Posts Tagged ‘Japan’

PM gives rape victim hope

Friday, July 25th, 2008

Peter Alford; 25/7/08

“Jane”, the Australian who for more than six years has struggled to bring a US military rapist to justice, has won Kevin Rudd’s backing - and she believes her quest might be close to ending. Jane, whose real name cannot be disclosed, will today walk into the US embassy in Tokyo with a Japanese judgment against the absconded rapist, a letter of support from the Prime Minister and a demand that US authorities co-operate in bringing him to justice. Jane will also disclose today she knows where the rapist, a former US Navy sailor called Bloke T.Deans, lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin - or where he did until exposure drew close. Mr Rudd has directed Australia’s Tokyo embassy to write to the US Government seeking a response to Jane’s allegations of a cover-up and refusal to pursue the former sailor since he was allowed to flee Japan in 2004.

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Rebirth of a nation

Sunday, July 20th, 2008

20/7/08; The Sun-Herald

For centuries the Ainu had lived on Japan’s northernmost islands, calling their home Ainu Mosir, or Land of Human Beings. Here, they had fished, hunted, worshipped nature and established a culture that yielded Yukar, an oral poem of Homeric length. But, just as with America’s expansion west, the Japanese pushed north in the late 19th century in the first sign of their imperialist ambitions. Japanese settlers decimated the Ainu population, seized their land, rubbished their traditions and renamed it Hokkaido, or North Sea Road. Disease ravaged the population. The Ainu, thought to be descendants of early inhabitants of Japan, had a distinct culture and language some experts say date back to AD1200. They were forced to change their names and banned from traditional hunting and fishing, as part of a harsh assimilation policy.

See: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/news/world/rebirth-of-a-nation/2008/07/19/1216163229922.html

Japanese and Canadian miners’ $500m bet on uranium

Friday, July 11th, 2008

Amanda O’Brien & Elizabeth Gosch; 11/7/08

Japanese and Canadian mining giants have made a $500 million bet on a change of government in Western Australia after agreeing to buy Rio Tinto’s vast uranium deposit in the Pilbara region of the state. The state Labor Government remains vehemently opposed to uranium mining, but with an election expected in October, the sale of Rio Tinto’s Kintyre uranium deposit sets up a major political brawl. Under the deal unveiled yesterday, and which is expected to be completed next month, Canada’s Cameco and Japan’s Mitsubishi Development will pay $US496million ($519million) to buy the deposit, which could be worth up to $5 billion at current uranium oxide prices. Cameco noted yesterday: “Australian governments and political parties generally are becoming more supportive of uranium development.”

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Open Bay Timber Ltd signs 40-year restoration project deal

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Zara Kanu, 9/7/08

East New Britain-based Open Bay Timber Ltd recently signed a new 40-year restoration project agreement with the PNG Forest Authority. The company has committed to increase the area from 12,000 hectares to a reforested 20,000 hectares with planting scheduled to be completed by the end of 2020 at a cost of K32 million. Established in 1971, Open Bay Timber is presently the only Japanese timber company operating in PNG. Company chairman Hiroshi Nakamura said the company started a large scale reforestation project in 1985 and would be one of the largest reforestation companies planting non-conifer trees in the South Pacific region when the new targets were reached. Mr Nakamura emphasised the importance of reforestation worldwide considering the rapid decrease in natural forest resources and the problem of world climate change.

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Garrett ‘whale of a flop’ at IRC meeting

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

28/6/08

Environment Minister Peter Garrett has come under fire from the opposition and Greenpeace for failing to make a dent in Japan’s scientific whaling program at the International Whaling Commission (IWC) annual conference. He was “a whale of a flop” at the meeting, in Santiago, Chile, which ended on Friday, says Opposition Environment spokesman Greg Hunt. Anti-whale hunting nations spearheaded by Australia expressed deep concern at Japan’s skirting of a 1986 moratorium on commercial whaling by hunting hundreds of whales each year in the name of scientific research.

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Dispute saps bid for whale truce

Saturday, June 28th, 2008

Andrew Darby; 28/6/08

A new whaling dispute has sapped confidence that United States-led attempts at reconciliation between nations on the issue will gain ground. Whalers supported a humpback quota in the International Whaling Commission yesterday, even though they had no chance of success. They used the opportunity to attack conservation nations’ arguments and predicted that the US reconciliation efforts would fail. The outburst of acrimony dampened Federal Government hopes that the IWC peace process could end Southern Ocean whaling by Japan. The dispute also overshadowed a conservation reform plan put to the meeting by Australia.

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Garrett steps up whaling pressure

Friday, June 27th, 2008

Andrew Darby; 27/6/08

Federal Environment Minister Peter Garrett has urged Japan to take part in a multinational collaboration in non-lethal Southern Ocean scientific research and to call off whaling. “In support of this new partnership approach … I would specifically ask that Japan suspend its lethal scientific research in the Southern Ocean,” Mr Garrett said in his most direct call yet at this week’s International Whaling Commission talks in Santiago. Earlier in the week he had moderated his criticism of Japan. Tokyo made no response to the partnership call. Glenn Inwood, a spokesman for Japan, said: “Japan feels it does not need to respond to this.” Australia’s non-lethal research partnership proposal, announced by Mr Garrett yesterday, drew wide support from anti-whaling nations at the IWC.

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Australia signs on to truce on whaling

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

Andrew Darby; 26/6/08

The Federal Government, under fire for weakening its opposition to Japanese whaling, has bought into a deal set to muzzle it, at least through the coming Antarctic season. Australia joined a truce at the International Whaling Commission, and will be one of a select group of countries working for agreement. IWC chairman Bill Hogarth cautioned all countries against damaging the peace by pushing their own agendas too hard outside the talks. Within hours of the agreement being reached, Environment Minister Peter Garrett moderated his criticism.

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Japan threat may sink whale body

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

25/6/08

Japan has gone on the attack at the opening of the International Whaling Commission annual meeting in Chile, accusing Australia of bringing nothing to the negotiating table. The Japanese Government, a financial backer of the nation’s whaling fleet, also complained of a lack of rational decision-making at the IWC and described it as “dysfunctional”. A possible resumption in commercial whaling is expected to split the meeting of the 80-member IWC in Santiago. Australia wants to reform the IWC into a conservation body. But Japan has threatened to resume commercial whaling after a suspension of more than 20 years, in a gesture of defiance towards conservationists and anti-whaling governments.

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Peter Garrett and Stephen Smith insist on whaling reform

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Dennis Shanahan; 24/6/08

Australia is pressing ahead with radical reform of the International Whaling Commission, despite signs of compromise from Japan and anti-whaling organisations. As federal Environment Minister Peter Garrett arrived in Santiago, Chile, for the whaling commission’s annual meeting, Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said the IWC could no longer remain a forum at which the number of whales to be culled was determined. Mr Smith said in Canberra yesterday that while Australia would maintain bilateral pressure on Japan to secure whaling reforms, the issue would be pursued “in a multilateral forum like the International Whaling Commission”. “Australia wants to reform the International Whaling Commission,” Mr Smith said.

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