Tag Archives: South Pacific

Australia sending new migrants to Papua New Guinea

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says all refugees who arrive in Australia by boat will be resettled on the South Pacific island nation of Papua New Guinea.

Rudd and Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter O’Neill signed an agreement in the Australian east coast city of Brisbane on Friday that will enable Australia to deport refugees to its developing neighbor.

The move aims to deter an escalating number of asylum seekers who travel to Australia in rickety fishing boats from poor, war-torn homelands through countries including Indonesia and Malaysia.

The growing influx poses a major political problem for Rudd’s Labor Party which is the clear underdog in elections expected within months.

Immigration Minister Tony Burke says the rule will apply to refugees who arrive from Friday.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Fiji regime suspends opposition party

Fiji’s military regime said it had suspended one of the South Pacific nation’s main opposition parties for failing to meet its financial obligations.

The Fiji Labour Party (FLP) had refused to pay a FJ$6,400 ($3,400) bill to cover the cost of publishing its financial data, Registrar of Political Parties Mohammad Saneem said.

“Unfortunately, this seems to have been a deliberate decision by FLP leadership to not abide by the decree. It is now up to them to remedy their breach,” Saneem said.

He said the FLP, one of only three opposition parties the regime has approved to contest elections scheduled for September next year, had been suspended with immediate effect.

Saneem said the party would be deregistered unless it paid the bill within 60 days, which would bar it from the first vote since military leader Voreqe Bainimarama seized power in a 2006 coup.

Fiji had 17 opposition parties until the military tightened registration criteria earlier this year, lifting the membership required to qualify 40-fold from 128 to 5,000.

Only three parties met the new benchmark, the FLP, National Federation Party and the Social Democratic Liberal Party.

FLP leader Mahendra Chaudhry could not be contacted for comment on his party’s suspension.

Bainimarama rules by decree but has said he plans to create his own party and run for prime minister in next year’s election.

After seizing power, he tore up Fiji’s constitution and curbed freedom of speech and assembly, as well as muzzling local media.

International observers, including regional powers Australia and New Zealand, have said they will be closely watching developments in Fiji to see if the elections are conducted in a free and fair manner.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Tom Riddle, Q Join Ron Howard's Next

Oscar-winning director Ron Howard has lined up a cast of familiar genre movie faces for his next film, In the Heart of the Sea. Namely, Thor, Scarecrow, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, Mad-Eye Mooney, and now Q from Skyfall and Tom Riddle from Harry Potter.

Potter actor Frank Dillane is in negotiations to join the cast, while the filmmakers are also eying Skyfall and Cloud Atlas actor Ben Whishaw for a role.

They’d join a cast that already includes Chris Hemsworth, Cillian Murphy, Benjamin Walker and Brendan Gleeson. Tom Holland and Sam Keeley also star.

In the Heart of the Sea is based on Nathaniel Philbrick’s book about the ill-fated whaleship Essex. The ship left Nantucket for the South Pacific in 1819, where it was attacked by an angry sperm whale. But it was what transpired after that — when the survivors were adrift at sea for months and resorted to cannibalism — that is just as frightening as the attack that inspired Herman Melville to write Moby Dick. Hemsworth would play the first mate.

Continue reading…

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

3 sisters to recount WWII island journey in POW uncle's footsteps

Three Bronx-born sisters are returning to the borough to discuss their journey to a remote South Pacific island where their uncle was imprisoned by the Japanese and killed at the end of World War II.

Andrea Talbutt of Rockland County, Susan Nishihira of Seattle and Marcy Hanigan of Los Angeles will be speaking Wednesday night at the Huntington Free Library about last year’s trip to the island where their uncle spent the last months of his life as a POW.

Marine fighter pilot Moszek “Mike” Zanger of the Bronx bailed out of his damaged plane in December 1944, was taken prisoner and killed by his captors in 1945. The sisters visited the jungle crash site and identified wreckage with the help of Justin Taylan of Hyde Park, founder of the Pacific Wrecks website.

