwinds,” Romer said.

The pair pushed for congressional approval of tax credits and other incentives for small businesses to expand and spur new hiring.

Summers additionally said a more than 10 percent jump in income tax refunds this spring should trigger spending and boost employment.

REPUBLICANS TAKE EXCEPTION

Senate Republicans, however, took issue with the administration’s analysis of the jobs picture and recommended broader tax relief with less government intervention.

“Washington should be making it easier to hire and to expand, rather than making it more expensive to grow the workforce or their employees’ paychecks,” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell’s office said in a statement.

Increasing exports is the best way to bring back lost U.S. manufacturing jobs, Summers told CNN in a separate interview, adding that commercial practices in a number of countries, including China, must be addressed to achieve this.

Neither Romer nor Summers, however, would publicly back claims by some lawmakers that China manipulates its currency at the expense of U.S. jobs.

Currency issues gained prominence over the weekend in Washington when Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said he would delay a report due April 15 on the currency question.

Some U.S. lawmakers claim China deliberately keeps the value of the yuan low against the dollar as an effective subsidy. They say China is giving its exporters a price advantage and ballooning America’s trade deficit.

Summers said “no one can be satisfied where we are” on the trade imbalance, but that the decision to delay the report was not calculated to engage China on Iran’s nuclear ambitions and other delicate issues.

Chinese President Hu Jintao is due in Washington on April 12 for a nuclear security summit and analysts said it could have been seen as an insult if Washington had labelled China a currency manipulator just days after Hu’s visit.

Summers said economic issues are key to U.S. diplomacy and the administration prefers to take advantage of upcoming high-level US/China economic meetings in Beijing as well as G20 meetings later this spring to address the currency issue.

“Those are opportunities to engage with China, to engage with other countries that have large trade surpluses, other countries who think they can continue to rely on the United States as an importer of last resort,” Summers said.

Romer said the issue would be “high on the agenda” but that ultimately the yuan “needs to be more influenced by market forces.”

The U.S. strategy is to build momentum to cast the matter as one of persuading China to accept greater responsibility as a global trade partner and boost American exports.

(Reporting by John Crawley and Andy Sullivan; editing by Todd Eastham and Vicki Allen)

(For more business news on Reuters Money visit http://www.reutersmoney.in)

Nepal PM says MRP printing being done in India for political reasons

Kathmandu, Apr 5 (ANI): Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal on Monday said the government has awarded the contract to print Machine Readable Passports (MRPs) to India for political and diplomatic reasons.

The Kantipur quoted Nepal as saying that vital information would not be leaked as argued by lawmakers while printing the MRPs in the Indian security press.

He also mentioned that the government had failed to move ahead with a decision of the Parliamentary Public Account Committee (PAC) tender process due to time constraints.

The PAC had quizzed Nepal and Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sujata Koirala over the government’s decision to award the contract to India in violation of the directives of the PAC.

Earlier, the PAC had directed the Foreign Ministry to call for a fresh tender bid to print MRPs and hand over the contract on the competition basis.

Disregarding the PAC directive, on March 19, the cabinet gave its approval to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to grant the contract to print MRPs to an Indian company.

The government had authorised the Foreign Ministry to hand over the MRPs contract to Indian state-owned Security Printing and Minting Corporations, citing the fast approaching International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) deadline and the cancellation of tender process. (ANI)

Delhi residents spend more than other Indians

New Delhi, April 5 (IANS) Residents of Delhi spend more per month compared to people in any other state with large chunk of their money being spent on food items, said a Delhi government report released here Monday.

According to ‘Household Consumer Expenditure in Delhi’ brought out by the directorate of economics and statistics, the monthly per capita expenditure in urban areas of Delhi is the highest in the country.

Releasing the report, Delhi Finance Minister A.K. Walia said: ‘The average monthly per capita expenditure of Delhi has increased from Rs.1,972 in 2007 to Rs.2,078 in 2008. At the national level, the monthly per capita expenditure is Rs.1,472.’

About 37 percent of monthly per capita expenditure of Delhi residents was on food items, the report said.

The report also revealed that about seven percent of total households were headed by female members of the family.

Walia said that as per the survey, the literacy level in urban area of Delhi was 85 percent in 2008.

No change in policy on foreign ownership in banks: Sharma

New Delhi, April 5 (IANS) Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma Monday said the government has no plans to alter its policy on foreign ownership in banks in India.

‘As far as ownership and control are concerned, that has been defined with clarity and the calculation of FDI (foreign direct investment) is much simpler. The policy has worked well,’ the minister told reporters on the sidelines of an event organised by the industry lobby, Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (Assocham).

