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Lyle ‘out of order’ on Montgomerie

• Former Ryder Cup captain accuses Lyle of bitterness
• Lyle had raked up Montgomerie’s ‘Jakartagate’ incident

Bernard Gallacher, the former Ryder Cup captain, feels Sandy Lyle is “out of order” for accusing the 2010 captain Colin Montgomerie of cheating.

Lyle had been responding to suggestions that he cost himself the captaincy for Celtic Manor when he withdrew from last year’s Open after nine holes played in driving rain by raking up the ‘Jakartagate’ incident of 2005, when Montgomerie incorrectly replaced his ball in a better position at the Indonesian Open.

“I am sorry to say it but Sandy is out of order,” said Gallacher, Europe’s captain in 1991, 1993 and 1995. “It is very poor what he has done, especially in the week of the Open Championship, and someone really needs to give Sandy some advice. The reason he was not given the captaincy is that they have gone back to someone who is in touch with the players. I don’t think it is a personal thing against Sandy at all.

“Sandy’s spent his whole life being a nice guy and now he’s in grave danger of spoiling it. He’s certainly spoiling it by saying things like this. People will see this as his bitterness at him not getting the captaincy. It’s sad because Sandy is a really nice guy and never harboured any hatred for anyone in the past that I’ve known. He’s a bit twisted on this one.”

Montgomerie was cleared of any wrong-doing after the Jakarta incident but subsequently apologised for an “unwitting error” and donated his £24,000 prize money to charity.

“Sandy, unfortunately, is bitter at not being given the captaincy and what he has now done is below the belt for me,” Gallacher added. “Monty’s explanation for what happened in the Indonesian Open was accepted by a forthright committee and, at that point, everyone should have put the matter behind them.”

On Monday Lyle had said: “You get Monty in this situation where he was dropping the ball badly in that overseas event and that is a form of what you would call cheating. That is a case where he is breaking the rules. And there have been other times where he has been called in to see videos. That is far worse than someone pulling out [of the Open] because of sore knuckles.”

The 51-year-old Scot could now face sanctions from the European Tour under its regulations, which state: “It is an obligation of membership to refrain from comments to the media that attack, disparage or criticise tournament sponsors or promoters, fellow competitors, the European Tour or its officials.”

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Doubts emerge over Papua killings

Wounded Freeport staff in jeep, 12 July 09

The rebel Free Papua Movement has denied any role in the shooting of an Australian at a mine in Indonesia.

Drew Grant was killed near the huge Freeport gold and copper mine, where he worked, in Papua province on Saturday.

Autopsies have suggested evidence may have been altered, and police said that the bullets used were military issue.

The revelations have raised doubts about official accusations that the separatist rebels were to blame for this and two other fatal shootings.

A security guard was killed on Sunday, and the body of a policeman found on Monday, near the mine operated by an Indonesian subsidiary of the US company Freeport McMoran, in the Timika district of Papua.

The Timika commander of Free Papua Movement (OPM), Kelly Kwalik, told the Jakarta Globe newspaper that his fighters neither had the desire, nor the equipment, for the attacks.

Rebels raise the Morning Star flag

Yorris Raweyai, a Papuan lawmaker in the national parliament, dismissed claims that the separatist movement was responsible for the deaths.

"We know the OPM has been labelled as a troublemaker in Papua for four decades. But we also know that they have no guns and fight for their struggle peacefully," he said.

‘Possible manipulation’

Police have confirmed that high-powered weapons issued to military and police were used in the shootings.

Analysts have noted that Freeport is a lucrative posting for Indonesian security forces – they are paid by the mining company and also earn large amounts of money by charging money to local illegal miners.

Some analysts have suggested that the military could loosen its powerful grip on the region following the re-election of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

Abdul Munim Idris, the doctor who conducted the autopsy on Mr Grant’s body, said that fragments of bullets were found in the body, but no whole bullets.

Map

Asked whether there was any evidence the body had been manipulated, he said: "It’s possible," the radio station reported.

Mr Grant’s body has now been returned to Australia. His wife, Lauren, recently gave birth to their first baby.

Australian Federal Police are in Indonesia assisting in the investigation of Mr Grant’s murder.

Separatist sentiment in Papua has been focused in recent years on calls for a referendum – similar to that held in East Timor in 1999 – to allow Papuans to decide if their resource-rich region should stay in Indonesia.

The former Dutch colony was absorbed into Indonesia in 1969 after a vote by selected elders widely seen as flawed. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Food fight

Mark Gregory
International business reporter, BBC World Service

harvesting wheat in Kansas

Food prices soared in 2007 and early 2008, throwing hundreds of millions of people around the world into poverty.

Rioting took place in Egypt, India, Indonesia and other countries over the rising cost of rice and wheat.

Since last year’s peak, trends in global food price have been more complex.

But despite this, the BBC’s own research suggests rising food costs remain a major problem for lots of people in lots of places.

In 2007 and early 2008, various factors were at work. There were poor harvests in grain producing countries. Rising oil prices led to increased transport and production costs.

At the same time, an increased use of biofuels meant less land was available for growing food.

Finally, there were increases in food demand in some emerging economies, notably China, coupled with changes in diets – meat uses more resources to produce than grain.