Click for more from PacificWrecks.com.

Click for more from MikeZanger.com.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/zOf5Yn6S4cA/

Air Lease Corporation Announces the Placement of Six New Boeing 737-800s with Aerolíneas Argentinas

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Air Lease Corporation Announces the Placement of Six New Boeing 737-800s with Aerolíneas Argentinas

LOS ANGELES–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Today Air Lease Corporation (NYS: AL) announced a lease agreement with Aerolíneas Argentinasfor six new Boeing 737-800 aircraft, each on lease for twelve years. The aircraft are scheduled for delivery between November 2014 and February 2016.

ALC continues to expand our relationships globally with airlines that have strong operational and growth plans. We are pleased to add Aerolíneas Argentinas as a new customer and look forward to working with them in the years to come,” said Matt Stevens, Air Lease Corporation’s Marketing Manager of Latin America.

“For the last four years Aerolíneas Argentinas has been committed to a solid business plan focusing on our domestic and regional core route network. As the fleet renewal continues, the Boeing 737 NG has been introduced with excellent results. Aerolíneas Argentinas is proud to welcome six new Boeing 737-800 NG from ALC. We look forward to a long term and productive business relationship with the leading and prestigious lessor,” said Sergio García Gómez, Manager of Fleet Planning and Financial Restructuring at Aerolíneas Argentinas.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including expected delivery dates. Such statements are based on current expectations and projections about our future results, prospects and opportunities and are not guarantees of future performance. Such statements will not be updated unless required by law. Actual results and performance may differ materially from those expressed or forecasted in forward-looking statements due to a number of factors, including those discussed in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

About Air Lease Corporation (NYS: AL)

ALC is an aircraft leasing company based in Los Angeles, California that has airline customers throughout the world. ALC and its team of dedicated and experienced professionals are principally engaged in purchasing commercial aircraft and leasing them to its airline partners worldwide through customized aircraft leasing and financing solutions. For more information, visit ALC‘s website at www.airleasecorp.com.

About Aerolíneas Argentinas

Founded in 1950, Aerolíneas Argentinas is one of the leading South American carriers. From its home bases in Aeroparque Jorge Newbery and Ezeiza International Airport in Buenos Aires, Aerolíneas Argentinas flies to 18 international destinations in The Americas, Europe and the South Pacific. Along with Austral Líneas Aéreas, Aerolíneas operates flights to 35 destinations in

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Bodies of American wireless executive, wife found after New Zealand plane crash

New Zealand navy divers have recovered the bodies of an American wireless executive and his wife after the plane he was piloting crashed in the South Pacific.

Eric Hertz, an experienced amateur pilot, radioed authorities March 30 to say an engine had failed on the couple’s twin-engine Beechcraft Baron. He and his wife Kathy, a university employee, had left from an airport near Auckland bound for the South Island town of Timaru.

Divers recovered a second body Sunday after recovering the first Saturday near Kawhia Harbour, about 93 miles south of Auckland. Divers also recovered plane parts from the wreckage about 184 feet below water.

Hertz, 58, had been chief executive of New Zealand‘s Two Degrees Mobile since 2009. He’d previously been chief executive at Seattle’s Zumobi and held senior positions at Western Wireless, AT&T Wireless, Bell South, CellularONE and McCaw Cellular.

In New Zealand, Hertz helped launch Two Degrees as a competitor to the dominant wireless providers, Telecom and Vodafone. The company is majority owned by Washington state-based Trilogy International, co-founded by wireless pioneer John Stanton. Two Degrees has named Trilogy’s Stewart Sherriff as interim chief executive.

Kathy Picone Hertz, 64, worked for the Auckland University of Technology, helping youth prepare for the workforce.

In a statement, the families of the couple thanked rescue teams for their efforts in the challenging ocean conditions and said they looked forward to one day understanding what happened.

