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Cameron eyes Britain-Japan defence trade

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British Prime Minister David Cameron arrived at Tokyo's Haneda airport shortly after noon
Photo: AFP


British Prime Minister David Cameron arrived in Tokyo on Tuesday hoping to prise open Japan's potentially lucrative defence market for firms from Britain.

"We think there are many other opportunities for defence cooperation, for instance in the area of helicopters and other defence equipment," Cameron told the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper in London ahead of the visit.

Britain is keen to become "Japan's partner of choice" alongside Tokyo's major ally the United States for defence industry collaboration, he separately told Kyodo News.

Cameron, who has headed Britain's coalition government since May 2010, arrived at Tokyo's Haneda airport shortly after noon (0300 GMT).

His two-day trip will include a brief meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda and an audience with Emperor Akihito, before he goes on to a quick tour of Southeast Asia ending Friday.

Cameron is being accompanied by a delegation of British business leaders, including defence contractors eyeing joint development programmes with Japanese firms.

Noda is thought to be keen to forge a defence partnership with his British counterpart after Tokyo loosened its decades-old self-imposed ban on weapons exports.

The expected agreement would make Britain only the second country to have any kind of defence collaboration with Japan, after the United States.

The ban, lifted in December, had prevented Japanese firms from joining multinational weapons projects, other than with the United States, and left Tokyo with little choice in where it bought its hardware.

The easing of export restrictions means Japanese companies are now able to supply parts to foreign contractors, for example in Britain, who will be hoping to leverage their more advanced weaponry technology and sell finished products to Tokyo.

Japan in December chose to buy the US-developed F-35 stealth jet for its next-generation fighter over the Eurofighter Typhoon, in a deal that is estimated to be worth $4.7 billion.

Japan, whose industries took years to recover after World War II, declared in 1967 that it would tightly control its foreign weapons sales.

But China's rise and East Asia's changing security environment -- as highlighted by the expected launch in the coming days of a North Korean rocket -- have nudged policymakers into the change.

Cameron will also visit the headquarters of Nissan Motors, which recently decided to build a new hatchback compact car in Britain, in a 125 million pound ($200 million) investment, aided by a 9.3 million pound grant from London.

The new vehicle, called "Invitation", will be built at Nissan's Sunderland plant in northeast England from mid-2013.

Cameron eyes Britain-Japan defence trade - International, world news - TuoiTreNews

Top China leader ousted, wife probed over Briton's murder

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Chinese politician Bo Xilai, seen here in March 2012, has been suspended from the Communist Party's politburo. Bo had once been tipped to access the top echelons of power before becoming embroiled in a huge scandal.
Photo: AFP


Chinese politician Bo Xilai, once a rising star, has been stripped of his elite Communist Party post and his wife is being investigated for the murder of a British national, state media said.

The shock announcements – made late Tuesday by the official Xinhua news agency – shed some light on a mysterious political scandal involving Bo and a reported attempt by his former righthand man to defect to the United States.

Analysts say the rare, public scandal has exposed deep rifts within the ruling party ahead of a key, once-in-a-decade leadership transition due to take place later this year.

Xinhua first issued a short report late Tuesday announcing Bo had been suspended from the party's powerful 25-member Politburo and from the wider Central Committee, which consists of more than 300 top officials.

The report said "Comrade Bo Xilai" was suspected of being involved in "serious discipline violations", which in China usually refers to corruption, but gave no details.

The People's Daily newspaper, the mouthpiece of the Communist Party, on Wednesday said Bo had "seriously violated the party discipline, causing damage to the cause and the image of the party and state," Xinhua reported.

Bo was one of China's most high-profile politicians and a rising star in the party until he was sacked last month as party chief of the southwestern metropolis of Chongqing.

Before his downfall, the charismatic former commerce minister had been tipped to become a member of the party's Standing Committee – the apex of political power in China – later this year.

The 62-year-old's troubles started in February when Wang Lijun, his former police chief, fled to a US consulate and reportedly asked for asylum.

The scandal remained shrouded in mystery until news emerged late last month that London had asked China to reinvestigate the death of a British national in Chongqing in November amid rumours it might be linked to Bo's family.

On Tuesday, in a second brief dispatch, Xinhua said police had reopened a probe into the death of Neil Heywood after finding evidence Bo's wife, Gu Kailai, may have been involved in his murder.

Gu has been "transferred to judicial authorities for the suspected crime of intentional homicide" of Heywood, the report said, adding Wang made allegations about the death of the British businessman when he visited the US consulate.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague welcomed the news, saying he had taken a "personal interest" in the case.

"The Chinese are doing as we asked them to do, and we now look forward to seeing those investigations take place and in due course hearing the outcome of those investigations," he told Sky News television.

Xinhua said that Gu and and her son had been on "good terms" with Heywood, but they fell out over "economic interests."

According to results from the new probe, "the existing evidence indicated that Heywood died of homicide, of which Bogu Kailai (Gu Kailai) and Zhang Xiaojun, an orderly at Bo's home, are highly suspected," it added.

The People's Daily called for "firm support" for the suspension of Bo and probe of his wife, Xinhua reported.

"The Wang Lijun incident is a serious political event leaving very negative impacts at home and abroad, and the death of Neil Heywood is a serious criminal case involving the family and close staff of a party and state leader," the paper said.

By suspending Bo and investigating his wife, the party had shown its "determination to keep its purity, and the clear stand of the party and government to safeguard party discipline and the laws of the state," it added.
 
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