‘We have to look at it not from a narrow prism, but look at the larger picture,’ he added.

According to the new policy brought about by the government in February this year, an Indian bank in which a foreign investor holds 51 percent stake or more is considered a foreign bank.

Some Indian banks falling under this category have sought clarifications from the finance ministry on the new policy as they fear that future investments by foreign investors could be restricted.

‘There are some banks and talks have been there between the Reserve Bank of India, Finance Ministry and the Commerce Ministry,’ Sharma said.

Shimla to get laser lights

Shimla, April 4 (IANS) To make this popular tourist destination brighter, the Himachal Pradesh government is installing laser lights and high-mast lights in the town, an official said Sunday.

‘Two laser lights and eight high-mast lights would be installed in the town this month. This would give the town a more fairytale look during the night,’ Tourism Director Arun Sharma told IANS.

Also, the Municipal Corporation of Shimla is installing energy-saving streetlights in the town under a project sponsored by the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE).

‘We are installing LED (light emitting diodes) streetlights in Shimla to save power. All conventional streetlight points would be replaced by LED fixtures,’ Assistant Municipal Commissioner K.K. Sharma said.

A Himachal Pradesh State Electricity Board official said that with the installation of new lights, the government is expected to save energy worth Rs.15-20 lakh per annum.

The ‘Queen of Hills’, as Shimla was fondly called by the British, was the summer capital of British India.

SKorean warship diverted after pirates hijack tanker

A South Korean warship is rushing to the area where Somali pirates hijacked a South Korean oil tanker with 24 crew members aboard, the military said on Monday.

The 300,000-tonne Samho Dream was seized yesterday on its way from Iraq to the US state of Louisiana with a crew of five South Koreans and 19 Filipinos.

A South Korean destroyer, which was in the Gulf of Aden on anti-piracy operations, has been ordered to move to waters off Somalia, a Joint Chiefs of Staff spokesman said.

“The destroyer is sailing in a hurry to catch up with the hijacked ship,” he said.

But the spokesman declined to say whether the 4,500-ton destroyer with about 300 soldiers on board has been ordered to intercept the hijacked ship.

Somali pirates have given no word yet but the South Korean government will not engage in any negotiations with them, the foreign ministry said.

Instead the ship’s owner, Samho Shipping, based in the southern port city of Busan, will be in charge of any negotiations, it said.

The company said the tanker’s captain had remained out of contact.

Somali pirates, targeting one of the world’s busiest maritime trade routes, raked in an estimated 60 million dollars in ransoms last year.

A South Korean tuna ship with 25 crew was hijacked by Somali pirates in April 2006. The ship and its crew were released after four months when a ransom was paid.

In 2007 Somali pirates seized two South Korean vessels and 24 crew. The crew were released after six months in captivity.

Karzai: No op without locals’ consent

President Hamid Karzai, under fire for anti-Western remarks, distanced himself from his foreign backers in a speech on Sunday, telling tribal elders Afghans need to see their leaders are not puppets.

Speaking in front of some 1,500 elders at a shura or traditional council meeting in the southern city of Kandahar, Karzai said he would block an upcoming major NATO offensive in the area if it did not have the support of local people.

The commander of US and NATO forces General Stanley McChrystal, who flew down to Kandahar with Karzai, sat on the stage behind the Afghan President but did not speak.

“Afghanistan will be fixed when its people trust their President is independent … when the people trust the government is independent and not a puppet,” Karzai said, adding that government officials should not let foreigners meddle in their work.

“The other day, I told (Barack) Obama: ‘I can’t fix this nation through war,’” he said. “It has been eight years since this situation is going on, we want peace and security… I’m engaged with all my force to bring peace in this country.”

In his speech, Karzai promised to consult tribes before the operation and block it if they do not support it.

US Major General William Mayville, in charge of operations for NATO troops, played down those comments, saying the President was on board for the operation and was only trying to win support for it from the community.

Saudi population not to exceed 26 million – report

The population of Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, will not exceed 26 million this year, a government official said in remarks published on Sunday.

Population growth is one of the biggest challenges for the Gulf Arab state which needs to create tens of thousands jobs and housing for its mostly young natives.

To determine exact population figures the U.S. ally is holding a rare census from this month, the first one since 2004.

The total population, including expatriates, hit 25 million last year and with an assumed growth of 500,000 is not expected to exceed 26 million this year, Abdullah Batil, deputy head of the census project, told Saudi daily al-Hayat.

He gave no further details but the Central Department of Statistics and Information put the number of Saudis of the total population of 25.37 million at 18 million.

Saudi Arabia has pledged investments worth $400 billion to diversify its economy and create new jobs outside the oil industry. It plans a mortgage law to boost home ownership.

