Archive for July, 2009

U.S. President Obama to arrive in Ghana for two-day visit on Friday night

July 11th, 2009

LAGOS, July 10 (Xinhua) — U.S. President Barack Obama is due to arrive at the Kotoka International Airport (KIA) in Accra on Friday night for a two-day visit, according to the reports of the Ghana News Agency.

Ghanaian President John Evans Atta Mills and First lady Naadu Mills will be at the airport to welcome President Obama and his wife, Michelle.

The itinerary for the Obama’s visit begins on July 11, with a special welcoming ceremony and he would hold closed-door bilateral talks with President Mills.

President Obama would then be hosted to a big breakfast for about 300 guests, including former presidents Jerry John Rawlings and John Agyekum Kufuor, as well as the presidential contestants of the 2008 elections, leadership of the religious bodies, traditional councils, civil society and business communities.

He would then pay a brief visit to the La General Hospital briefly in Accra, before moving to the Accra International Conference Center (AICC), where Parliament would be convened to hear his formal address.

While at the AICC, President Obama would make a major policy statement that is expected to redefine America’s relationship with Africa.

In line with his earlier pronouncements that his presidency would seek to assist Africa in reaching the point where its citizens would be proud to stay and work on the continent, he would be expected, through his policy statement in Ghana, to set the tone for equal partnership between America and Africa, just like he has done elsewhere.

The major address ends President Obama’s official activities in Accra.

He then moves to Cape Coast, the capital city of the Central Region, where he would be welcomed by Vice President John Dramani Mahama and given a private tour of the Cape Coast Castle.

President Obama and his wife are expected to go through the emotional experience at the gate of no return.

He would then depart for the KIA where he and his host would give brief remarks before he boards Air Force One back to the United States.

GM exits bankruptcy, CEO vows better performance

July 11th, 2009

General Motors Corp. CEO Fritz Henderson addresses the media after a news conference at the company’s headquarters in Detroit, Friday, July 10, 2009. Henderson announced on Friday that the company had emerged from bankruptcy protection far faster than anyone thought it could and will focus more on customers. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

A leaner General Motors arose on Friday, making an unusually quick exit from bankruptcy with ambitions of making money and building cars people are eager to buy.

Once the world’s largest and most powerful automaker, new GM is now cleansed of massive debt and burdensome contracts that would have sunk it without federal loans. The U.S. government owns a majority stake although the Obama administration says it has no plans to run the automaker.

The new GM also emerges amid the worst sales slump in a quarter-century.

At a news conference, CEO Fritz Henderson said the new GM will be faster and more responsive to customers than the old one and it will make money and repay government loans faster than required.

Henderson said GM completed its 40-day stay under court supervision far faster than anyone thought it could. He said it would repay about $50 billion in government loans ahead of a 2015 deadline.

He said the company now will focus more on customers, including a partnership with eBay to test auctioning vehicles online.

The new GM will also build more cars and trucks that consumers want and launch them faster than in the past, the CEO said.

"We recognize that we’ve been given a rare second chance at GM, and we are very grateful for that. And we appreciate the fact that we now have the tools to get the job done," he said.

The new company arose Friday as the bulk of General Motors Corp.’s assets were transferred to a company controlled by the U.S. government.

Henderson said the company would reduce its overall U.S. salaried employment by 20 percent by the end of 2009. He said management ranks will be cut by 35 percent, or 450 executives, including the elimination of its North American president position. Henderson said he will take responsibility for North American operations.

He said Bob Lutz, a legendary industry executive, was "unretiring" to become a vice chairman responsible for all creative elements of products, marketing and customer relationships. Lutz had previously planned to retire at the end of the year after more than four decades in the auto business.

The automaker is launching a "Tell Fritz" Web site to allow owners and the public to share their concerns with senior management and he planned to go out on the road every month, Henderson said.

"We need to listen to the questions, ideas and the concerns of the people who matter the most," Henderson said.

The new company will focus on three top priorities, customers, cars and culture, Henderson said.

"If we don’t get this right, nothing else is going to work," he said during a morning news conference at GM’s Downtown Detroit headquarters. "Business as usual is over at General Motors."

New Chairman Edward Whitacre Jr. said the 40-day period had been extremely challenging. "There have been a lot of long hours, there have been a shuttering of plants, there have been painful layoffs," he said. Whitacre cited the "strong leadership" of Henderson and the management team, giving the CEO who replaced Rick Wagoner a vote of confidence.

"We all want to win and we are going to win," Whitacre said.

The company’s logo will emain blue with white underlined GM letters. Henderson said GM has no plans to change the background color to green. "It’s not in my plans actually," he said.

GM has considered the change to represent its new environmental focus.

Concessions made by the United Auto Workers union just before the company entered bankruptcy protection have brought GM’s labor costs down to where they are fully competitive with Toyota Motor Corp., Henderson said.

Henderson also said the U.S. government has urged them to form a "world-class board" and has vowed that it would not get involved in day-to-day decisions. Steve Rattner, the head of the Obama administration’s auto task force, "wants the company to perform," Henderson said.

GM ranked as the top global automaker in terms of sales for 77 years before Japan’s Toyota Motor Corp. snatched its crown in 2008. The company sold nearly 8.4 million cars and trucks around the world in 2008, falling short of Toyota’s nearly 9 million.

Once the largest corporation in America, GM held the top spot in the Fortune 500 ranking for 20 years before being pushed out of the top spot in 1973 by Exxon Mobil Corp. It reclaimed No. 1 status in 1985 and held it for another 15 years.

Turning a profit will not be easy. GM has piled up losses and survives only because it expects to receive $50 billion in U.S. government loans. Without the loans, its executives have said the company would have been sold off in pieces.

In addition to the U.S. government’s 61 percent controlling interest, the United Auto Workers union gets a 17.5 percent stake of the company through its retiree health care trust, and the Canadian government will control 11.7 percent. The remaining shares went to bondholders of the old company.

The parts of GM not moving to the new company will become part of "old GM," a collection of assets and liabilities that will be sold to pay creditors.

Medical service provided after SW china quake

July 11th, 2009

A doctor measures blood pressure for a female who is frightened by the earthquake at Guantun Village in Guantun Town of Yao’an County, southwest China’s Yunnan Province, July 10, 2009. A 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit Yao’an on July 9. The quake has left one person dead and 328 people injured. (Xinhua/Lin Yiguang)

Medics carry an injured person onto the stretcher at the People’s Hospital of Yao’an County, southwest China’s Yunnan Province, July 10, 2009. A 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit Yao’an on July 9. The quake has left one person dead and 328 people injured. (Xinhua/Lin Yiguang)

Doctors check the injury condition of an old man at the People’s Hospital of Yao’an County, southwest China’s Yunnan Province, July 10, 2009. A 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit Yao’an on July 9. The quake has left one person dead and 328 people injured. (Xinhua/Lin Yiguang)

An injured person is wheeled to the operating room at the People’s Hospital of Yao’an County, southwest China’s Yunnan Province, July 10, 2009. A 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit Yao’an on July 9. The quake has left one person dead and 328 people injured. (Xinhua/Lin Yiguang)
A doctor measures blood pressure for a female who is frightened by the earthquake at Guantun Village in Guantun Town of Yao’an County, southwest China’s Yunnan Province, July 10, 2009. A 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit Yao’an on July 9. The quake has left one person dead and 328 people injured.