China Web filter rules risky for providers: USTR

(Reuters) – China’s comprehensive Internet filtering regime for political, social or religious content is complex and opaque — creating precarious conditions for providers, the U.S. Trade Representative’s official said in its annual report to the U.S. Congress on Wednesday.

In a report compiled before Google Corp. moved its Chinese search portal to Hong Kong from China this month in a censorship dispute, the USTR said: “changes to Internet filtering can occur without warning or public explanation.”

“Chinese government authorities may issue lists of banned search terms or banned sites weekly, with little justification or means of appeal, putting Internet-enabled services in a precarious position, caught between complying with the law and implementing apparently arbitrary restrictions,” it said.

(Editing by Sandra Maler)

China gas deal to add $14b to Queensland economy

The State Government says a coal seam gas deal will add $14 billion to southern Queensland’s economy over the next decade.

The Queensland Gas Company (QCC) will pipe gas from the Surat Basin in the state’s south to Gladstone in the central region, and then ship to China from 2014.

The deal is hailed by the Federal Government as the biggest liquefied natural gas (LNG) contract in Australian history, with 72 million tonnes of gas to be exported to Asia over the next 20 years.

Geosciences Australia estimates Queensland has enough coal seam gas to power the entire state for more than 1,000 years.

The State Government says it will generate $200 million a year in royalties for Queensland.

The China National Offshore Oil Corporation signed a deal with the British-owned BG Group yesterday.

The deal is subject to environmental approval as well as from the Foreign Investment Review Board.

‘Ready to go’

Queensland Treasurer Andrew Fraser says he is confident the project will clear any hurdles to its approval.

He says work on the 500-kilometre pipeline from the Surat Basin to Gladstone will start this year.

“There’s certainly a range of approval processes that are undertaken in a project this massive, but what this deal means is that as far as the financing of the LNG development goes, this one’s cooked and ready to go,” he said.

But the state Opposition says the Government has to make sure there is appropriate infrastructure for the gas development.

Opposition spokesman Jeff Seeney says the Government should plan ahead.

“It’s not good enough for the Government to do what they’ve done in the past and wait for the infrastructure to become overloaded and then talk about allocating some money,” he said.

“The Government knows these projects are going to happen in central Queensland. They should be allocating some money now.”

‘Enormous’ benefits

Meanwhile, Queensland Resources Council chief executive officer Michael Roche has welcomed the deal.

Mr Roche says it will make Queensland one of the world’s major energy exporters.

“There will be hundreds of millions of dollars in extra royalties … $10 billion a year in revenue and 18,000 jobs,” he said.

Gladstone Ports Corporation chief executive officer Leo Zussino says the potential benefits for the city are enormous.

“It really cements the potential for the LNG industry to actually happen in Gladstone,” he said.

“Obviously what it means is it gives BG enough sale gas to build three production trains, and what we look forward to now is BG getting through their EIS [environment impact statement] process and hopefully us getting through our dredging approvals ”

Mr Zussino says the region will be transformed.

“Subject the environmental approvals being obtained, I have no doubt that Gladstone is going to be converted into one of the most significant LNG production centres in the world,” he said.

Environmental concerns

Queensland Conservation Council spokesman Toby Hutcheon says he is not entirely opposed to a gas deal.

However, Mr Hutcheon says coal and LNG are big polluters but environmental groups could support the idea if the gas replaced coal exports.

“Both of them are fossil fuels,” he said.

“We are not dead-set against it. The gas is cleaner than coal, but we are still exporting coal.

“This proposal will add to global emissions unless it displaces coal. If Queensland wishes to continue to export coal and export gas it’ll do nothing for climate change.”

Royalties concerns

The Federal Member for Maranoa, Bruce Scott, has welcomed the deal but says at least a third of the royalty needs to be spent in the Surat Basin.

“I think whilst the agreement to sell LNG to China is important, there should also be an agreement written with the regional councils and the community so that there’s a guarantee of royalty money coming back to the region,” he said.

Meanwhile, the State Member for Condamine, Ray Hopper, says the Government needs to keep a closer eye on QGC’s mining operations.

The Petroleum and Gas Inspectorate has issued a compliance notice to QGC to inspect its gas wells in the Tara region, west of Toowoomba, for leaks.

Mr Hopper says it should not be left to residents to monitor operations in the region.

“It is amazing that it has to be the people that actually make the complaint come forward,” he said.

