Monday, June 1, 2009

Ex-Japan officials acknowledge nuke deal

TOKYO, June 1 (UPI) -- Four former top Japanese officials have acknowledged that Japan has a secret deal with the United States to allow nuclear weapons into the country.

Although the 1960 deal has been known in Japan since U.S. documents were declassified in the late 1990s, Tokyo has consistently denied it has any arrangement to allow nuclear-armed U.S. aircraft and vessels to stop over in the country without prior consultation. But now four former Japanese vice foreign ministers have confirmed the deal, the Japanese news agency Kyodo reported Monday.

It said the admissions by the top Foreign Ministry bureaucrats may serve to shatter Tokyo's tightly-held public position that it has always remained resolutely opposed to any kind of nuclear weapons on Japanese soil.

One of the four told Kyodo he saw documents spelling out the arrangement and handed them down to his successor, saying, "It was a great secret," while another vice foreign minister said the ministry only informed politicians whom it saw as trustworthy.

The Foreign Ministry again denied any secret deals on the handling of nuclear weapons between Japan and the United States, Kyodo said.

New MFI to issue property loans

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The Phnom Penh Post
Monday, 01 June 2009

First Finance – a joint venture with Phillip Capital Group of Singapore and private investors – says it will lend to the struggling property sector despite the continuing downturn and bad loans

090601_15.jpg Photo by: TRACEY SHELTON
The construction sector has seen reduced activity and an increase in nonperforming loans since the economic crisis hit




















W
HILE most banks remain reluctant to provide real estate loans to customers amid the global financial downturn, a new microfinance institution set to launch June 8 says it will channel lending to house purchases and construction.

"For the first time, home financing will be available to middle- and lower-income Cambodians," Talmage Payne, CEO of newcomer First Finance, told the Post on Friday. "We are going to offer a product that the other [microfinance institutions] are not touching - loans for house purchasing."

First Finance is a joint venture between Phillip Capital Group and local individual investors. The Phillip Capital Group is a Singapore-based Asian financial house with operations in eight countries in the Asia-Pacific and Europe.

"We see largely younger Cambodians getting educations who really want to improve their lives. Many of them want to own their first home," he added.

He said First Finance will offer long-term repayment loans - up to 15 years - with a competitive interest rate. "The medium loan size is US$14,000, and clients will be required to use the title of the house or apartment they are buying as collateral."

The UN Development Programme said last month that more than 30 percent of construction projects "may have been placed on hold due to the global downturn", while analysts have blamed a rise in nonperforming loans this year on the faltering property market.

Payne said that despite the current downturn in real estate, First Finance had not been discouraged to invest.

"The Cambodian economy will come back soon, so we want to be ready," he said. "For those people that have the income and resources, it will be a good time to buy because it's cheaper due to the downturn period."

First Finance will expand to cities in Preah Sihanouk and Battambang provinces by 2010, said Payne.

Hout Ieng Tong, president of the Cambodia Microfinance Association and general manager of Hattha Kaksekar Limited, said Sunday that he welcomed the new institution.

"Most of the MFIs focus lending on small businesses rather than home buyers," he said, explaining that more customers benefitted from loans given to micro-, small- or medium-sized enterprises rather than individual real estate buyers.

He said that Hattha Kaksekar planned to lend $30 million this year, but would not issue property loans.

Bun Mony, a board member of the Cambodia Microfinance Association and general manager of Sathapana Limited, said Sunday this was a new market for MFIs.

"First Finance will be an evolutionary institution, and its focus on loans for house purchases reflects the progress of the real estate sector in Cambodia," he said.

Cambodia passes $2.8b public investment plan

2009-06-01
Xinhua

PHNOM PENH -- Cambodia's Council of Ministers approved a three-year plan drafted by the Ministry of Planning to spend US$2.8 billion on public investment from 2010 to the end of 2012, national media reported on Monday.

The plan related to 536 projects, 389 of which are direct investment with the remainder technical assistance projects, the Cambodia Daily quoted the council as saying.

Minister of Planning Chhay Than said earlier that the majority of the budget would be spent on infrastructure and irrigation systems to boost agricultural production.

The list of planned projects also includes the construction of major roadways, hospitals and schools, Than said.

The new three-year plan is part of the broader national development planning strategy 2006 to 2010, which was approved by the National Assembly in May 2006.

The entire state budget approved for 2009 totals approximately US$1.9 billion, meaning that each year the proposed infrastructure projects would consume the equivalent of about half of the current national budget.

Cambodia women in health battle

Sunday, 31 May 2009 15:47 UK
By Jill McGivering
BBC News, Cambodia

In Cambodia , five women die every day because of inadequate health care during childbirth - making it a leading cause of death among women of child-bearing age.

Health centre
Cambodian villagers are encouraged to give birth in the local health centre

The government is trying to improve health services but it is proving a long slow process.

Lvea village, in north-western Cambodia, is a collection of wooden stilt-houses along a dirt track, hectic with dogs, piglets and chickens.

Most of the women here have been told to have their babies in the local health centre.

So when one woman, Low't, went into labour recently with her ninth child, she made her way there too.

Sad but common story

Her neighbour, Ron, told me what happened:

"The delivery went well - but afterwards Low't started to feel faint. She was losing blood.

"The health centre didn't have the right medicine - so they went eight kilometres (5 miles) by trailer to a larger one.

"The midwife there couldn't stop the bleeding either, and sent them to the hospital in the nearest town.

"They were still travelling, heading downriver by boat, when Low't died."

It's a sad but common story.

Eighty per cent of Cambodia 's population live in rural areas and the public health system is weak.

