Thứ Ba, 13 tháng 3, 2012

US, EU and Japan challenge China on rare earths at WTO

President Obama: "If China would simply let the market work on its own, we would have no objections''

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The US, Japan and the European Union have filed a case against China at the World Trade Organization, challenging its restrictions on rare earth exports.
US President Barack Obama accused China of breaking agreed trade rules as he announced the case at the White House.
Beijing has set quotas for exports of rare earths, which are critical to the manufacture of high-tech products from hybrid cars to flat-screen TVs.
It is the first WTO case to be filed jointly by the US, EU and Japan.
They argue that by limiting exports, China, which produces more than 95% of the world's rare earth metals, has pushed up prices.
Environmental concerns?
The co-ordinated complaints are the first step in a process that could ultimately lead to sanctions against China.

What are rare earths?

  • Despite their name, rare earths are not particularly rare
  • They are a collection of 17 elements: scandium, yttrium, and some 15 lanthanides
  • Some are as common as copper or zinc, while even the rarest occur in greater quantities than gold or platinum
  • They are essential in the manufacture of many electronic goods
"We've got to take control of our energy future and we cannot let that energy industry take root in some other country because they were allowed to break the rules," Mr Obama said in Tuesday's Rose Garden press conference.
"If China would simply let the market work on its own we would have no objections. But their policies currently are preventing that from happening. And they go against the very rules that China agreed to follow."
In the press conference, Mr Obama also said his new trade enforcement unit - which he established last month, with China the primary target - was ramping up its operations.
"When it is necessary, I will take action if our workers and our businesses are being subjected to unfair practices," Mr Obama added.
Beijing has denied the allegations in the WTO case, saying that it enforced the quotas to ensure there was no environmental damage caused due to excessive mining.
China's Industry Minister, Miao Wei, told state media agency Xinhua that the country was "actively preparing to defend ourselves" against the WTO complaints and denied the quotas were trade protectionism.
"We feel sorry for their decision to complain to the WTO," Mr Miao said.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said: "We think the policy is in line with WTO rules.
"Exports have been stable. China will continue to export, and will manage rare earths based on WTO rules."
China controls almost the entire world supply of rare earths
The filing focuses on 17 rare earth minerals which are essential for making products such as smart phones and camera lenses, as well as many renewable energy devices.
The rare earth complaints follow a WTO ruling earlier this year in favour of the EU. It found China had illegally restricted exports of other materials, such as bauxite, zinc and magnesium.
"Despite the clear ruling of the WTO in our first dispute on raw materials, China has made no attempt to remove the other export restrictions," said EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht.
"This leaves us no choice but to challenge China's export regime again to ensure fair access for our businesses to these materials."
The EU imports 350m euros ($458m) of rare earth minerals from China each year.
The US trade representative's office argues that quotas are one way that China engages in trade protectionism on rare earths, including export duties and pricing requirements.
Welcoming Chinese Vice-President Xi Jinping to the White House last month, Mr Obama warned that China must play by the same rules as other major powers in the world economy.

Mississippi and Alabama primaries spell high stakes

Newt Gingrich (left), Mitt Romney (middle) and Rick Santorum (right)
Voters in Mississippi and Alabama are picking a Republican presidential candidate, with eve-of-poll surveys suggesting a tight three-way race.
A win for front-runner Mitt Romney in the conservative Deep South would be a landmark breakthrough for his campaign.
The stakes are also high for Newt Gingrich, who will face mounting pressure to quit if he cannot win.
Rick Santorum is hoping to muscle Mr Gingrich out of the race and turn it into a head-to-head against Mr Romney.
Polls will close in the two southern states at 20:00 EST (0:00 GMT).
Public Policy Polling's survey published on Monday gave Mr Romney an unexpectedly strong showing in Alabama, where he was leading on 31%.
Mr Gingrich was snapping at his heels in the state, one point behind, while Mr Santorum was in third place by the same margin.
In Mississippi, the opinion pollster placed Mr Gingrich ahead of Mr Romney by 33% to 31%, with Mr Santorum on 27%.
The fourth candidate, Texas Congressman Ron Paul, who has not campaigned actively in either state, was trailing far behind.
Romney's 'away game'
Mr Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, ignored his rivals on Tuesday, instead focusing attacks on Mr Obama.
Campaigning in Missouri, which holds caucuses this Saturday, he told supporters Mr Obama had failed to take responsibility for unemployment and was not bothered by high petrol prices.
Mr Santorum won the vote of Alabama Governor Robert Bentley, but could not secure his pre-primary endorsement.
As spokesman said Mr Bentley voted for Mr Santorum in his hometown of Tuscaloosa because the governor considers him "the most conservative candidate in the Republican presidential race".
The Romney campaign argues that his rivals cannot catch him in the hunt for delegates needed to become the Republican nominee, who will challenge Mr Obama for the White House in November.
Mr Santorum's campaign has appeared to accept that in recent days, with the candidate and his aides telling the media that they are now aiming to prevent Mr Romney reaching the winning post.
That would force a meaningful vote at the Republican convention this summer that Mr Santorum believes he would win, according to reports.

