Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Abortions skew sex ratios in Asia

From: AFP

March 15, 2011 5:42AM

ABORTIONS of female fetuses have led to a massive surplus of young unmarried men in India and China, raising fears of an outcast group that could threaten the social fabric, a study says.

The trend took root in the 1980s when ultrasound technologies made it easier for families to detect fetal sex early and to abort if it was not what the parents desired, according to the analysis, which is published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

Sons have traditionally been preferred over daughters in many parts of China, India and South Korea due to social, cultural and financial motivations. Sex-selective abortion is outlawed but can be difficult to enforce.

The phenomenon was first spotted in South Korea in the early 1990s, when the sex ratio at birth (SRB) - typically 105 male births to every 100 female births - rose to 125 in some cities.

Similar rises in male births were seen in China, "complicated by the one-child policy, which has undoubtedly contributed to the steady increase in the reported SRB from 106 in 1979, to 111 in 1990, 117 in 2001 and 121 in 2005," said the study.

India has seen "sex ratios as high as 125 in Punjab, Delhi and Gujarat in the north but normal sex ratios of 105 in the southern and eastern states of Kerala and Andhra Pradesh," it added.

In parts of China where a second child is allowed, after a daughter is the first born, the SRB for the second is 143, suggesting that many choose to abort a second girl fetus in favour of trying again for a boy.

Estimates of China's actual population difference in 2005 pointed to 1.1 million excess males, with men under 20 exceeding the number of females by about 32 million, according to the study, which was led by Therese Hesketh, University College London Centre for International Health and Development.

"These men will be unable to marry, in societies where marriage is regarded as virtually universal, and where social status and acceptance depend, in large part, on being married and creating a new family," said the authors.

Referred to in China as "guang gun", meaning bare branches, these men are presumed to be unable to bear fruit by coupling and raising a family.

"In China and parts of India, the sheer numbers of unmated men are a further cause for concern," said the study.

"Because they may lack a stake in the existing social order, it is feared that they will become bound together in an outcast culture, turning to antisocial behaviour and organised crime, thereby threatening societal stability and security."

Other concerns include the possibility that the surge of unmarried men will boost the sex industry, which has already expanded in India and China over the past 10 years.

However, "the part played by a high sex ratio in this expansion is impossible to isolate; there is no evidence that numbers of sex workers are greater in areas with high sex ratios", said the study.

Ninety-four per cent of unmarried people aged 28-49 in China are male, and 97 per cent of them have not completed high school, it said.

"Despite the grim outlook for the generation of males entering their reproductive years over the next two decades, there are encouraging signs," said the study.

A crackdown on sex-selective abortion in South Korea has resulted in a more normalised male-to-female birth rate in recent years, and China and India are both down from their peak SRBs due in part to public awareness campaigns and relaxed one-child policies.

But it will likely to be several more decades before the sex ratios return to normal, the authors said.

The article was co-authored by Zhu Wei Xing of Zhejiang Normal University in China.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Sinophillia or Sinophobia?

Either way, the Chinese are coming

By ROWAN CALLICK in Islands Business
 
They are eagerly awaited for the fortunes they are said to bring islanders. And they are equally feared for the destruction they are alleged to have on traditional Pacific ways.
Either way, the Chinese are coming. Many are already here in the islands, but the expectation of a far bigger Chinese presence is overwhelming.
And the preparation is almost non-existent, in terms of Pacific understanding of the culture, politics, economy or language of China. Many visits are made there—but usually paid for by the hosts, and with an overwhelming focus on seeking financial and material benefits from a China perceived wrongly as wealthy.
In fact, China's average wealth is lower than that of many islands countries. But its living standards have been growing very rapidly—for reasons which, for the most part, remain mysterious in the Pacific, because of its inadequate understanding of China: hard work, savings, a family focus on education, a government focus on building—and maintaining high quality infrastructure, and a priority on creating the settings needed for business success and thus for jobs, the core factor in development.
In Papua New Guinea, Planning Minister Paul Tiensten has boasted that the country "can become the China of the Pacific." But, while he referred in general terms to "aligning itself with short and long-term government strategies," it is unclear which qualities of China he had in mind.
As Australia and New Zealand review and prepare to restructure their aid programmes in the region, China's Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai stated clearly at the Pacific Islands Forum meeting in Port Vila last August: "China will push forward its relations with the islands countries to a higher level."
But the gap between islander expectations and China's capacity and desire to deliver is growing steadily wider as the performance of Pacific societies continues to trail their citizens' hopes.
No Pacific country is in the top half of the 2010 UN Human Development Index. Many are turning to China, as the great success story of development in this new millennium, to lead the way.