“This should have been catered for and monitored right from day dot, because if anything was leaking that could be detrimental to a lot of things and it’s got to be done properly right from the word go.”

Western Downs Regional Mayor Ray Brown in southern Queensland says the Government must not be swayed by the lucrative royalties generated for the new coal seam gas deal.

Councillor Brown has welcomed the deal but says there are still issues about coal seam gas mining that need to be addressed.

“We do have a lot of concerns on the ground, right through from land access to are they addressing the issues of underground water acquifiers, salt issue, gas extraction issues,” he said.

“They’re regulated by the State Government. It’s just to make sure the State Government don’t look at the huge dollar signs.”

- Reporting by Fidelis Rego, Sam Burgess, Francis Tapim

Government lauds $60b China gas deal

The Federal Government has announced a $60 billion deal to export liquefied natural gas (LNG) from Queensland to China.

Resources and Energy Minister Martin Ferguson was in Beijing yesterday to witness the deal between British company BG Group and the China National Offshore Oil Corporation.

BG Group will supply 72 million tonnes of LNG over 20 years from its coal seam gas plant in central Queensland.

Gas will be piped from the Surat Basin to Curtis Island near Gladstone.

Mr Ferguson says the 20-year contract is the biggest in Australian history and will have huge benefits.

“The coal seam methane industry potentially means about $50 billion in investment over time, tens of billions in exports and tens of thousands of jobs,” he said.

“From an energy and a resource point of view, Australia is very important to China’s future economic development.”

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says the project will create up to 9,500 jobs.

“There will be jobs in both construction and on an ongoing basis,” she said.

Mr Ferguson says the deal, which is Australia’s second major gas deal with China in six months, shows China and Australia’s economic relationship has not been harmed by this week’s controversial trial of Australian Rio Tinto executive Stern Hu in Shanghai.

The deal is due to start in 2014, but is still subject to foreign investment review board and environmental approvals.

If it is approved, BG Gas will invest about $10 billion to develop the project.

Council fights for Kimberly-Clark future

Wattle Range Council will hire specialist consultants as part of a push to reverse the Federal Government’s changes to anti-dumping legislation that has opened the way for imports of cheap toilet tissue.

Yesterday, Mayor Mark Braes called for urgent intervention from a new-look State Government to ensure that Kimberly-Clark’s Millicent factory and jobs remain sustainable.

He says the consultation process is also part of that push, as a large-scale effort is needed to reverse the decision.

“We’re starting a whole of community campaign, Wattle Range Council,” he said.

“I’m determined to do all I can to either reverse the decision or come at it from some different direction and make sure that Kimberly-Clark sustains.”

Diversify or die: economists warn on mining dependence

The Finance Minister, Lindsay Tanner, has warned that Australia needs to reduce its reliance on mining by revitalising other export industries.

He told ABC local radio that he was worried that a former expansion in tourism, education and wine exports had gone into reverse.

Lindsay Tanner was asked whether Australia’s economy is too dependent on China. This is what he said:

“I wouldn’t so much say China but I would say that we do need to reinvigorate the breadth of our exports,” he told ABC radio 774 in Melbourne.

“We have had a worrying period over the past decade or so where the diversification of our exports in the ’90s kind of stagnated.

“So we had a huge growth in tourism, in education, in specialised manufacturing, in wine, in pharmaceuticals – all kinds of things that helped us to diminish our enormous reliance on minerals, and that’s kind of almost gone into reverse in recent times.

“So it’s not so much that there’s one country that we’re dependent on. It’s that we have I think to some extent too many eggs in that basket.”

The Finance Minister says Australia needs to diversify its exports.

“Minerals are always going to be critical for Australia. There’s no question about that,” he added.

“But our strategy of improving infrastructure and skills and lifting out productivity very much has in mind the need to revive our performance in some of our other exports which have been languishing.”

Dollar damage

What the Finance Minister did not say is that the decline in the export industries that boomed in the 1990s has gone hand in hand with the boom in mining.

“One of the corollaries of the present mining boom is a very high value of the Australian dollar that is hurting the competitiveness of sectors such as agriculture, manufacturing, tourism and education,” said Saul Eslake, the director of the Productivity Growth Program at the Grattan Institute, a policy think tank affiliated with Melbourne University.

“Although the mining industry is generating a lot of prosperity for Australians at the moment, and will do in the foreseeable future, nonetheless the mining industry can’t possibly guarantee prosperity for the vast majority of Australians given that it accounts for less than 3 per cent of total employment.”