In recent years, the government has made it a priority to strengthen its network of trained midwives.

Villagers in Lvea
Most Cambodians live in rural areas, where the health system is not strong

They now attend more than half of all births - a significant increase.

Many local clinics function better, even if they're still poorly equipped.

But midwives are paid very little - and can be distracted by running private businesses too.

In Lvea village, the women were cautious about criticising the midwives who tried but failed to save Low't's life.

But one woman made this plea to her government: "Please supply good quality medicine to the health centre so that it can help us."

Progress is being made.

But for women like Low't, it's simply too little, too late.

GM expected to file for bankruptcy Monday

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- General Motors, the nation's largest automaker and for decades an icon of American manufacturing, stood on the brink of a bankruptcy filing and a de facto government takeover on Monday.

The storied history of GM enters a new chapter as the automaker seeks bankruptcy protection.

The storied history of GM enters a new chapter as the automaker seeks bankruptcy protection.

A bankruptcy petition will be filed at 8 a.m., according to a source with direct knowledge of the bankruptcy proceedings.

President Barack Obama will address the nation shortly before noon on Monday to explain the rationale for the filing, and his hopes that this is the best route for a turnaround, two officials close to the situation told CNN.

The day "will rank as another historic day for the company -- the end of an old General Motors and the beginning of a new one," the administration stated in documents released Sunday.

Chapter 11 bankruptcy will aim to help GM emerge with only its more profitable plants, brands, dealerships and contracts. Unprofitable plants, contracts and other liabilities that the company can no longer afford would be left behind.

The rescue of GM is being led by an unlikely coalition of the U.S. and Canadian governments and the company's employees and creditors.

The Obama administration will commit another $30 billion on top of the $19.4 billion it has already given GM to cover its losses and fund its operations.

The U.S. government will get a 60 percent equity stake in the new company after restructuring, as well as $8.8 billion in debt and preferred stock.

A trust established to fund health care benefits for retirees of the United Auto Workers union will own 17.5 percent, and get the right to purchase another 2.5 percent of the company. The governments of Canada and Ontario will lend $9.5 billion and receive 12 percent of the equity in the new GM.

Finally, bondholders who lent GM $27 billion will forgo much of what they are owed and instead get a 10 percent share of the new company plus the right to secure another 15 percent.

In addition, investors who own 54 percent of those bonds have agreed to not fight plans for a quick bankruptcy. The deal could make it easier for GM to restructure by neutralizing some of the opposition to a bankruptcy filing.

But for GM, the bankruptcy filing will be just the beginning of a major overhaul aimed at creating a much smaller company.

As part of the reorganization, GM is expected to cut 20,000 jobs and close about a dozen plants by the end of 2010. The company has already said it will slash 40 percent of its network of 6,000 retail dealerships by next year and drop four of its brands -- Hummer, Saab, Saturn and Pontiac.

The impact of GM's bankruptcy, which follows a Chapter 11 filing by Chrysler on April 30, will ripple across the nation to dealers, suppliers and other businesses large and small that work in the sector.

The company, once the country's largest private-sector employer, has only a fraction of its former staff. Its 80,000 hourly and salaried U.S. employees are half the number it had as recently as 2001.

Nearly 500,000 U.S. retirees, as well as more than 150,000 of their family members, depend on GM health insurance and pension plans. Retirees will see cuts in their health care coverage, although the company's underfunded pension plans are not expected to be affected by a bankruptcy filing.

In addition, some 300,000 employees at GM dealerships will be affected, as well as hundreds of thousands of workers at auto parts makers and other GM suppliers whose jobs depend on the company's survival.

The government takeover -- even one that aims to be temporary -- marks a dramatic turn for century-old GM, which has been brought to a whisper of insolvency by plummeting auto sales and huge losses.

General Motors has reported losses of more than $90 billion since 2005, while its share of the U.S. market has dropped to 19 percent from more than 40 percent in 1980.

The company and Treasury Department officials, under the direction of Obama, have been negotiating for weeks with creditors and the UAW.

But months of complicated talks and court fights remain.

While most of the company's major bondholders have agreed to drop their fight in return for the stake in the company, many small bondholders vowed to fight the reorganization plan, arguing they deserved a larger stake in the company. They argued that Treasury and the union trust fund got too large a stake in the company given their losses.

But it is likely that GM's stock will not be publicly traded for at least six to 18 months. Current GM stockholders will see their holdings in the company completely wiped out by the bankruptcy filing.

GM stock closed trading Friday at 75 cents a share. Adjusted for stock splits, it marked the first time the stock finished at that level since 1932.

Taxpayers would make back the money loaned to GM if shares of the new company increase dramatically in value someday following a successful bankruptcy.

A senior administration official said Sunday that the government is only taking a majority stake in order to try to recapture some of the money that is being provided to GM -- and not to exert control over the company or make decisions on what cars to make or how to make them.

"It is not something we sought or desired. It's a necessary outcome," he said.

The government would try to get back as much money as possible but would also sell its stake as soon as possible, the official said. "There's a natural tension between those two goals."

Many experts have questioned whether the government will be able to recapture its investment in the next few years. GM will still be contending with weak demand for autos and competition from much stronger rivals such as Toyota Motor and Ford Motor.

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Administration officials said they would not be making decisions about directors, although they will be consulted about new board members. Chief Executive Fritz Henderson, who got the job earlier this year when the government forced Rick Wagoner out of the top job, is expected to stay in place, according to an administration official.

Several administration officials said they believe this latest cash infusion will be enough to see the company back to once again being a competitive company, although they would not rule out additional help if the company continued to struggle.