Nikkei hits 18-mth peak after solid US jobs data

TOKYO, April 5 (Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei average hit a fresh 18-month high on Monday after U.S. employers created jobs in March at the fastest rate in three years, the strongest signal yet that the U.S. recovery is on a solid footing.

Helped by the yen’s post-jobs data dip to a seven-month low against the dollar, the Nikkei pushed above a 38.2 percent retracement of its slide from a 2007 peak to its 2008 trough, and hit a fresh 18-month high for the fifth straight session.

But popular stock Fast Retailing (9983.T) slid 9.2 percent after the company said its Uniqlo casual-clothing chain’s same-store sales slid 16.4 percent in March from a year earlier, hit by unseasonably cold weather.

Technical indicators such as MACD as well as daily and weekly Ichimoku charts show the Nikkei is in an uptrend. The Nikkei’s relative strength index (RSI), however, has risen to above 70, and has entered levels at which the market is considered overbought.

But Nagayuki Yamagishi, investment strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities, played down worries that the Nikkei’s rally was looking overstretched.

“As long as it rises along with gains in the five-day moving average, an extreme sense of overheating is unlikely to emerge,” said Yamagishi. The Nikkei has mostly moved above its five-day moving average since early March.

U.S. nonfarm payrolls rose 162,000 in March, the largest since March 2007, and only the third time payrolls have increased since the recession struck in late 2007.

The Nikkei .N225 rose 0.5 percent to 11,343.28.

It climbed as high as 11,408.17, its highest since October 2008 and above 11,313.6, the 38.2 percent retracement of its 2007 to 2008 slide, for a second straight session.

The broader Topix index rose 0.6 percent to 995.34.

Yamagishi said the Nikkei may face resistance at 11,600, adding that trade just above that level has been relatively sparse in recent years.

If that level is breached, however, the Nikkei could set its sights on 12,000, Yamagishi said.

In terms of retracement levels, the next major level is the 50 percent retracement of the 2007 to 2008 sell-off near 12,650.

Sharp Corp (6753.T) rose 3.1 percent to 1,246 yen. It plans to start making advanced 3D displays this year that require no special glasses for cellphones and other mobile devices, betting demand for 3D images will grow beyond movie theatres and living rooms to portable machines. [ID:nTOE630063]

The Nikkei business daily also reported on Monday that Sharp plans to diversify into the electronic signboard business by offering 52- and 60-inch LCD panels that can be assembled into large displays at low cost.

Fast Retailing (9983.T) tumbled 9.2 percent to 15,150 yen and was the biggest percentage decliner on the Nikkei 225.

The slide in March sales snapped a trend of generally robust growth since 2008 on the back of hit products like its “Heattech” line of basic garments made of heat-retaining fabric.

Softbank shares fell 3.5 percent, the second-biggest percentage loser among Nikkei 225 stocks, to 2,256 yen on news that Japan’s government planned to make it easier for mobile phone users to switch operators while keeping the same phone. [ID:nTOE63401G]

The move is a risk for Softbank Corp (9984.T) due to its weak network and it’s status as sole provider of iPhone and could prompt customers to switch to NTT DoCoMo, which has a strong network.

NTT DoCoMo (9437.T) shares gained 0.6 percent to 144,000 yen. (Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

Nine alive after week in flooded China mine

XIANGNING, China, April 5 (Reuters) – Nine miners trapped in a flooded coal mine in northern China were rescued early on Monday after more than seven days underground, with signs that over 140 others may also still be alive in the shaft.

Officials have said 153 miners were trapped in the unfinished Wangjialing mine in Xiangning, Shanxi province, after it filled with water from an adjacent underground source over a week ago — one of the worst mine accidents for some time in a nation with notoriously dangerous coal mines.

Some locals believe even more miners were trapped. [ID:nTOE63101B]

The government mobilised 3,000 rescue workers to pump out water and search for trapped miners, but hopes of anyone emerging alive appeared to be dimming until rescuers heard knocking on a mine pipe on Friday.

After frantic pumping, the water level dropped low enough for rescue workers to enter the shaft, who then pulled out the nine, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

“Their blood pressure and heart rates remained normal after having being trapped in the shaft for one week,” Xinhua reported of the survivors.

The rescued survivors were weak but lucid and able to speak despite the ordeal, identifying themselves to doctors, the semi-official China News Service reported.

“Their widespread problem is that after a long time soaking in water, they have partially ulcerated (skin),” the report said.

The Xinhua report said 144 miners were still trapped and “rescue workers heard banging on a metal pipe, indicating further signs of life”.