New exploiters
At the same time, in some areas, the Chinese are being demonised as the new exploiters. The truth, as ever, is somewhere in between. And it is all the harder to discover and disseminate, since so few Pacific islanders have the experience and skills to understand and explain what drives China and Chinese business.
Most Pacific leaders visit China with their hands out for personal or national favours, not with their notebooks open ready to observe and note how China has achieved its remarkable development successes.
There is a wide expectation that the best way to achieve maximum material benefits is to set China up to out-perform its apparent Western "rivals" such as Australia, New Zealand and the USA.
This assumes that diplomatic relations and aid are part of a big strategic game in which the winner takes all.
This was indeed the situation when China and Taiwan vied for diplomatic partners in the region. But since the smart and very internationally minded lawyer Ma Ying-jeou won the presidency in 2008, that rivalry has largely been placed in abeyance.
China has eight diplomatic partners among the islands states, Taiwan has six, and the two sides have tacitly agreed to leave the great game at that score for at least a few years to come.
That gives the countries scope to focus not so much on "greasing" the politicians in power as on consolidating their relationships and their support for the countries that recognise them.
China and Taiwan are also now especially keen to participate in regional programmes as "responsible stakeholders" in the international system.
As he proved so often in his long career as an expert island-watcher, the late Professor Ron Crocombe was prescient in his final book, choosing as the topic "Asia in the Pacific Islands: Replacing the West."

Compete for influence
He said in terms of external military influence, the Pacific was known from the 1500s as "a Spanish lake", from the late 1700s as "a British lake", and from World War II "an American lake".
Today, he said, the Asian powers are vying for that title, as China and Taiwan, Japan and India compete for influence.
A century ago, Crocombe said, "Asians were among the least educated, poorest and lowest-status people in the region".
Today, that has all changed. Asia is the main market for the commodities—minerals, oil and gas, timber, fish, tree crops—that the Pacific sells, and increasingly for tourism too.
And as Crocombe wrote, "Islanders do not feature in business or politics in Asia—whereas Asians are prominent in business and influential in politics in the islands".
Islands governments, he said, which after independence sought self-reliance, "now seek foreign investment—in fact, they plead for it".
And as Japan, then Taiwan, Korea and Singapore, and now China, have enjoyed a surge of growth and surplus capital, they have risked some of it in the Pacific, focusing on extraction or speculation more than production, with fishing, logging, land and hotels common targets.
Since the 1990s, Crocombe said, "conditions in the islands have attracted speculative 'frontier' enterprises from Asia seeking short-term gains using opportunistic techniques"—a polite term for corruption.
The key goals of the aid policies of the larger Asian nations, he said, include islands' votes at the United Nations and at other international forums, and resources.
"They try to influence the political and strategic positions of islands governments, as do Western donors, despite denials from all of them."