“The recovery of Eric and Kathy, along with the wreckage of the aircraft, is of immense relief to us all,” the families wrote. “Knowing that they can rest together in peace and that we can say our farewells is of huge comfort at this time.”

A private memorial service has been scheduled Thursday in Auckland.

The couple is survived by daughter Ari Hertz.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bodies of American exec, wife found in New Zealand

New Zealand navy divers have recovered the bodies of American wireless executive Eric Hertz and his wife Kathy after their small plane crashed in the South Pacific.

Divers recovered a second body Sunday from the wreck of the couple’s twin-engine Beechcraft Baron at a depth of 56 meters (184 feet). They recovered the first body Saturday near Kawhia Harbour, about 150 kilometers (93 miles) south of Auckland. Divers were also able to recover pieces of the plane.

Hertz, an experienced amateur pilot, radioed authorities March 30 to say the engine had failed. The couple had left from an airport near Auckland bound for the South Island town of Timaru.

Hertz, 58, had been chief executive of New Zealand‘s Two Degrees Mobile since 2009. He’d previously been chief executive at Seattle’s Zumobi and held senior positions at Western Wireless, AT&T Wireless, Bell South, CellularONE and McCaw Cellular.

In New Zealand, Hertz helped launch Two Degrees as a competitor to the dominant wireless providers, Telecom and Vodafone. The company is majority owned by Washington state-based Trilogy International, co-founded by wireless pioneer John Stanton. Two Degrees has named Trilogy’s Stewart Sherriff as interim chief executive.

Kathy Picone Hertz, 64, worked for the Auckland University of Technology, helping youth prepare for the workforce.

In a statement, the families of the couple thanked rescue teams for their efforts in the challenging ocean conditions and said they looked forward to one day understanding what happened.

“The recovery of Eric and Kathy, along with the wreckage of the aircraft, is of immense relief to us all,” the families wrote. “Knowing that they can rest together in peace and that we can say our farewells is of huge comfort at this time.”

A private memorial service has been scheduled Thursday in Auckland.

The couple is survived by daughter Ari Hertz.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Airline Starts Charging Passengers by the Pound

By Matt Brownell

Filed under: , ,

Alamy

A Samoan Airline has become the first to link its airfare to passengers’ weight, charging heavier customers a higher ticket price.

The Sydney Morning Herald explains that passengers on Samoa Air, a small regional airline serving the Samoan islands in the South Pacific, are asked to punch in their body weight and the weight of their luggage when booking. Rates range from $1 (Australian) per kilogram on short flights to $4.16 per kilogram on longer ones between Samoa and American Samoa. Passengers and their luggage are weighed again when they get to the airport to make sure they weren’t fibbing.

“We at Samoa Air are keeping airfares fair, by charging our passengers only for what they weigh,” explains the airline’s website. “Your weight plus your baggage items, is what you pay for. Simple.”

In an interview with ABC Radio, the airline’s CEO likewise framed it as an issue of fairness, noting that “there are no extra fees in terms of excess baggage or anything – it is just a kilo is a kilo is a kilo.”

Kilos are an issue in Samoa, which has high rates of obesity. That said, it’s not just the obese who will find themselves paying more for their flight. Since this is strictly about saving money on fuel, only weight matters, which means that a tall, well-built passenger will still wind up paying more just by virtue of being bigger. So Samoa Air‘s claim that “you decide how much (or little) your ticket will cost” isn’t exactly correct.

Could such a scheme come to the U.S.?

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Samoa Air is a unique case — it operates smaller aircraft in a country with particularly heavy people, so passenger weight and its impact on fuel efficiency is a big concern. But weight is an issue for large American airlines as well, as evidenced by the big fees they charge for carry-on luggage. And over the last few years we’ve seen several controversies pop up regarding very large travelers — Southwest, for instance, was sued for telling an obese passenger that she had to buy two seats.

