New sugar season to begin with much lower stocks: Pawar

New Delhi, Sep. 1 (ANI): Union Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar on Tuesday said that the new sugar season will begin with much lower stocks, as the production will be hit by lower sugar recovery from cane after the failure of monsoon rains.

“The production of sugar in India during year 2008 and 2009 sugar season has not been adequate to meet the domestic demand of the country. We started with very comfortable opening balance that was around 10 million tonnes of sugar on 1st October 2008. However we expect sugar production during 2009 and 2010 definitely less…somewhat 8-22 billion tonnes,” Pawar told reporters.

Recently, the head of the National Federation of Cooperative Sugar Factories Ltd, J.B. Patel had said India’s opening stocks would be at 2.7 million tonnes, down three quarters from 10 million tonnes on October 1, 2008.

India’s dwindling stocks and rising demand have helped raw sugar futures surge to the highest in nearly three decades on prospects of large purchases by the world’s top sugar consumer.

Weak monsoon rains have further raised supply concerns in India.

Many Indian farmers abandoned cane cultivation last year as they found wheat more attractive after the government raised the purchase price for the grain handsomely.

India had exported five million tonnes of sugar last year, but it swiftly turned into a large importer to counter low supply and rising prices.

Sugar industry officials say the government should lift controls on the sugar sector to correct the demand-supply mismatch. (ANI)

New Zealand Law Society advises against taking judges’ jobs in Fiji

Wellington – New Zealand’s Law Society Thursday urged lawyers and judges not to accept appointments as judges from Fiji’s military regime.

All of Fiji’s judges were sacked last week after three Australian judges sitting as the Court of Appeal ruled that the military government of Voreqe Bainimarama, who seized power in a coup in December 2006, was illegal.

In response to the ruling, the constitution was revoked and emergency powers were declared, including stringent censorship forbidding criticism of the government.

New Zealand and Australian lawyers have frequently served as judges in Fiji, but Law Society President John Marshall said that while the organization could not stop New Zealand lawyers from accepting such jobs, they should avoid working for the Fijian regime.

The society believed this week’s sacking of the judges was unlawful, and the judges were in principle still in office.

“But for practical purposes the regime is not allowing judges to sit, so in this situation I think it would be wrong for New Zealand lawyers to accept appointment as judges in Fiji,” he told Radio New Zealand.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, and the European Commissioner for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Aid, Louis Michel, joined international condemnation of the regime’s actions on Thursday.

“The long-term damage of undermining such fundamental institutions as the judiciary and the media cannot be underestimated,” said Pillay, who called for a return to rule of law, reinstatement of judges and lifting of restrictions on the media.

Michel said in a statement that he was particularly disappointed, because the government had agreed with the EU on a plan that would have restored political order and democracy to Fiji and allowed the EU to provide substantial financial support to rescue the country’s sugar sector and help restore the economy.

“These developments are unacceptable for the international community,” he said. “Commitments must be respected. An early and inclusive domestic political process leading to a return to constitutional order and democracy in Fiji will allow us to provide assistance to Fiji, at a time when global economic prospects are becoming increasingly difficult.” (dpa)