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Chinese workers hurt in PNG mine attack: report
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Aug 07, 2014


China court upholds mining tycoon's death sentence
Beijing (AFP) Aug 07, 2014 - A Chinese court on Thursday upheld the death sentence handed down to a mining billionaire said to have links with disgraced former security tsar Zhou Yongkang.

Liu Han, his brother Liu Wei and three accomplices appealed to the high court in the central province of Hubei after they were condemned to death in May for "organising and leading a mafia-style group", murder and other crimes.

The court on Thursday rejected the appeal, it said in a posting on China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo.

"The crimes of organising and leading a mafia-style group and murder Liu Han and Liu Wei committed were extremely serious and a punishment should be meted out to several offences combined," it said.

The court "upholds... the death sentences handed down to Liu Han and Liu Wei respectively," it continued.

Liu Han led private company Hanlong, which is based in the southwestern province of Sichuan and once launched a billion-dollar bid for an Australian firm.

Sichuan is one of the power bases of Zhou, who once enjoyed vast power as China's security chief but was announced last week to be under investigation for corruption.

The influential business magazine Caixin has reported that Liu Han once had dealings with a businessman believed to be Zhou's son. State media have also hinted that the gang had connections to central government officials.

With the official announcement of the long-rumoured probe, Zhou became the most senior member of the Communist Party to be investigated since the infamous Gang of Four -- a faction that included the widow of founding leader Mao Zedong -- were put on trial in 1980.

Five Chinese workers were hurt after armed villagers stormed a nickel mine in Papua New Guinea, damaging equipment and forcing it to close, a report said Thursday.

PNG police said they were investigating the attack after the staff were injured when the villagers charged into the Kurumbukari mine southwest of Madang on Monday morning, PNG's The National reported.

"Five Chinese employees got injured with one receiving 14 stitches," the newspaper quoted an unnamed Ramu company representative as saying.

Mining machinery was burnt and office equipment trashed, the report said, adding that Ramu NiCo president Wang Jicheng had visited the site to access the damage.

The Kurumbukari mine is part of the US$2.1 billion Chinese-run Ramu Nickel project, which produces 31,000 tonnes of nickel and 3,000 tonnes of cobalt annually on the northern coast of the Pacific nation.

The project's Basamuk refinery site was attacked by PNG mine workers in 2009, injuring five Chinese and three locals.

The Chinese government-owned Metallurgical Group Corporation, known as MCC, is the majority owner of the project. Local partner Highlands Pacific owns an 8.56 percent stake.

The National reported that while the company was looking into what sparked the attack, earlier investigations suggested illegal migrants to the area were unhappy with the firm's hiring policies.

The Ramu representative said his firm had been trying to encourage locals to undergo training, and was trying to recruit skilled workers from outside the region "to occupy the increasing skills gap requirement so the project production is increased".

"We will continue to establish a mutual understanding and relationship with the project landowners for their long-term benefit and that of the project shareholders," the representative said.

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Kenya launches giant port construction with $480m deal
Nairobi (AFP) Aug 01, 2014
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta launched Friday a construction deal for the first berths in a proposed multi-billion dollar port, the day after ordering vast tracts of "stolen" land be repossessed. The planned $24 billion (18 billion euro) Lamu port project, due to be finished by 2030, is intended to serve much of east Africa, with oil pipelines to South Sudan and railways to Ethiopia and Ug ... read more


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