Delegate totals

0300600
  • Mitt Romney
  • Rick Santorum
  • Newt Gingrich
  • Ron Paul
  • 454
  • 217
  • 107
  • 47
A candidate needs 1,144 delegates to win
Mr Romney said last week that the Deep South contests were "a bit of an away game".
The Harvard-educated north-easterner has been accused of pandering to Mississippi and Alabama voters by addressing them as "y'all" at rallies and singing the praises of grits, a popular local corn-based dish.
He has been endorsed by the Republican Governor of Mississippi, Phil Bryant, and well-financed backers have spent twice the combined sum that Mr Gingrich and Mr Santorum's allies have invested in Tuesday's primaries.
Correspondents say Mr Romney, a Mormon, could struggle to win over evangelical Christians, a key element of the Republican base in the Deep South.
He is also viewed with suspicion because he was governor of Massachusetts, a liberal state. But he has benefited from the splitting of the anti-Romney conservative vote between Mr Santorum and Mr Gingrich.
Mr Santorum, a former Pennsylvania senator, is hoping to channel his appeal with social conservatives to score a knockout blow to Mr Gingrich's hopes for a Southern comeback.
"People of Mississippi and Alabama want a conservative," Mr Santorum said on the eve of voting. "If they want a conservative nominee for sure, they can do that by lining up behind us and making this race clearly a two-person race outside of the South."
But Mr Romney told Fox News that Mr Santorum would need to "pull off a miracle" to overtake him in the delegate count.
And Mr Gingrich, campaigning in Birmingham, Alabama, did not seem ready to stand aside.
"I've stayed in this race for two reasons," he said. "I do not believe the two other candidates can beat President Obama."
Mr Romney, who is the Republican establishment's favourite, has now won 17 of the 26 state or territory votes, compared to seven wins for Mr Santorum.
Mr Gingrich, a former House of Representatives Speaker, has only won two contests, both in the South, including his home state of Georgia.
Alabama and Mississippi together have 90 delegates, and both states award them proportionally.
Hawaii and American Samoa also hold caucuses on Tuesday.
The votes take place as two surveys indicated a fall in approval for President Obama, amid anger at escalating petrol prices.
A Washington Post/ABC News poll found that 46% of those surveyed are happy with the president's handling of his job, and 50% disapprove.
A New York Times/CBS poll found 41% approval, and 47% disapproval.
But a third poll released on Tuesday evening offered good news: the Reuters/Ipsos survey put Mr Obama's approval rating at 50%, with 48% disapproving.

Thứ Bảy, 10 tháng 3, 2012

The moral dilemmas of Syria's revolution

The moral dilemmas of Syria's revolution

Syrians protesting in DubaiSyrians have protested in Dubai too
The rebellion in Syria has forced many ordinary people to grapple with new and ordinary dilemmas - such as whether to put country before friends and even family.
She was drinking Guinness in a bar in Dubai - a Syrian revolutionary on a weekend break, taking time out in the five-star hotels.
Small and smiley, she fizzed with energy as she spoke of the battles on the streets.
She stood out amidst the languorous, slightly drunk expats - mostly men - downing their scotch and beers with half an eye on the rugby match showing on a screen the size of a house.
"I go to protests every day but my husband is more cautious," she said.
"He holds back. We just got married. I thought I knew him but now... I hope I live with him for 40 years and we have children. Maybe. Maybe. But I am not sure any more. I don't know what to do."
A revolutionary dilemma. Here is another.
Again a young Syrian on a trip to Dubai. "For months now I have been in Syria, constantly active on the streets taking pictures and putting them online," she told me.