Warren Hogan succeeded Saul Eslake as chief economist at the ANZ Bank and he shares his concerns.

“Our real effective exchange rate is at a 30 year high, and this, of course, is a major constraint strategically on this economy,” he explained.

“When you have a commodity boom that drives up your currency because you’re seeing certain of your exports go up in price it puts pressure on other sectors.

“Manufacturing but, I think more importantly in Australia’s case, I’m worried about tourism and I’m worried about education exports. This is the classic Dutch disease. And you know I don’t think many Australians would be happy to think that all we sell is iron ore and coal.”

The term Dutch disease was coined in the 1970s. It described the effect of a huge natural gas reserve discovered in the 1950s which drove up the currency and killed Dutch manufacturing.

It has become synonymous with mineral booms that destroy other export sectors, and it is a real risk for Australia.

“The mining boom, though it may well go on for more than a decade, isn’t going to go on indefinitely any more than previous mining booms have,” Mr Eslake added.

“Future generations of Australians are going to look for other sectors of the economy for their employment prospects long after this present mining boom has come to an end.”

The danger is they will no longer be there by the time the mining boom ends and the currency edges lower.

Industry policy revival?

Frank Gelber, the chief economist with forecasting firm BIS Shrapnel told PM last week that, without intervention, Australia risks becoming a quarry.

“We’re running down the rest of the economy. We’re specialising in minerals, and this is all very nice when we’ve got very high minerals prices and very strong demand,” he said.

“But minerals prices don’t always boom and demand isn’t always strong. The lessons of the last 50 years should have taught us that.”

He is calling on the Federal Government to resurrect unfashionable ideas such as industry policy to help other sectors survive.

“What we need to do is to try to impede the demise of the other tradables industries. Does it mean some sort of an industry policy again? Yes it does.”

However, that concept is anathema to the Department of Treasury.

Back in 2006 the Treasury Secretary, Ken Henry, predicted a commodities super cycle lasting up to 50 years.

He said it would see capital labour relocate to the mining states, enriching those areas and stripping wealth from others, and government policy should be judged on whether or not it backed the trend.

“Proposals that seek to resist the changes should themselves be resisted,” Dr Henry said.

Lindsay Tanner is not talking about resisting the mining boom, and he is not using the phrase “industry policy”.

But if the government wants to maintain a diverse economy and a diverse export base it will have to start asking some hard policy questions, and it may have to buck the Treasury line.

Australia too reliant on resources: Tanner

The Federal Finance Minister says Australia has become too reliant on resources and needs to expand its export base.

Lindsay Tanner says there has been a “worrying period” over the last decade where resources have increased their domination of Australia’s exports.

Lindsay Tanner says the 1990s saw great diversification, with strong exports across a range of sectors, and he says there needs to be a return to that kind of diversification.

“We had a huge growth in tourism, in education, in specialised manufacturing, in wine, in pharmaceuticals that helped us to diminish our enormous reliance on minerals,” he told ABC radio 774 in Melbourne.

“That’s kind of almost gone into reverse in recent times. So it’s not so much that there’s one country that we’re dependent on, it’s that we have, I think to some extent, too many eggs in that basket.”

Mr Tanner says Australia’s future prosperity should not be pinned to one industry, and the Government is looking at ways to boost productivity in other sectors.

“Minerals are always going to be critical for Australia, there’s no question about that,” he added.

“But our strategy of improving infrastructure and skills and lifting our productivity very much has in mind the need to revive our performance in some of our other aspects which have been languishing and, also, to strengthen newer areas like financial services.”

Mining can’t guarantee prosperity

One of Australia’s leading economists says he has some sympathy with Mr Tanner’s view.

The Grattan Institute’s program director for productivity growth Saul Eslake says, while the mining boom certainly has contributed to wealth creation and an increase in tax revenues, it also has some negative side-effects.

He says the recent boom in mining activity may actually be damaging some of the sectors of the economy that Lindsay Tanner wants to revive.

“The mining industry can’t possibly guarantee prosperity for the vast majority of Australians, given that it accounts for less than 3 per cent of total employment,” Mr Eslake told ABC News Online.

“One of the corollaries of the present mining boom is a very high value of the Australian dollar that is hurting the competitiveness of sectors such as agriculture, manufacturing, tourism and education, most of which employ considerably more Australians than the mining industry does.”