Another 300 rescuers had gone into the shaft, hoping to find survivors, Chinese television news said. An official helping oversee rescue efforts said it may be Monday afternoon before searchers reach the tunnels where there could be more survivors.

Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang, the senior official in charge of work safety, told the rescuers “to race against time and go all out to continue the rescue work”, the report said.

But many of those 144 appear likely to join China’s toll of thousands of miners killed every year by explosions, shaft collapses, flooding and toxic gas.

Strong demand for energy and lax safety standards have made China’s mines the most dangerous in the world, despite the government’s drive to clamp down on small, unsafe operations where most accidents occur.

The number of people killed in Chinese coal mines dropped to 2,631 in 2009, an average of seven a day, from 3,215 in 2008, according to official statistics.

China has ordered the consolidation or takeover of many private mines. It says the shutdown of many of the most dangerous private operations has helped cut accidents.

But the deadliest accidents are not limited to private firms. The Wangjialing mine was a project belonging to a joint venture between China National Coal Group and Shanxi Coking Coal Group, two of China’s larger state-owned firms.

Relatives of miners and some Chinese media have blamed the firms for ignoring safety requirements in their push to start operations. (Reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Benjamin Kang Lim)

Factbox: Key political risks to watch in Japan

(Reuters) – Japan’s government, its support rate dropping ahead of a mid-year election, faces soaring public debt, leaving it with few options to tackle deepening deflation.

World | Japan

Standard and Poor’s in January threatened to cut Japan’s credit rating, prompting sovereign credit default swap spreads to widen to 90 basis points — the most in 10 months. They now trade around 67 basis points.

Following is a summary of key political risks to watch:

* FISCAL DILEMMA

A record $1 trillion yen budget for the year from April 1 was enacted last month with an all-time high of 44.3 trillion yen ($477.6 billion) in new bond issuance, but the government is resisting pressure to spend more for the fragile economy.

The government’s ability to prevent the economy from slipping back into recession is severely constrained by the huge public debt, already nearing 200 percent of GDP.

Sliding tax revenues mean government income now covers less than half of spending. Efforts to cut budget waste to find funds for new programs have so far fallen short of target.

Finance Minister Naoto Kan in February broached the sensitive topic of consumption tax, saying the government would start discussing tax reform in March. But the government is sticking to its pledge not to raise the tax at least until the next general election, mandated by late 2013.

What to watch:

– The government aims to release a mid-term fiscal reform plan and to finalize a growth strategy in June. Failure to make those policy guidelines credible could disappoint nervous bond investors and push up JGB yields. Japanese media have reported the fiscal plan would include incremental goals to reduce reliance on debt, but analysts doubt it will be enough to allay concerns.

– Data showing deflation has persisted for a full year could prompt calls for extra stimulus ahead of the upper house election in July, but the government would be sensitive to rises in bond yields.

– Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama has approved a plan to raise the limit on deposits at Japan Post, a move some fear could be a ploy to subsidize more bond issuance.

* PRESSURE ON CENTRAL BANK?

The BOJ forecasts three years of deflation and says it is committed to keeping interest rates near zero as long as necessary. Kan, a vocal BOJ critic, says he would favor inflation of 1 percent, roughly matching the central bank’s view, and has urged the BOJ to do its part to achieve that goal. However, the BOJ is not keen on setting an inflation target.

The BOJ eased its ultra-loose monetary policy in March by doubling the size of a funding operation launched in December to 20 trillion yen ($216 billion). But the board was split in its decision and some market players say that means the BOJ may not meet future government demands for easier monetary conditions. Though independent by law, the central bank is required to work closely with the government to align policy and has in the past caved in to government pressure. The current tension makes it harder for markets to forecast policy.

What to watch:

– Persistent deflation could put pressure on the BOJ to buy more government bonds or extend the duration of loans to six months from three.

– Government rhetoric on the role of the central bank will give clues to how much influence the Democrats will seek to have.

* YEN INTERVENTION

Finance Minister Kan’s early comments led some analysts to argue the government will be less tolerant of a rising yen, although others say intervention is highly unlikely for now.

Government officials say currency levels should be determined by markets, but traders still see Kan as favoring a weaker yen.

What to watch:

– Comments by government officials regarding possible currency intervention. Picking a level that would trigger intervention is tricky. Intervening could also be difficult at a time when the Group of Seven is encouraging flexibility in foreign exchange rates, particularly in China.

– Another way of countering a surge in yen strength could be for the Bank of Japan to take more easing steps as it did in December after the yen hit a 14-year high against the dollar.