Despite this, we’re skeptical that pay-by-the-pound airline tickets could catch on in the U.S.; while extra fees are commonplace and travelers have become accustomed to being poked and prodded by airport security, being weighed like a stack of bologna at the deli counter might be a step too far. However, at least one economist thinks that charging passengers by wieght is a good idea. Last fall, Bharat P. Bhatta, a professor of economics at Sogn og Fjordane University College in Norway, looked at pay-by-weight airfare pricing and concluded that “the model can be technically and economically feasible to implement and its proper implementation may provide significant benefits to airlines, passengers and society at large.” He does concede, though, that “the nature …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

US gov't to air-drop toxic mice on Guam snakes

Dead mice laced with painkillers are about to rain down on Guam‘s jungle canopy. They are scientists’ prescription for a headache that has caused the tiny U.S. territory misery for more than 60 years: the brown tree snake.

Most of Guam‘s native bird species are extinct because of the snake, which reached the island’s thick jungles by hitching rides from the South Pacific on U.S. military ships shortly after World War II. There may be 2 million of the reptiles on Guam now, decimating wildlife, biting residents and even knocking out electricity by slithering onto power lines.

More than 3,000 miles away, environmental officials in Hawaii have long feared a similar invasion — which in their case likely would be a “snakes on a plane” scenario. That would cost the state many vulnerable species and billions of dollars, but the risk will fall if Guam‘s air-drop strategy succeeds.

“We are taking this to a new phase,” said Daniel Vice, assistant state director of U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Wildlife Services in Hawaii, Guam, and the Pacific Islands. “There really is no other place in the world with a snake problem like Guam.”

Brown tree snakes are generally a few feet (1 meter) long but can grow to be more than 10 feet (3 meters) in length. Most of Guam‘s native birds were defenseless against the nocturnal, tree-based predators, and within a few decades of the reptile’s arrival, nearly all of them were wiped out.

The snakes can also climb power poles and wires, causing blackouts, or slither into homes and bite people, including babies; they use venom on their prey but it is not lethal to humans.

The infestation and the toll it has taken on native wildlife have tarnished Guam‘s image as a tourism haven, though the snakes are rarely seen outside their jungle habitat.

The solution to this headache, fittingly enough, is acetaminophen, the active ingredient in painkillers including Tylenol.

The strategy takes advantage of the snake’s two big weaknesses. Unlike most snakes, brown tree snakes are happy to eat prey they didn’t kill themselves, and they are highly vulnerable to acetaminophen, which is harmless to humans.

The upcoming mice drop is targeted to hit snakes near Guam‘s sprawling Andersen Air Force Base, which is surrounded by heavy foliage and if …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Perfect Getaway Not Far From US

2 charged after allegedly torturing, burning alive woman for witchcraft in Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea police charged two people on Monday with the grisly killing of a woman who was burned alive in front of hundreds of people, including young children, after being accused of witchcraft.

Janet Ware and Andrew Watea were charged with murder over the slaying of Kepari Leniata, a 20-year-old mother who was stripped, tortured with a hot iron rod, doused in gasoline and set alight on a pile of car tires and trash by a mob earlier this month.

Leniata had been accused of sorcery by relatives of a 6-year-old boy who had recently died in a hospital. Ware and Watea are believed to be the boy’s mother and uncle, police said in a statement.

The two were among more than 40 people who were detained last week in connection with Leniata’s slaying. The others were eventually released due to lack of evidence, but police said more arrests are expected.

In rural Papua New Guinea, witchcraft is often blamed for unexplained misfortunes, but the brutal killing was met with outrage across the South Pacific island nation, drawing condemnation from the prime minister, police and diplomats.

Police said the hundreds of onlookers, many of whom were children and teenagers, were powerless to stop the mob who participated in Leniata’s killing in the Western Highlands provincial capital of Mount Hagen. Police officers were also among the spectators, but were outnumbered and couldn’t save the woman, national police spokesman Dominic Kakas said. An internal investigation is under way into the police’s actions at the scene.