He says the currency impacts will be exacerbated by wage pressures as Australia’s economy nears full-employment again.

“Growth in demand from the mining sector could well put upward pressure on wages in other sectors of the economy contributing, in the context of a strong exchange rate, to a further squeeze on the profitability of employers in other parts of the economy and thus diminishing the viability of those industries.”

Mr Eslake says, while the damage to those other industries could be long-lasting, the current mining boom has a finite lifespan.

The danger is that, when the mining boom does come to an end, there will be few other internationally competitive export industries left standing to provide employment alternatives.

“The mining boom, though it may well go on for more than a decade, isn’t going to go on indefinitely any more than previous mining booms have, and future generations of Australians are going to look for other sectors of the economy for their employment prospects long after this present mining boom has come to an end,” he noted.

Mr Eslake says a resource rent charge is likely to be one tax canvassed by the Henry Review, which is due to be released before the Federal Budget is handed down in May.

He says, while the Government would not want to actively constrain the mining sector, shifting the tax burden to those resources companies that are highly profitable by introducing a resource rent tax to replace the current mining duties would make sense.

“There are reasonable arguments for moving away from a production based system of taxing the mining industry, one which takes no account of the profitability of individual mine ventures, to one which allows the community to share in high prices as well as increased volumes of production of mineral resources, whilst also ensuring that in periods when commodity prices are very low mining companies are not punitively taxed.”

PNG-Queensland business council fosters trade: Fraser

Queensland Treasurer Andrew Fraser says the State Government will continue to develop trade links with Papua New Guinea (PNG) despite the appointment of a special trade representative and the setting up of a new business body.

Former Cairns mayor Kevin Byrne has been appointed trade representative.

Mr Fraser, who is leading a PNG trade delegation this week, has also announced plans to establish a PNG-Queensland business council.

It will be chaired by Skytrans and Airlines PNG director, Simon Wild.

Mr Fraser says Government support for business will be needed in a challenging environment:

“There are always challenges when you’ve got the sort of development phase that’s happening here in PNG,” he said.

“But that’s why it’s so important that there is government involvement [and] guidance about the way business is done – about the opportunities and also about the challenges.

“That really emphasises that we want the people on the ground with the links into the business community to be the conduit to provide the links to open the doors to get get decisions that will see business done between the far north and PNG.”

Obama confirms 24-hour flying visit

The White House says US President Barack Obama is pushing ahead with his trip to Asia and Australia because the area is fundamental to America’s economic and security interests.

The trip will be shorter than first planned, with the president spending little more than 24 hours in Australia, and only visiting Canberra.

The White House has revealed the details and expectations for the visit, suggesting climate change, trade and terrorism will all be on the agenda.

Some were wondering if this trip would go ahead at all, after being delayed and condensed so the president could try to win support for his domestic health reforms.

But the White House says the president considers it critical that he builds on the partnerships in the Asia-Pacific region, suggesting it is an area that has been neglected.

In a phone briefing for reporters, National Security Council chief of staff Denis McDonough described Australia and Indonesia as essential partners.

“The Asia-Pacific region is fundamental to the economic and security interests of the United States in the 21st century,” he said.

“And in order to effectively advance those interests, we need to deepen and broaden our engagement in our leadership in the region, which is why we have taken a more aggressive role in engaging groups like APEC and ASEAN.”

The National Security Council’s director for Asian affairs, Jeff Bader, says China is bound to be discussed because the US and Australia share similar perceptions, describing Prime Minister Kevin Rudd as being deeply knowledgeable on the subject.

“We both see China’s emergence as a major economy, a driving economy in the world, as offering great potential to both our countries,” he said.

“Potentials for growth, potential for prosperity of our citizens, who are also looking to reshape the international regulatory system through the G20 in a way that ensures that new actors, such as China, are acting consistent with international norms.”

Mr Bader says visiting Australia will deepen the partnership on environmental and economic issues and that clean energy and trade will be key areas of discussion.

“Australia’s got great beef but we want to make sure that there are not obstacles to the import of US beef,” he said.

“But also the aviation sector is one where the US has found good customers is Australia in the past.”

Before Mr Obama arrives in Australia though, for what will be a brisk visit, he is spending time in Indonesia, home to the world’s largest Muslim population.

It will be the first visit to a Muslim country since he delivered a key address in Cairo in June 2009 and the White House has suggested the president’s return to his childhood home of Indonesia could be another opportunity to bridge the divisions with the Muslim world.

