Category: East Asia & Pacific

  • Turkey closer to Korean nuclear deal

    Turkey closer to Korean nuclear deal

    The South Korean government has signed a preliminary agreement with Turkey to build two nuclear power plants on the country’s Black Sea coast.

    If the two countries reach a commercial agreement by the end of next year, as they hope, Turkey would become the second export market for South Korean nuclear reactors after the UAE.

    800px Flag of South KoreaYesterday’s announcement, made during a visit to Seoul by Abdullah Gul, the Turkish president, revived hopes of a South Korean win in the country after a first round of nuclear contracts was awarded to Russian companies last month. “The memorandum of understanding marks the first government-level understanding of the will to co-operate on it,” Yoon Sang-jik, the senior secretary for knowledge economy at the office of the South Korean president, told the state news agency Yonhap.

    “It means the first concrete step towards a deal.”

    Two senior sources in South Korea’s nuclear industry said the deal was preliminary and a number of important questions still had to be addressed.

    “The media are talking about it a lot but it’s still under discussion between both countries,” one source said.

    Officials at Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO), the state-owned power company that leads the country’s overseas nuclear programme, had mentioned Turkey as a key potential market along with Jordan, China, Romania, the US and Finland.

    That was after winning the US$20 billion (Dh73.45bn) contract at the end of last year to build four reactors in Abu Dhabi by 2020.

    A KEPCO official said in April that the Korean industry aimed to supply 20 per cent of the world’s nuclear market by 2030, equal to about 80 reactors.

    But the company’s officials have been cautious about deals in which KEPCO would help to finance a reactor in a foreign country and make its return on the long-term sale of electricity. In its agreement to build four reactors on Turkey’s southern coast last month, Russia said it would fully cover the upfront, multibillion-dollar cost of each of the plants and eventually sell 51 per cent back to Turkish state power companies.

    Choi Kyung-hwan, the South Korean minister of knowledge economy, told local press on Thursday that providing financing for reactors in Turkey could prove to be a hurdle for Korean companies.

    “We can’t build plants by wholly establishing funds by ourselves like Russia proposed to Turkey,” Mr Choi was quoted as saying. “Turkey has to be the main player in financing the project, while Korea will partly participate.”

    Turkey has barely any reserves of oil or natural gas and has planned the construction of civilian nuclear reactors for years to reduce its reliance on gas imported from Russia and Iran.

    It initially planned to award construction contracts for nuclear power plants in 1997 but delayed the decision several times and ultimately abandoned the proposal.

    In March 2008, the government invited a new round of commercial bids but received only one, from Russia’s AtomStroyExport.

    The deal was cancelled last year but revived by last month’s political agreement for Russian companies to build four power plants with capacity of 1,200 megawatts.

    The first plant will be in operation in as little as eight years, depending on how long it takes government regulators to approve a construction licence.

    The Turkish government has secured the crucial support of the US government, with which it finalised a civilian nuclear co-operation agreement in May 2008.

    The agreement gives Turkey access to US nuclear parts and expertise that are the basis of many reactor designs in use around the world.

    Chris Stanton
    Last Updated: June 15. 2010 8:03PM UAE / June 15. 2010 4:03PM GMT

    Source: thenational.ae

  • UK to stop development aid to Russia and China

    UK to stop development aid to Russia and China

    mitchell
    Mr Mitchell wants to redirect some of bilateral aid worth £2.9bn

    Britain will stop giving aid money to China and Russia, as “it is not justifiable” any longer, the UK government has said.

    International Developement Secretary Andrew Mitchell announced a review into how the UK funds overseas development work in around 90 countries.

    “The money will be redirected towards those countries where they can make the most difference,” he said.

    In 2008-09, China received more than £40m, while Russia got £190,000.

    Britain’s annual bilateral aid budget stands now at £2.9bn.

    Mr Mitchell said that, apart from Russia and China, “other country programmes which are less effective will be closed or reduced”.

    The news came on the same day as the head of the Ukrainian presidential administration, Serhiy Lyovochkin, told journalists that Russia had agreed to lend Ukraine $4bn.