* FUNDING SCANDALS

The funding scandal ensnaring powerful ruling Democratic Party Secretary-General Ozawa is threatening the party’s chances of the mid-year upper house election win that would clear the way for smoother policymaking.

The Democrats need to win an outright majority in the upper house election to reduce the clout of two small parties whose cooperation is currently needed to enact legislation smoothly. A ruling bloc loss would create a parliamentary deadlock.

Hatoyama is beset by criticism over his own funding scandal, though fewer voters think he should resign, in contrast to the majority who want Ozawa to step down.

What to watch:

– Further falls in voter support for Hatoyama’s government, already below 40 percent, could pressure Ozawa to resign; Hatoyama could also face calls for him to quit.

– Ozawa’s departure could push up voter support temporarily but may delay policymaking because he is seen by many as the real power behind the government and can make tough decisions when others can’t.

* U.S. BASE DISPUTE

Hatoyama is in an increasingly tight spot over a dispute with Washington over a plan to relocate a U.S. Marine base to a less crowded part of Okinawa as he approaches a self-imposed deadline at the end of May. The dispute has frayed ties with ally Washington and fanned doubts among voters about Hatoyama’s leadership skills. Some analysts say he may have to quit if he fails to resolve the row.

What to watch:

– Comments by Hatoyama and other cabinet ministers ahead of an expected visit by the prime minister to Washington in April for a nuclear security summit.

(Editing by Andrew Marshall)

Pakistan tables long-awaited constitutional reforms

(Reuters) – The Pakistani government introduced a constitutional bill in parliament Friday to transfer President Asif Ali Zardari’s sweeping powers to the prime minister, possibly ending months of political wrangling.

World

The set of reforms, known as the “18th Amendment Bill,” is expected to be passed by the two-chambered parliament, effectively turning Zardari into a titular head of state.

The development may help calm political opposition to Zardari, but the government faces mounting pressure from an assertive Supreme Court to reopen corruption cases against the president after it threw out a controversial amnesty law in December.

“I suspect that after the signing of the 18th amendment, it (the political environment) is going to change,” said Samina Ahmed, South Asia director for the International Crisis Group.

“Part of the problem is structural. Nobody knows where the locus of authority lies.”

Because of that uncertainty, she said all branches of government are trying to expand their powers at the expense of the others.

“There’s a little bit of muscle flexing all around.”

But if the 18th Amendment goes through smoothly, the center of authority goes to the parliament, “with the judiciary interpreting” — possibly leading to a less assertive bench.

“It will settle down,” Ahmed predicted.

That hasn’t happened yet. On Friday, Pakistan’s Attorney General Anwar Mansoor Khan resigned, just one day after he told the Supreme Court that the law minister and his ministry were not providing him documents relating to corruption cases against thousands of people, including Zardari.

“It had become impossible for me to work in such a situation,” Khan told Reuters.

Analysts say that even as a ceremonial president, Zardari would still yield considerable influence from his position as head of the Pakistan People’s Party, the country’s largest political party.

The PPP was once led by former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, Zardari’s wife, who was assassinated in December 2007.

Under the proposed constitutional amendments, the president will lose his key powers, including the authority to dissolve the national assembly and appoint powerful military chiefs and the chief election commissioner.

The bill gives the prime minister final say on dissolving the national assembly and appointing the heads of the armed forces. The bill also shifts Zardari’s powers to appoint judges to a commission comprised of senior judges and government figures.

Farah Ispahani, a senior PPP leader, said it was wrong to say the bill “stripped” Zardari of his powers, “as he himself sought to restore the constitution to its original form without the amendments imposed by dictators.”

Most analysts, however, say Zardari only agreed to the reforms reluctantly after intense political pressure.

“FOCUS OF STORMS”

Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani, a staunch Bhutto loyalist, will emerge as the powerful head of the government after these constitutional reforms are adopted. Analysts say his role will come under increased scrutiny in the future.

“You think that the prime minister will become stronger after these amendments but I think now I will be the focus of all storms,” Gilani told parliament before the introduction of the bill.

“These proposals will strengthen democratic institutions.”

The reforms would also abolish the two-term limit on prime ministers, allowing Nawaz Sharif, a two-time former prime minister and now opposition leader, to contest for a third term after general elections due in 2013.

Under the bill, provinces will get greater autonomy, while the mainly ethnic Pashtun North West Frontier Province bordering Afghanistan gets a new name as “Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa” in a bid to represent its dominant population.

The legislation is likely to be passed by far more than the two-thirds super-majority needed in parliament because it has been drafted by a parliamentary committee made up of all political groups.

No date has been fixed for its adoption.

(Editing by Chris Allbritton and Jerry Norton)