New Asian paradigm
But Crocombe believed that long after the tides of population, trade and investment have turned in favour of Asia, Western influences were likely to remain strong because of the English language, Western patterns of education, entertainment and organisation—and Christianity.
He lamented that little was being done in the islands to prepare people to gain optimum benefit from the new Asian paradigm.
"Responses are needed across the board—not just in foreign policy and practice, but in the preparation of teachers, curricula, media personnel, politicians, civil servants and the public, as well as adaptation of the economy to benefit from the new potentials."
The biggest island nation, Papua New Guinea, is at the frontier of these new challenges, as so often happens.
It is the first recipient of a major Chinese investment—the $US1.5 billion Ramu nickel mine being developed by one of the country's biggest state-owned businesses, Metallurgical Construction Corporation (MCC).
The succession of problems encountered so far during the project's development—labour issues, landowner disagreements, environmental battles—have placed MCC on a fast learning curve.
The company appeared to have expected that its strong relationship with Prime Minister Michael Somare and elements of the central government should be sufficient to ward off any challenges. But it has since learned the need to address all the stakeholders more directly, and has discovered the fiercely independent nature of the legal system in PNG.
As Bougainville seeks under its new president, the veteran politician and former Catholic priest John Momis, to regain some of its once envied living standards, it is looking to reopen the copper mine closed 21 years ago at the start of the civil war and to attract investment from China—to which Momis was formerly the PNG ambassador.
Momis has joined others in urging that China—to which he recently led a large delegation—be adopted as a model for PNG, stressing the country's success through opening its economy to foreign capital, technology and management skills.
But at the same time as Sinophilia—a love of China—is growing in PNG and elsewhere in the Pacific, so is Sinophobia—a fear or hatred of China.
Bernard Yegoria, a Papua New Guinean studying for a master's degree in international relations at Jilin University in China's north-east, said: "We witnessed the ransacking of Asian businesses in 2009, mostly targeting people of ethnic Chinese origin in major towns because of the disparity of wealth.
"This Sinophobia is growing and could lead to a major social uprising. Chinese entrepreneurs were in PNG a long time before independence and contributed immensely to PNG's development as a sovereign nation.
"But in more recent years, a new wave of Chinese immigrants and business activities has moved in a different pattern.
"The Chinese have adapted to the changes in PNG society, backed by their guanxi (network) system that is similar to our wantok (relative) system.
"We, on the other hand, have failed to evolve the way we do business. As a result, the lack of opportunity experienced by middle and low class citizens has led them to take out their frustrations on foreign-owned businesses"—with the new Chinese migrants, some of whose legality has come under question, in the front line.
So at one level, politicians seek support from China, importers depend on Chinese goods, exporters look to Chinese markets, with businesspeople and officials constantly visiting China, as they have done last year for the Shanghai expo.
At another very different level, there is a disconnect and intense mistrust between grassroots islanders and the new class of Chinese migrants, workers and businesses.
The declaration of peace in the diplomatic war between China and Taiwan, which was especially hot in the Pacific, is a key factor that will permit both countries to start to address such poor perceptions, rather than focusing on consolidating their own supporters and seeking through chequebook diplomacy to entice more countries to join their banners.
Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Palau, Solomon Islands and Tuvalu recognise Taiwan, the other eight islands countries recognise China.
Taiwan's President Ma has admitted publicly that corruption was a side-effect of this diplomatic war, which involves a quarter of Taiwan's total diplomatic partners around the world.
He told ISLANDS BUSINESS during a visit to Solomon Islands in 2010: "We wanted a framework that puts cross-strait relations and our foreign relations on the same plane.
"As we have improved relations with China, countries which are China's allies have done the same with us.'' And Taiwan is now, he said, relaxed about its partners building links with China outside diplomacy.
That regional visit helped him flesh out how Taiwan's new aid programme will function, with different countries hosting technical assistance programmes that can be tailored for most of the six countries—encouraging a return to healthier diets, operating on cataracts, advising on land reform, for instance.
When Ma arrived in the Solomons, he was told bluntly what had to change. The Solomon Star editorialised to him on "the abuse of your taxpayers' money by MPs using Taiwanese aid money as a slush fund. We are begging you to put a stop to this".
Ma said President Frank Kabui twice raised such concerns during a state banquet. "Ever since I got here," he said, he had been confronted about the corrupt use of Taiwanese aid.
He said: "That is exactly our instruction to our ambassador here. We have a watchdog agency in our government structure, the Control Yuan. It is in charge of investigating bureaucratic activities, and our ambassador here knows that very well.
"I sometimes joke to our ambassadors that they have to let their friends know I used to be the justice minister."
For a rare moment, though, he wasn't smiling. "We've been accused before of doing things not quite acceptable by international standards," he said candidly.
China and Taiwan are both offering scholarships to islanders, through the Pacific Islands Forum.
As China's vice-minister, Cui said at the last Forum summit in Port Vila: "China is ready to maintain the high-level exchanges, deepen economic and trade cooperation, and further strengthen cooperation with Pacific islands' regional organisations."
This is a side of China's Pacific strategy that appears to be rarely noticed—but is becoming increasingly important.
China has been prepared, for instance, to provide Fiji with more material support as Western powers hold back until the country's military rulers hold elections, but this has been more modest than many—including the government—had hoped.
Tai chi instruction on the Sukuna Park oval for public servants, while clearly beneficial, does not compensate for the country's economic downturn.
Essentially, China wants to work cooperatively within the islands region—including with Australia and New Zealand, to which it has become as close as to any Western countries.
It looks to Australia for crucial supplies of minerals and has a free trade agreement with New Zealand.
The words of Vice Minister Cui need to be taken as they were intended. China will refuse to be played off as "siding" with any one country or group within the region, where its aid increased by six times from 2005-2008, filling—as Danielle Cave of Lowy Institute in Sydney puts it—"the gap left by US neglect," although Washington, waking up, did send its largest delegation ever to the Forum summit in Port Vila.