    China is considered to be the fastest growing economy in the world, while Russia is also among the leaders.

    Mr Mitchell said: “I am determined to get value for money across my department’s work and focus on the big issues such as maternal health, fighting malaria, and extending choice to women over whether and when they have children.”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10334927, 16 June 2010

  • Turkish President: “Fight Against Terrorism Is Most Important Issue Of Turkey”

    Turkish President: “Fight Against Terrorism Is Most Important Issue Of Turkey”

    Monday, 14 June 2010

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul said Sunday that fight against terrorism was the most important issue of Turkey.

    Gul replied to questions of reporters on board the plane en route from Turkey to South Korea.

    “Terrorist organizations are used or motivated sometimes. They don’t have their own rules. Together we should fight against terrorism. We are combating it also by minimizing it and isolating it with all dimensions. Fight against terrorism is always atop the agenda of Turkey,” he said.

    Replying to a question, Gul said, “Turkey will get rid of terrorism.

    Turkey’s standards have been upgraded. The country’s democracy standards are of great importance for isolation of terrorism. We will do whatever we can to get rid of it. There is no other way. We will overcome this issue. Our fight will continue till terrorism is isolated.”


    Monday, 14 June 2010

    A.A

     

    Turkish Weekly

  • Australia expels Mossad station chief over passports in Dubai killing

    Australia expels Mossad station chief over passports in Dubai killing

    11

    Babylon & Beyond

    OBSERVATIONS FROM IRAQ, IRAN,
    ISRAEL, THE ARAB WORLD AND BEYOND

    ISRAEL: Australia expels Mossad station chief over passports in Dubai killing

    It would be difficult to weave as intricate a web as the international spy thriller that first unraveled in Dubai in January. Yet another sinew has been threaded out of the ongoing, worldwide investigation on the killing of Hamas arms procurer Mahmoud Mabhouh.

    In recent days, the Australian foreign minister informed the Israeli Embassy that its Mossad station chief, whose identity remains secret, would be leaving the island continent within a week.

    Stephen Smith spoke to the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, claiming that the officer in question was “involved in state intelligence.” He argued that Australian passports “were deliberately counterfeited and cloned for use” and investigations had proved “beyond doubt” that Israel was involved, reported the Australian publication International Business Times.

    Israeli authorities had a warrant out for Mabhouh’s arrest, as did the Egyptians and Jordanians. In 1989, Israeli authorities had failed to arrest Mabhouh for his recently confessed participation in the murder of two Israeli soldiers.

    Smith concluded that Australia “remains a firm friend of Israel.”

    However, he lamented, “this is not what we expect from a nation with whom we have had such a close, friendly, and supportive relationship.”

    21The chief of Australia’s Security and Intelligence Organization, David Irvine, managed to convince the Australian government that Israel had a hand in the passport counterfeit after a clandestine trip to Israel earlier this month to investigate foul play. Upon his return, he claimed that four of the passports used during the assassination had been Australian counterfeits, according to news reports.

    Smith first announced Canberra’s decision to the U.S. government and then to Israel, and later shared the ruling with the foreign ministers of the United Kingdom, the United Arab Emirates, France, Germany and Ireland. The Brits had also expelled two Israeli diplomats in March because of the use of forged passports in the Mabhouh killing.

    Intelligence-sharing between Australian and Israeli agencies has come to a halt, reported Haaretz.

    Though it was not the first time that Israel had forged passports, Smith claimed, this time violated “confidential undertakings” between the two countries, the Associated Press reported.

    Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Yossi Levy responded, “We regret the Australian move, which in our opinion does not conform to the kind of relations we have with Canberra and their importance.”

    Hamas spokesman Dr. Sami Abu Zuhri told the Palestinian Information Center that Australia should also prosecute Mabhouh’s assassins. At least, he explained, other countries have started to recognize the threat that the “Zionist entity” poses to global security.

    — Becky Lee Katz in Beirut

    Photos:

    Top: One of possibly 26 forged passports, this copy of an Australian counterfeit was used in the assassination attempt. Credit: Dubai authorities.