As a measure of the scale of these cost increases, the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) food price index rose 82% over two years, reaching its highest level in June 2008.

This index measures the movement of wholesale prices of five basic food categories: meat, dairy, cereals, sugar and oils & fats.

What’s happened since

Since last year’s peak, some of the factors that caused food prices to shoot up so rapidly have gone into reverse.

vegetable seller, Bangalore, India

Poor harvests have given way to bumper crops. For example, the 2008 global wheat harvest was the best on record.

This year’s wheat harvest is likely to be the second best yet, despite crop failures in Argentina.

Recession in many countries has taken the pressure off demand for food products.

Oil prices have also dropped, lowering food transport and production

Concerns remain

Despite these trends, the BBC’s own research suggests rising food costs remain an issue for many people.

TAKING THE PULSE OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMY

  • The BBC is Taking the Pulse of the Global Economy, looking at a range of subjects this summer
  • Food prices – which remain a concern particularly in many developing economies
  • Highly volatile energy prices – which have been a major issue in the past year
  • The plight of migrant workers – as the global recession takes hold in many economies
  • Housing markets – which have turned from boom to bust in many countries
  • Rising unemployment levels – as firms cut back because of falling orders

BBC World Food Price Index

Taking the pulse explained

For the last 12 monthsthe BBC Food Price Indexhas been tracking what shoppers pay for some basic foods in seven cities: Washington DC, Delhi, Jakarta, Brussels, Buenos Ares, Nairobi and Moscow.

Overall, prices have risen by a bit less than 5% over the period of the survey.

But there are some remarkable differences between cities.

In Nairobi, our index suggests food prices rose by nearly a third. In Buenos Aires, the increase was almost a fifth. Both these cities are in the developing world.

However, in the two wealthiest cities, Washington and Brussels, the cost of staple products actually fell sharply – by 17% in the US capital and by 10% in Europe’s hub.

Our survey is not comprehensive, but it may illustrate underlying trends.

Price puzzle

Other data suggests global food prices fell very sharply towards the end last year as many economies went into recession, but have since begun to climb again, although not to last year’s levels.

In May 2009, the FAO’s food price index was 29% below its peak in June 2008. However, the May figure was nearly 10% above the very lowest point reached in February 2009.

Customer ordering food in a McDonalds restaurant in China

The FAO points out that although international food prices have come down from record highs in 2008, they have yet to drop to their levels before the food crisis, and the risk of price volatility remains.

The organisation says the cost of basic staple foods in developing nations remain "stubbornly high" by past standards.

Another important point is that the current economic slowdown has cut many people’s purchasing power – they’ve lost their jobs or seen their incomes cut.

This means they may find it just as difficult to pay for food as they did last year when food prices were higher.

It is something of a puzzle to explain why food prices have started to rise again.

Many economies are in recession, which should mean less demand for food, and global crop yields are generally high.

Some commentators say the fact that food prices remain relatively high in these circumstances suggests there has been a structural shift in the balance of supply and demand for food.

It may be that long term factors such as population growth and increased meat consumption among the new middle class in emerging economies mean food prices will remain permanently higher than before the crisis of 2007/08.

Click here for more from BBC World Service on Taking the Pulse of the Global Economy
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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Second death near Indonesia mine

Map

A security guard has been shot dead outside an Indonesian mine operated by the US company Freeport.

The attack, in Papua province, comes a day after an Australian man working for the company was shot dead in an ambush.

Police said suspected separatist militants had opened fire on officers investigating the earlier attack.

The huge Grasberg mine is a source of friction with local people, who have complained about its environmental impact and their share of its revenue.

Supporters of Papuan independence see the mine as a symbol of unfair rule from Jakarta. Two Americans and an Indonesian were shot dead in an ambush there in 2002.

A police spokesman was quoted by local media as saying that police engaged armed men in a gunbattle after the killing of the guard, named as Markus Rattealo, an employee of Freeport’s Indonesian subsidiary.

One report said five people were injured in the attack.

The resource-rich Papua province has been embroiled in separatist insurgency since the end of Dutch colonial rule in 1962.

The mine has some of the world’s largest recoverable copper and gold reserves. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Australian killed near Papua mine

Map

An Australian man has been shot dead near the Grasberg mine in Indonesia’s restive Papua province, say reports.

The man is reported to have been an engineer working at the gold and copper mine – one of the world’s largest – owned by US giant Freeport McMoRan.

The mine has been a frequent source of unrest over its impact on the environment and the proportion of its revenues going to local people.

In 2002, two American teachers were shot dead in an ambush at the facility.

In a statement, Freeport McMoRan said a shot had been fired at one of its vehicles in the early hours of the morning.

The man who was killed had been sitting in the back of the vehicle and none of the other passengers was injured, said the company.

Police chief Bagus Ekodanto told Reuters the shooting had happened on the road between Tembagapura and Timika.

It is not clear who carried out the attack.

The resource-rich Papua province has been embroiled in separatist insurgency since the end of Dutch colonial rule in 1962.

Supporters of Papua independence see the mine – which has some of the world’s largest recoverable copper and gold reserves – as a symbol of unfair rule from Jakarta.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.