Start Quote

I took the option of being a lying father rather than being one who risks his daughter's life”
Syrian politician who sent his family abroad
"When I came here a few days ago, I met up with some Syrian friends who live here. I'd been on the plane so didn't know what was happening. I asked them. They said they didn't know.
"But what's on the news? They said they hadn't seen it today - they only watch it from time to time. They'd been shopping. It was a shock. I am risking my life there. I could just stay here."
She read a text on her phone and sighed. "Another friend has been arrested," she said. She shrugged her shoulders as if it was nothing, but she looked sad and worried.
So did the man who could not go back to Syria for his mother's funeral. Wearing a T-shirt and baggy navy shorts, he might have been a tourist. In fact he was an artist now living in exile.
His images are considered "anti-system" and his name was on a list that meant he would be arrested at the airport.
I met him in an art gallery - a huge warehouse of a room full of pictures of guns and soldiers and one showing a holy trinity - Obama, Ahmadinejad and Bin Laden.
As he talked about his mother, he wept, shook his head and then broke off the narrative, walking away in despair and grief. A lot of Syrians are crying at the moment.

From Our Own Correspondent

  • Broadcast on Saturdays at 11:30 GMT and Thursdays at 11:00 GMT on BBC Radio 4, and weekdays on BBC World Service
Then there was the Syrian who is still active in Damascus, but has sent his family abroad. A slim, grey-haired man, his lined face an outward sign of the time he has spent as a political prisoner.
Now an opposition politician, his life is clearly at risk. He got his family out but it was not easy. His 13-year-old daughter wanted to stay. He told me how he tried to persuade her she would have to go.
"I said to her we need to get some passports - she asked why. I said maybe we'll go on a summer holiday. But her recurrent question was, 'Why are the other school kids are not getting passports, getting visas and so on?'
"Every time, I made up some reason or another. Once I told her maybe because the others cannot afford to get passports and go on holiday.
"I lied to her. I took up the option of being a lying father rather than being one who risks his daughter's life. And then at home, I would sit her next to me in front of Google Earth, showing her different countries and trying to generate a desire in her to see those places.
"And for some moments, she would say that yeah, she'd like to visit those countries, but the next morning everything changed again. She didn't want to go anywhere.
"When the time came and she had to face up to the fact that she'd be leaving her father behind, she said, 'What will happen to you will happen to me, we're sticking together.'
"And I just paused and thought am I doing the right thing? Is this beneficial for my country or not? Am I under the illusion that I can help my country?
"It's a difficult equation. Am I preferring my fellow countrymen to my own family?"
Finally a cartoonist.
Ali Farzat
"I first met Bashar al-Assad in 1996 - before he was president - he came to one of my exhibitions," he told me.
"He actually laughed at some of the cartoons - specifically at those targeting security personnel - he had a bunch of them with him and he turned to them and said: 'Hey, he is making fun of you. What do you think?'
"He took my phone number and we met often - twice a week, at times. He admired my courage. He wasn't used to listening to opposing views and wanted to listen to me.
"He would come to my place, I would go to his."
Ali Farzat after he was attackedAli Farzat's hands were badly hurt
But then a few months ago, Ali Farzat drew a cartoon which suggested Bashar al-Assad was like Colonel Gaddafi. The response was immediate.
They had black sticks. One of them was telling the other, "Keep beating him on his hands, so he cannot draw any more."
"Was it a direct order from the president?" I asked.
"I don't know."
"Would you meet him again?"
"No. I was born to be a cartoonist, to oppose, to have differences with regimes that do these bad things. This is what I do.
"And the doctor says I can be drawing again in 10 to 15 days."
 How to listen to From Our Own Correspondent:
BBC Radio 4: A 30-minute programme on Saturdays, 11:30 GMT.
Second 30-minute programme on Thursdays, 11:00 GMT (some weeks only).