Four Nepali women being sent to Muscat detained at Gorakhpur

Gorakhpur, Sept 19 (ANI): Volunteers of a social service organisation and the personnel of the Anti-Human Trafficking Cell of Uttar Pradesh Police at Gorakhpur detained four Nepalese women.

Reportedly, as per the statement of the women who were taken into custody at the Gorakhpur Railway Station, they were intending to go to Muscat.

These women had entered India through the Sanauli border post.

Although all the four women had their respective passports with them, only two of them could show their endorsed visas for Muscat.

“Our team visited the railway station along with a Nepali counsellor. When she saw these women and spoke to them, they gave some wrong information, which in turn sounded fishy and made us to suspect something was amiss. When we asked them where they were heading, initially they said Oman and again changed their statement saying, New Delhi. When our counsellor asked them for their passports, some said they had it while others said they didn’t. So, we found them suspicious,” said Gyan Kumar, co-ordinator, Maanava Sewa Sansthan, Gorakhpur.

Amidst such confusing utterances by the women, the police believe that one of the women named Dilmaya was trying to send the other three to Muscat by bringing them from Nepal.

She claimed that they were going to Muscat because they had their relatives residing and working there.

“These people held us for interrogation. We asked them either to let us go to Nepal or else allow us to go to Muscat. We have our relatives there,” said Dilmaya.

A couple of months ago, police officials of Gorakhpur had detained five women who were allegedly being trafficked to Gulf countries for flesh trade.

Reportedly, a pimp was escorting these women to Mumbai from where they were to be sent to certain destinations in the Middle East. (ANI)

Emma Watson used gap year to design teen summer wear for People Tree

London, Sep 18 (ANI): Harry Potter star Emma Watson has revealed that she spent her gap year designing a ‘complete teenage summer wardrobe’ for the fair trade fashion brand People Tree.

Watson, 19, who has just enrolled at Brown University in the US, acted as a creative advisor for the ethical fashion collection, which will reach shops in February.

“I wanted to help People Tree produce a younger range because I was excited by the idea of using fashion as a tool to help alleviate poverty and knew it was something I could help make a difference with,” Sky News quoted her as saying.

“I think young people like me are becoming increasingly aware of the humanitarian and environmental issues surrounding fast fashion and want to make good choices but there aren’t many options out there.

“It has been the most incredible gap year project,” she added.

Among items that the teen actress has had a hand in designing were knitwear, cotton t-shirts, jersey dresses, and poplin shorts.

Her range also includes some more bizarre items, including “bohemian hand embroidered bed throws, recycled sweetie wrapper jewellery, banana fibre slouchy beanies and head scarves.”

They will be sold by People Tree, a company which aims at supporting developing countries and promoting environmental projects. (ANI)

India needs to liberalise, change policies to attract more FDI: Nazareth (Corrected)

New Delhi, Sep 18 (ANI): Policy analyst Premila Nazareth has emphasised that India needs to liberalise and change its policies to attract more foreign direct investments.

During the release of the annual study of worldwide investment trends by the United Nations Conference on Trade And Development (UNCTAD) in the national capital, Nazareth also blamed the bureaucracy in India for being the main reason for less inflow of FDI.

“FDI policies do not need much changes to increase fund inflows. Policies are fine. The rest of the policies, bureaucracies and regulations are creating problems for people and these are the reasons behind less inflow of FDI. The policies are liberal, but we need to change and liberalise the sectoral policies of various sectors for private investments,” Nazareth said.

Nazareth further said that India and China are being seen as strong contenders for the Global Direct Investment (GDI) due to their emerging economy status.

“India’s position as a recipient country in the global FDI picture is only going to strengthen over the next few years because global investors are now looking more and more the emerging world as a whole. China and India are seen as very strong players, markets with guaranteed growth in a way and this is only going to grow,” Nazareth added. (ANI)

India needs to liberalise, change policies to attract more FDI: World Bank

New Delhi, Sep 17(ANI): World Bank consultant Premila Nazareth on Thursday emphasised that India needs to liberalise and change its policies to attract more foreign direct investments.

During the release of the annual study of worldwide investment trends by the United Nations Conference on Trade And Development (UNCTAD) in the national capital, Nazareth also blamed the bureaucracy in India as the main reason for less inflow of foreign investments.

“FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) policies do not need much changes to increase FDI inflows. Policies are fine. The rest of the policies, bureaucracies and regulations are creating problems for people and these are the reasons behind less inflow of FDI. The policies are liberal, but we need to change and liberalise the sectoral policies of various sectors for private investments,” Nazareth said.

Nazareth further said that India and China are being seen as strong contenders for the Global Direct Investment (GDI) due to their emerging economy status.

“India’s position as a recipient country in the global FDI picture is only going to strengthen over the next few years because global investors are now looking more and more the emerging world as a whole. China and India are seen as very strong players, markets with guaranteed growth in a way and this is only going to grow,” Nazareth added. (ANI)

Krishna in Belarus to strengthen bilateral ties

Minsk, Sept 17 (ANI): Indian External Affairs Minister S M Krishna has arrived here to foster bilateral ties between the two countries.

Krishna is the first Indian External Minister to visit this country.

On Wednesday, Krishna visited the Victory Square Monument in the city and paid tribute to soldiers who had laid down their lives during the World War II while fighting the Nazi invaders.

“This is the first ever visit by an Indian Minister for External Affairs to Belarus. I think it is an important visit with a view to further cement and strengthen relationship to mutual advantage,” said Ramesh Chander, Indian Ambassador to Belarus.

Krishna’s visit is being seen as important, as it would help to cement ties further between the two countries.

“In 2008, we had a 432 million trade turnover. And this year, it is likely to touch 500 million by the end of the year,” Chander added.

Krishna reviewed guard of honour of the Belarus Army at the Square. He was received by the Deputy Mayor of Minsk, Titenkov Mikhail.

On Thursday, Krishna will call on Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko.

He will also hold talks with his counterpart Sergey Martynov. Two agreements will be signed including one on Cooperation in Physical Education and Sports and an MoU on the Establishment of a Digital Learning Centre in Minsk.

The Digital Learning Centre will impart skills in advanced computing and software creation to young Belarusian students, initially with Indian faculty members and thereafter with trained Belarusian professionals.

Krishna will also pay an official visit to Turkmenistan on September 18 and 19.

He will call on Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdimuhammedov and hold meetings with Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Rashid Meredov.

Krishna will also have a meeting with Minister in-charge of Oil and Gas sector Baymyrat Hojamuhammedov.

Both countries will sign a cooperation agreement during the visit. By Ravi Shankar (ANI)

SunTec wins two strategic customers in Middle East

Trivandrum/United Arab Emirates, Sept 16 (ANI/Business Wire India): SunTec, the leading provider of Relationship-based Pricing and Centralized Billing solutions, has announced two strategic wins in the Middle East region, one of which has helped the company to gain a foothold in Port Operations Billing – its fifth operating domain.

One of the largest banks in UAE has invested in SunTec’s Relationship-based and Centralized Billing solution, while a leading Port Operator of the region has signed up to SunTec to automate and centralize the pricing and billing operations for their vessels as well as cargo operations, helping them to offer a convergent bill to customers and effectively manage multiple contracts.

The solution will be implemented in multiple phases at the leading bank, and by the end of phase-I in December 2009 their ‘Customer Benefits Program’ will go live for retail banking.

The bank will thus be among the first few in UAE offering comprehensive customer benefits programs. SunTec’s solution being the pivot, the bank will be able to scale up their benefits programs to customer with ease.

Furthermore, in future, the bank will leverage SunTec’s solution for streamlining and automating their pricing and billing functions across enterprise.

The solution offers pertinent pricing innovations for the leading port operator also.

The complex multi-national operations of modern-day ports call for streamlined Relationship-based Pricing. New models like cost-based billing have become more relevant, as containerised trade is gaining prominence across the globe.

The situation demands differential pricing to be offered to customers based on the value they bring in.

“With these wins, SunTec has not only gained considerable footprint in the Middle East region, but also established its multi-industry compatibility,” said Nanda Kumar, CEO of SunTec.

“We conceptualized and created our core pricing and billing platform, horizontal in nature and flexible enough to address the pricing and billing requirements of any transaction-based vertical, all the while, helping our customers to imbibe best practices from multiple industries,” added Kumar. (ANI)

Nirupama Rao discusses India, Nepal ties in Kathmandu

Kathmandu, Sep 15 (ANI): Visiting Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao met Nepal Foreign Minister Sujata Koirala and discussed various bilateral issues including greater sharing of vital information between the two countries.

According to Nepalnews, both the leaders also discussed electricity import from India, signing of extradition treaty and the agreements reached during Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal’s visit to India last month.