Beijing lifting its game
The Lowy Institute presented a report in 2009 that claimed "China lacks a coherent strategy for its aid programme in the Pacific—beyond checking and reversing diplomatic recognition of Taiwan [a goal now made largely redundant]—and tends to pursue short-term objectives.
"China pledges aid in an erratic manner, funds projects without regard to recurring cost, and the secrecy surrounding its programme obstructs development outcomes and breeds suspicion."
Beijing has worked since then to lift its game, in part by getting closer to other major aid donors in the region.
Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi stressed on December 2: "It's important to note that China-US relations in Asia and the Pacific region should be cooperative and win-win—not a zero-sum game."
To turn win-win into an even better win-win-win, requires the Pacific to lift its game too, and to work to understand China and how it works in order to benefit more fully from its extraordinary rise without letting negative elements of that rise overflow into the islands

Tribunal says Somare can remain prime minister during misconduct hearing

A leadership tribunal has ruled Papua New Guinea’s Prime Minister can continue as the country’s leader while it hears allegations of misconduct against him, Radio New Zealand International reports.

The three-member tribunal bench has decided two-to-one in favour of Sir Michael Somare remaining in the top job.

The tribunal is into its third day of hearing 25 allegations that the Prime Minister failed to complete or did not file financial statements from as far back as 20 years ago.

From the witness box Sir Michael has told a packed courtroom he had always submitted his financial records to the Ombudsman Commission.

But the Prime Minister also said that missing financial statements central to the prosecution’s case could have been lost when he moved office or changed jobs, or been lost by a staff member.

Sir Michael was also asked about his financial earnings relating to his statements, and said he never received any extra pay.

 

Julia Gillard under the microscope

From JOHN PASQUARELLI
 
 Juliar's performance in the US should have been a few weeks earlier – she would have won an Oscar!
The 16-year-old Juliar who declared she was a socialist and a feminist when she joined the Labor Party,  became the misty-eyed Juliar PM  when speaking to the US Congress about America's battle during the Cold War and its trip to the moon. 
The young Juliar was an active member of the Socialist Forum which was just a rebadged Communist Party of Australia that  wanted to scrap ANZUS and get US bases out of Australia,  something Juliar's speechwriter obviously wasn't aware of.

 Juliar and her union backers have another hurdle ahead – placed in their path by none other than mining billionaire Gina Rineheart,  who out of the blue has called for us to bring in unskilled Asian guest workers to help out in remote areas of Australia,  which is amazing given that mining today in Australia demands highly skilled workers which includes fluency in English. 

 Is Rineheart in a time warp – back to the days of coolies using picks and shovels? 

What's concerning is that it appears she has made this announcement without consulting with her team? 

More ammunition for serial electioneer Pauline Hanson?

Lihir mine gets OK for K3.5b upgrade

By JASON GIMA WURI

 

THE Lihir gold mine last Friday received the green light to upgrade the capacity of its processing plant at a cost of K3.5 billion, The National reports.

The upgrade will help secure the economic future of the mine on Lihir Island by extending both its life and production outlook.

Speaking at the signing ceremony in Port Moresby for the ministerial approval in principle (AIP) of the capacity upgrade, Newcrest chief operating officer Greg Jackson said the approval was the next to last step in what had been a rigorous and thorough approval process.

“In extending the financial security of the mine, it also extended the social and economic development opportunities for the people of Lihir, the New Ireland province and the state through royalties, taxes and opportunities,” Jackson said.

The mine has thus far contributed more than K5 billion to the economy since 1997.

He acknowledged the contribution of all stakeholders during the rigourous consultation process, with particular reference to the Lihir landowners, government departments and authorities, the New Ireland provincial government, the interdepartmental working group and the minister who had personally visited the mine during the consultative process.

He said the plant upgrade was scheduled for throughput ramp up in 2013.

 

 

Tribunal to decide on Sir Michael's fate today

By JULIA DAIA BORE and JACOB POK

 

PRIME Minister Sir Michael Somare will today know his fate on whether or not he will be suspended from office by the leadership tribunal hearing misconduct allegations against him, The National reports.

This will follow arguments by lawyers from both sides on whether or not the prime minister should be suspended.

Today may see both Sir Michael and accountant Glenn Blake taking the witness stand.

Last Friday, the prime minister’s defence team filed two affidavits at 12.30pm – that of Sir Michael and Blake – just before the tribunal convened at 1.30pm and served the documents to the prosecuting team (from the offices of the public prosecutor and the Ombudsman Commission).

The affidavits were then submitted by counsel representing the prime minister, Ian Molloy, to the tribunal during the hearing.

The tribunal, comprising chairman Roger Gyles and members Sir Bruce Robertson and Sir Robin Auld, asked public prosecutor Pondros Kaluwin what he thought of the late affidavits and he said he needed time until today to peruse the documents before replying.