Murder in punishable by death in Papua New Guinea, although no one has been hanged since the country became independent in 1975.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

2 charged in Papua New Guinea 'witch' killing

Papua New Guinea police charged two people on Monday with the grisly killing of a woman who was burned alive in front of hundreds of people, including young children, after being accused of witchcraft.

Janet Ware and Andrew Watea were charged with murder over the slaying of Kepari Leniata, a 20-year-old mother who was stripped, tortured with a hot iron rod, doused in gasoline and set alight on a pile of car tires and trash by a mob earlier this month.

Leniata had been accused of sorcery by relatives of a 6-year-old boy who had recently died in a hospital. Ware and Watea are believed to be the boy’s mother and uncle, police said in a statement.

The two were among more than 40 people who were detained last week in connection with Leniata’s slaying. The others were eventually released due to lack of evidence, but police said more arrests are expected.

In rural Papua New Guinea, witchcraft is often blamed for unexplained misfortunes, but the brutal killing was met with outrage across the South Pacific island nation, drawing condemnation from the prime minister, police and diplomats.

Police said the hundreds of onlookers, many of whom were children and teenagers, were powerless to stop the mob who participated in Leniata’s killing in the Western Highlands provincial capital of Mount Hagen. Police officers were also among the spectators, but were outnumbered and couldn’t save the woman, national police spokesman Dominic Kakas said. An internal investigation is under way into the police’s actions at the scene.

Murder in punishable by death in Papua New Guinea, although no one has been hanged since the country became independent in 1975.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

China plays by its own rules while going global

When Venezuela seized billions of dollars in assets from Exxon Mobil and other foreign companies, Chinese state banks and investors didn’t blink. Over the past five years they have loaned Venezuela more than $35 billion.

Elsewhere around the Caribbean, as hotels were struggling to stay afloat in the global economic slowdown, the Chinese response was to bankroll the biggest resort under construction in the Western Hemisphere — a massive hotel, condominium and casino complex in the Bahamas just a few miles from half-empty resorts.

All over the world, from Latin America to the South Pacific, a cash-flush China is funding projects that others won’t, seemingly less concerned by the conventional wisdom of credit ratings and institutions such as the World Bank.

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EDITOR’S NOTE — This story is part of “China‘s Reach,” a project tracking China‘s influence on its trading partners over three decades and exploring how that is changing business, politics and daily life. Keep up with AP‘s reporting on China‘s Reach, and join the conversation about it, using the hashtag (hash)APChinaReach on Twitter.

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The Chinese money is breathing life into government infrastructure projects that otherwise might have died for lack of financing. For commercial projects such as the Caribbean resort, China is filling a gap left by Western investors retrenching after the 2008 financial crisis.

But some in the Bahamas worry what will happen if the sprawling Baha Mar project fails. They picture an economy saturated with hotels, dragged down by an expensive Chinese white elephant. Likewise, the infrastructure loans are loading financially shaky countries with more debt and letting them avoid economic reforms that other lenders would likely have demanded.

“The Chinese play by other rules,” said Kevin Gallagher, a Boston University international relations professor who has studied Chinese lending to Latin America. “We’ll give you financing with no conditions, and we’ll finance things the International Monetary Fund won’t fund, things others won’t fund anymore, like big infrastructure projects. It allows countries to shop around, which has good and bad sides.”

Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez talked up his independence last year while highlighting another $4 billion in Chinese loans, part of a wave of money that has translated into new railways, utilities and other projects.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Uighur on Palau after Gitmo release goes missing

One of six Uighur men resettled to Palau after being released from the Guantanamo Bay military prison has reportedly gone missing.

The deputy chief of staff to Palau‘s president says Adel Noori has been missing since late last year.

Rhinehart Silas said by phone Thursday that Noori had no passport and it was unclear where he went. He said the government just learned of his disappearance and was investigating.