    Bottom: Chief of Australian intelligence David Irvine led the Australian investigation into the passport forgery case in Israel. Credit: Andrew Taylor / The Sydney Morning Herald.

    , May 25, 2010

  • North Korean Troops ‘Prepare For Combat’

    North Korean Troops ‘Prepare For Combat’

    2:51pm UK, Tuesday May 25, 2010

    Adam Arnold, Sky News Online

    North Korea’s armed forces have reportedly been ordered to prepare for combat as tensions mount with the South over the deadly sinking of a warship.

    The North’s leader Kim Jong-Il is thought to have told his military to be braced for war, as Seoul blares out its own propaganda into the neighbouring rival country.

    As part of psychological warfare operations, South Korea is placing loudspeakers at the border and is also using radio to broadcast messages into the North.

    South Korea is slashing trade and denying permission for the North’s cargo ships to pass through the South’s waters.

    The tensions also spooked global markets, with the FTSE 100 index of leading British companies falling by more than 2%.

    Seoul has blamed Pyongyang for a torpedo strike that sank the warship Cheonan and killed 46 sailors on March 26.

    A team of international investigators concluded last week that a torpedo from a North Korean submarine tore the Cheonan apart.

    The sinking was the South’s worst military disaster since the 1950-53 Korean War, which ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty.

    The North denies any involvement and has warned retaliation would mean war. It has threatened to destroy any propaganda facilities installed at the heavily militarised border.

    The claim that Kim had told his million-strong armed forces to prepare for combat was made by the South’s state-run Yonhap news agency, citing North Korean observers.

    “We do not hope for war but, if South Korea, with the US and Japan on its back, tries to attack us, Kim Jong-Il has ordered us to finish the task of unification left undone during the… (Korean) war,” Yonhap quoted a May 20 broadcast as saying.

    Pyongyang is already subject to a number of UN-backed sanctions in response to its nuclear weapons and missile programmes.

    The US, which has 28,500 troops in South Korea, has thrown its full support behind its ally’s moves.

    Washington is planning two major military exercises off the Korean peninsula in a display of force intended “to deter future aggression” by the North.

    Also, US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is stepping up pressure on China to back international action against North Korea over the sinking of the warship.

    She said peace and security on the Korean peninsula is a shared responsibility between Washington and Beijing.

    Mrs Clinton said the Obama administration expects to work closely with China to “fashion an effective response” to the sinking.

    China, the communist country’s main ally, has remained neutral, but the US wants Beijing to support UN Security Council action against North Korea.

    Sky News Online

  • Peaceful Protest: JOIN TURKISH AUSTRALIANS ON SATURDAY 29th MAY 2010

    Peaceful Protest: JOIN TURKISH AUSTRALIANS ON SATURDAY 29th MAY 2010

    ErmenileriprotestogosterisiWhere: In front of Fairfield Council 86 Avoca road, Wakeley-N.S.W
    Time: 12:00 – 15:00

    Turkish Australians have had enough of the so-called genocide claims by the Armenians & Assyrians and others, who are part of an International conspiracy!!..

    Peaceful Protest against the claims of so-called genocide has been organised by Turkish Australians, we urge all Australians to attend and let Fairfield Councillors know that we Australians are not happy with the actions of the councillors who have no idea what happened in 1915,  A.T.A.G calls on the Australian Government to accept the offer made by the Prime Minister of Turkey to set up a Independent Executive Committee made up of Historians, Forensic Scientists, Academics and Experts to look in to the claims of the co-called genocide, this is the only way that will once and for all set the record straight.. The Armenians and others are refusing to take part in such an Independent Enquiry by an Independent Executive Commission, WHY, yet they continue to LOBBY Local, State and Federal politicians to accept their version of the 1915 incidents… Liberal M.P Joe Hockey (aka, HOKEDONIAN) IS PART OF THE SAME CONSPRICY, that continues to paddle the same LIES AND DISTORTION OF HISTORICAL FACTS…
    more information on this issue to be continued;…