The tribunal agreed to Kaluwin’s request and adjourned at about 2.30pm, setting 9.30am today to reconvene.

Outside court, counsel assisting the hearing Kerenga Kua said the prime minister’s team would ask for Sir Michael and accountant Blake to take the witness stand.

In his affidavit filed last Friday, Sir Michael stated: “I am aware of my obligations to give the Ombudsman Commission annual financial returns pursuant to the Organic Law on the Duties and Responsibilities of Leadership.

“Initially, I had personally completed my returns and lodged them.

“It has never been my intention not to comply with my obligations in respect of my financial statements.

“I have completed my statements honestly and to the best of my ability.

“However, through pressure of the business of government, the need to travel between my electorate and Port Moresby, and on overseas visits and the constant demands on my time, I acknowledged that my returns fell behind. I regret that.”

Sir Michael stated also that in 2000, he had engaged Blake, an accountant and family friend, to assist him with his outstanding returns and provided Blake the forms for May 1997-98 and May 1998-99.

In Blake’s affidavit, he stated that he came to know the Somare family through his business association with Arthur Somare at the time.

Blake confirmed being asked in 2000 by Sir Michael to assist him with his outstanding returns.

“I remember, specifically, asking him whether there were any earlier outstanding returns and he told me that he had prepared all the previous returns and they had been lodged.”

In relation to the returns being incomplete, Blake stated having difficulties obtaining Sir Michael’s salary details from the parliamentary salary section.

“I was unable to obtain an actual figure from parliament for any one year. No pay advice slips or certificates are issued and, frankly, despite my best endeavours, they were simply unable to tell me what Sir Michael had been paid in any one year.”

Relating to blank spaces in the forms, Blake said it was his “oversight”, adding that the intention was that the blank spaces were to indicate that there was, for instance, no income of that category derived.

Blake expressed being shocked at the Ombudsman Commission’s allegations about the missing statements, saying: “This came as a bombshell to me because it referred to outstanding returns for the years 1994-95, 1995-96 and 1996-97. 

“I have never heard of this before and, of course, it did not accord with what Sir Michael had told me when I was asked to prepare the 1997-98 and 1998-99 returns.

“I looked for any correspondence from the Ombudsman Commission on the subject and could find none.

“I then noted from the Ombudsman Commission’s letter of Oct 18, 2006, that the last correspondence from the commission on the subject was February 1998.

“There was apparently nothing subsequent to Feb 1998 and, certainly, nothing that I have seen.

“If I had any inclination during that eight-year period, that there were allegedly earlier outstanding returns, I would have acted to resolve the situation,” Blake stated, adding that Sir Michael had remained adamant that he had completed and lodged all his returns earlier; prior to those that Blake had been asked to take on to complete for Sir Michael.

In the final paragraph of his affidavit, Blake stated that under the current situation, with the missing returns for 1995, 1996 and 1997 that could not be located anywhere, he had now gone ahead and prepared “new returns” for those same years which Sir Michael had signed and filed last Friday.

He added that had he been aware they had not been lodged, as claimed now, he would have attended to them at the same time he had prepared the returns for the years 1997 and 1999. 

 

 

Office: PM in perfect health

By ISAAC NICHOLAS

 

PRIME Minister Sir Michael Somare is fine, confident and looking forward to facing the leadership tribunal this morning, The National reports.

There have been concerns about his health as he slid down his seat in a temporary lapse during the hearing last Friday morning.

The office of the prime minister has denied any serious health problems, saying Sir Michael will be at the tribunal today.

Spokesperson and the prime minister’s daughter Betha Somare told The National over the weekend that Sir Michael, who did not want to keep the tribunal waiting, had rushed up the ramp at the Supreme and National Court and was out of breath once seated.

She said the prime minister’s short lapse in the courtroom was not serious, but the public prosecutor called for a short adjournment as a precaution.

“He (PM) did not want to keep the judges waiting so he rushed up the ramps and was out of breath. He is fine, confident and looking forward to facing the tribunal tomorrow (this) morning,” she said.

The prime minister’s office also denied speculations that he had again collapsed at his home and was rushed to a private hospital and then flew out of the country for medical treatment at the weekend.

The prime minister had been going abroad for regular medical checks but last Friday’s lapse was unrelated.

Sir Michael is facing charges of misconduct in office for failing to submit his annual returns to the Ombudsman Commission between 1994 and 1997.

The prime minister’s morale and confidence had been boosted by his entire cabinet ministers attending the leadership tribunal last Thursday and Friday.