Uighurs are Muslims from the restive region of Xinjiang in western China.

The six were resettled to the South Pacific nation in 2009 after a U.S. judge ordered their release from Guantanamo, where they were imprisoned for about eight years for allegedly having ties to terrorist organizations.

Few other nations were willing to accept the men.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

PNG police about to arrest 'witch' murderers

Papua New Guinea police say they are about to make their first arrests almost a week after a mob stripped, tortured and bound a woman accused of witchcraft, then burned her alive in front of hundreds of horrified people in the South Pacific nation’s third largest city.

More than 50 members of the mob doused the 20-year-old mother with gasoline and then set her alight on a pile of car tires and trash in Mount Hagen last Wednesday. She had been accused of sorcery by relatives of a 6-year-old boy who had died in the local hospital the previous day.

Police spokesman Dominic Kakas on Tuesday said suspects had been identified through witness interviews. He said there will be as many as 50 arrests on charges of murder by Wednesday.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

2 More Big Quakes Hit Tsunami-Ravaged Solomons

Strong aftershocks rattled the Solomon Islands today, hampering relief efforts to tsunami-ravaged villages and forcing the South Pacific nation’s prime minister to forgo a visit to the stricken area, where nine deaths have been confirmed. Officials were already struggling to reach the isolated region when a magnitude-6.6 aftershock hit… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Relief efforts in tsunami-struck south Pacific hampered by aftershocks

A strong aftershock rattled the Solomon Islands on Friday, hampering relief efforts to tsunami-ravaged villages and forcing the South Pacific nation’s prime minister to forgo a visit to the stricken area where nine deaths have been confirmed.

Prime Minister Gordon Darcy Lilo was on a plane to Santa Cruz Island in the eastern Solomons to assess damage when the aftershock hit, said Silas Lilo, a spokesman for his office. The plane was forced to return to the capital Honiara.

Also aboard the 32-seater plane — the first to attempt to reach the island since the disaster — were shelter kits, water carriers, medical supplies and medical staff, said Andrew Catford, the Solomons country director for relief agency World Vision. The plane will try again to land on the island Friday afternoon, he said.

The 6.6-magnitude aftershock damaged roads on the island’s main town of Lata and prevented aid workers already stationed there from reaching people on the coast, Catford said.

The aftershock, the most significant since the 8.0 earthquake that sparked Wednesday’s tsunami, didn’t produce any tsunami warnings itself.

“My staff said it felt stronger than the initial earthquake and people are very concerned. Most of Lata town was evacuated. It’s like a ghost town,” Catford said. “We’ve had over 115 aftershocks, but unlike all the others, this one moved vertically up and down. For the first time, it’s created cracks in the roads.”

Wednesday’s earthquake triggered waves 1.5-meters (5-feet) tall that roared inland on Santa Cruz, damaging or destroying around 100 homes.

Catford said his agency now believes that 15 villages and about 6,000 people have been affected, many of them losing homes. Those estimates have risen from initial assessments, he said.

Five elderly villagers and a child who couldn’t outrun the rushing water were killed, said George Herming, a spokesman for the prime minister. Three more bodies were found Thursday, but Herming said details of how those victims died were not immediately available.

A boat carrying relief officials was expected to reach Santa Cruz by Friday evening, Herming said.

The relentless aftershocks were forcing thousands of villagers who fled inland after the original quake to stay away from the coastline.

“Many of them have lost their homes and they have no shelter at the moment,” Herming said. “They are still residing on high ground because of the fear of the aftershocks.”

The Solomons comprise more than 200 islands with a population of about 552,000 people. They lie on the “Ring of Fire” — an arc of earthquake and volcanic zones that stretches around the Pacific Rim and where about 90 percent of the world’s quakes occur.

More than 50 people were killed and thousands lost their homes in April 2007 when a magnitude-8.1 quake hit the western Solomon Islands and a tsunami crashed into coastal villages.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News