Talking to reporters after the meeting, Koirala said that the discussion basically revolved around building greater cooperation between India and Nepal, Constitution drafting and the peace process.

“India was keen on providing more assistance to help develop Nepal’s poor infrastructures, building transmission lines for the import of electricity from India, signing of the new extradition treaty and address other trade issues,” Koirala added.

Earlier Nirupama Rao met her Nepalis counterpart Gyan Chandra Acharya and discussed joint strategy for implementation of the 34-point agreement signed between the two countries last month.

During the meeting, she assured substantial amount of Indian investment in Nepal if peace is established in the country.

She also called on former Prime Minister and Nepali Congress President Girija Prasad Koirala at his residence and suggested that Koirala has a great role to play in the days ahead to end the political impasse in Nepal.

She also met CPN UML Chairman Jhalanath Khanal and extended an invitation to visit India on behalf of the government of India. During her meeting she advised Khanal to seek a practical solution on rehabilitation and integration of former Maoist combatants.

Nirupama Rao also met Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal, Deputy Prime Minister Bijay Kumar Gachhadar, Chief of Army Staff Chatra Mansingh Gurung and Maoist leader Babu Ram Bhattrai New Delhi is sending a high-level official to Nepal at a time when the constitution-drafting and peace process has been stalled due to differences among major political parties.

This is Nirupama Rao’s first visit to Nepal after being appointed Foreign Secretary on July 31.

She will also visit Pashupatinath temple and offer her prayers later today. (ANI)

Viagra laced fruit juices flowing in Malaysia!

Kuala Lumpur, Sept 14 (ANI): After being detected in coffee mixtures and sweets, Viagra has now been found in fruit juices.

After raiding more than 30 retailers and distributors dealing in the fruit juice, enforcement officers from the Health Ministry in Malaysia seized several hundred thousand ringgit worth of the product.

This followed after the ministry sent samples of the product for tests which confirmed the presence of sildenafil, reports The New Straits Times Online.

Sildenafil citrate, sold as Viagra, Revatio and various other trade names, is a drug used to treat erectile dysfunction.

According to a Health Ministry source, this was the first time they had encountered a case where sildenafil had been mixed with fruit juices.

The mixture is potent and deadly to people suffering from heart disease and high blood pressure.

“It was brought to our attention after several people complained to the ministry about the suspicious fruit juice,” the source said.

“The producer and distributor had claimed that the fruit juice had been produced from selected natural herbs which could improve sexual performance of men and women,” the source added.

Following test results, investigations were conducted to identify retailers and distributors involved in selling the fruit juice.

“More than 30 simultaneous raids were carried out nationwide. Officers were also concerned that the retailers and distributors would hide their stocks as the product had also been sold via direct selling,” the source said.

“At the raid at the company’s headquarters in Subang Jaya, three marketing officers and the store caretaker were questioned by authorities,” the source added.

Investigations revealed that the fruit juice had been in the local market for the past six months and had received good response from consumers.

The consumer needs to mix the powder with water before drinking. (ANI)

Lover of collapsed MG Rover director paid 1.7-mn pounds for a year’s work

London, Sep 12 (ANI): MG Rover’s director paid his lover 1.7 million pounds for a year’s work, according to a report on the collapse of the car manufacturing giant.

In May 2000, the Phoenix consortium-John Towers, Nick Stephenson, Peter Beale and John Edwards-acquired the business for a nominal 10 pounds from BMW.

BMW ensured that MG Rover could survive for a few years. But from the outset, it was clear that it had no long-term future unless it could find a substantial business partner within the motor industry.

The report into the demise of the giant compiled by Gervase MacGregor, a partner at the accountants BDO Stoy Hayward, and the barrister Guy Newey QC condemns the consortium which made a fortune out of the collapsed car maker, The Independent reports.

They reported that the four directors supplied inaccurate and misleading information about Rover’s finances to MPs, and singled out evidence Beale gave to the Commons trade and industry select committee.

They expressed concern over the plainly excessive fee of almost 1.7 million pounds paid to Dr Qu Li for advice she gave the Phoenix management about potential business partners in China.

For some of the time Dr Li was paid by Rover, she and Stephenson were having an affair. The report protested about the poor “corporate governance” of the Phoenix team: some board members were not invited to several board meetings and inaccurate minutes were taken of discussions.

Despite the failure of MG Rover between 2000 and 2005, the Phoenix Four continued to pay themselves generously right up to the group’s demise in 2005.

Towers, who led the buyout, was paid 8.96 million pounds, Stephenson 8.98 million pounds and Edwards received 9.02 million pounds. Beale, who is accused of misleading the parliamentary inquiry into the company’s collapse, was paid 8.98 million pounds over the four years, while Howe pocketed 5.71 million pounds.

The report cleared ministers of blame for MG Rover’s demise. (ANI)

UN strongly warns Lanka over continued holding of civilians in refugee camps

London, Sep 12 (ANI): The United Nations has strongly warned Sri Lanka that the world body cannot continue funding indefinitely the huge refugee camps in the north of the country, and asked the authorities to allow the hundreds of Tamil civilians to leave.

The senior UN official in the country hardened their stand when they said the camps should be a last resort for civilians with nowhere else to go.

Sri Lanka faces increasing international criticism over its treatment of the estimated 300,000 civilians held in camps, with the EU poised to cancel a trade concession worth one billion dollars to the government, The Independent reports.

Humanitarian aid groups have complained that conditions in the vast Menik Farms camp, where most people remain behind razor wire are still inadequate four months after the decades-long civil war ended.

“Nothing has changed over the past three months for the people in the camps. They are overcrowded, with poor sanitary conditions and inadequate health care. There are concerns about what may happen when the monsoon rains arrive in the next couple of months,” the UK-based Catholic Fund for Overseas Development said on Friday.

The UN’s senior official in Sri Lanka, Neil Buhne, told the BBC: “The best solution is, obviously, that as many people leave as soon as possible; and, for the people who have no place else to go, that the site can become an open one.”

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has also said that he intends to speak directly to Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa to protest against the decision to expel the spokesman for Unicef, accused by the government of acting as “propagandist” for the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

He will also raise the issue of two UN workers in the Tamil-dominated north arrested in June. (ANI)

US marks eighth anniversary of 9/11 terror strike

New York, Sep 11(ANI): The eighth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center twin towers in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, which killed nearly 3,000 people, was observed here on Friday.

On September 11, 2001, four hijacked planes crashed into the twin Towers, the Pentagon, and a field in Pennsylvania.

Memorial ceremonies are to be held at these sites and four moments of silence are observed, at 8:46 a.m., 9:03 a.m., 9:59 a.m. and 10:29 a.m. ET, as these were the timings when the attacks took place.

President Barack Obama attended the wreath-laying ceremony at the Pentagon, where 184 people died.

The names of more than 2,700 victims from the site were also read by family members and volunteers at the New York ceremony, which was attended by U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden.

For the first time, the anniversary was designated as a National Day of Service. On Thursday, Obama issued a proclamation honouring those who died and had urged Americans to mark the anniversary with acts of community service.

Remembering those who lost their lives on the tragic day, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, said: “It is the sacred duty of the living to carry within us the memories of those we lost. While there is pain in remembering the loss, there is sweetness in remembering their lives.” (ANI)

Smugglers using kids as ‘carriers’ on Indo-Nepal border

Kolkata, Sep. 11 (ANI): Smugglers active along the porous Indo-Nepal border are now using children, as ‘carriers’ to smuggle goods like sugar and tobacco.

Hundreds of children, in the age group of six to years, are being hired by the mafia of smugglers to carry out this illegal trade along the Sunauli check point of Uttar Pradesh.

Reportedly, the reliance on children has been so successful in smuggling that the influence of such a modus operandi is even witnessed in West Bengal.

The chosen children are paid around rupees 200 per day for running the errands.

“I travel at least 10 times in a day. I carry five kilograms of sugar in one visit and I get 200 rupees. I also study. I live in Jogiabadi,” said Akhil.

Shree Chand Gupta, President, Indo-Nepal Friendship Organisation contended that it is the poverty stricken parents who are persuading their children.

He added that this trends can turn out to be heinous in the long run if not checked at the right time.

“Today they are carrying sugar but tomorrow they can also smuggle arms and ammunitions on the other side and can work as traitors. Hence officers of both the countries should take a note of this crime as it can also cause a serious threat to the society,” said Gupta.

Physically challenged persons and aged women are also becoming soft targets for smugglers, as they don’t have any regular source of income.

Awareness campaigns in the border villages and schools can put a stop to the malpractice.

“Above all, the customs and the security personnel manning the transit points along the India-Nepal border need to pull up their socks,” Gupta points out. (ANI)