THE CHINA MAIL, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1951,▼
INDONESIA Giant Oil Refinery
Opened In Hampshire WEST EUROPE IS
AND JAP TREATY
Effort To Obtain Ratification
Washington, Sept. 17.". The Indonesian Ambas- sador to the United States is going home this week to try to persunde his country's Parliament
to ratify the
San
Japanese pence treaty, which was signed in Francisco last week.
Dr All The Ambassador. Sastreamidjojo. will leave on Thursday by air for Djakaria to back up the Foreign Minister, Dr Achmed Suharjo, whe Indalled the Anglo-American pact with Japan just one week ago.
American officials though: Dr Sastroamidjoj: had a tough Bght ahead but would come out on top. /
WAS The Ambassador himself understood to be optimistic about the outcome,
The Indonesinn decision to adhere to the pact was halled by American oficiais as a great viclory for the United States' point of view, but of the same time they realise a number of questions was left unanswered,
The principal antong for the Indonesians question of reparations.
these was the There
is nothing definite on this pro- mised in the treaty beyond the agreement of Japan to negotiate on the question. The Indonesian officials realise this is
que tionable matter. However, they Indonesia's fate are convinced
powers and they are hopeful of con-
lies with the Western
vincing their Parliament
this.
of
It is understood that Dr
Subardjo and Dr Sastroamidjojo į
The new oil refinery at Fawley, in Hampshire, was opened by the Prime Minister, Mr Attlee, on Sept. 14. When in full operation the refinery will be the largest in Europe and will save the country more than two million dollars a week in foreign '
exchange. Upper picture shows a model of the re- finery, Picture at right gives an indication, of the massive, intricate struction of tanks, pipes and scaffolding-Reuter- photos.
con-
may meet with some objection PEACE TALKS
in their Parliament that this is a
"white mom's pence", as has
been charged ja sume Asian quarters,
Dr
The United States, not with- out realisation of this situation,
that when has suggested Sastroamidjojo returns he should discuss with the Economic Co- Administration the operation possibility of a $150,000,000tems American loan to his country. United Press.
"UNITY" CALL BY EAST GERMANY
STALLED
Paris. Sept. 17. The
latest Arab-Israeli "peace talks sponsored by the United Nations and aimed at a settlement of outstanding prob
the dividing
Middle Eastern neighbours made no headway here today,
The Israell delegate would not accept a Ave-point própɔsai |
Pales- the three-nation
from
Line
Conciliation Commission
owing to the lack of instructions NEW MOVE| Attack On
from Tel-Aviv.
The representatives of four Arab States-Egypt, Syria, the Lebanon and Jordan had carlier received the Commis-.
basis ston's
for 4 settlement though one Arab delegate ex- pressed "pessimism" on the outcome.
Berlin, Sept. 17. The Communist-led Free German Trade Union Federation today appealed to the West German Trade Union Federa- tion to "lake common steps" to support the East German Pre- mier, Dr Grolewahl's, offer of talks on all-German unity,
"You cannot, you must tolerate a new war," the-ap- peal said.
The Commission, which for The Socialist Unity (Com-
three years had tried to bring munist) Party held meetings
and Isrnelis closer today throughout East Germany Arabs
through concillation to discuss a long-term propa- together ganda campaign to "put over" and mediation, tonight had no the offer to West Germany,-fixed date for the next meeting
Reuter
not,
with either side-Reuter.
A British Crossword Puzzle
4
15
19
10
12
13
14 05
16
17
118.
19
7
120
122
23
124
26
27
Z3
30
32
2 Garment (5).
+38
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Resonant noise (5).
1 Droll (5).
4 Retinue (0),
8 Cement (8).
10 Approaches (B).
12
Body Abres (8).
14 Comfort (7).
10 Pertume (7):
17 Young animal (4).
20 Quadruped (7).
22 Spare (4).
28 Military man (7).
27 Venerate (0).
20 Present itself (8).
30 Dispossentes (0),
31 Obtain by force (0).
Frolics (5).
3 Fertiliser (0),
5 Eastern Europ:an (4).
G Prayer (0).
I
Struggle (0).
D Liberate (7),
11
Protect (0),
13 Reinstate
15 Instrument (4),
10 Views (6),
18 Measure f land (4).
20 Grility (0).
Rope (0).
Horizontal (5),
25 Bring on (5).
20 Gras (5)..
20 Change course (4).
+
AGAINST
BRITAIN
Foreign Exchange. Ban On Bank
Teheran, Sept. 17.
Publishers
By Truman
Washington, Sept. 17. President Truman-today at tacked Amorican magazine
for publishers
campaigning in mail RN Increase against
The Persian Cabinet to- rates.
tirird class mall, which covers
night prohibited the British The Past Omer is losing $500 Bank of Iran and the Middle million a year on second and East from transacting any the malling of newspapers, further foreign exchange books and 'magazines, business.
The Persian Prime Minister's assistant, Dr Hussein Fatemi, said after a Cabinet meeting to- night that from tomorrow only the National Bank of Iran would be authorised to transact for- eign exchange business.
The Senate has voled to in~ crease ali mall rutes and the House of Representatives will this week try to increase second and third class rates. Mr Truman, wh
who was ad- dressing a meeting of the_Na- tional Association of Post- masters, asserted
crted that some of the biggest magazine publishers. who were getting the benefi of "millions of dollars of tax- payers' money each year," had 10bon iphibied the members of Can- મજ bed- gress "from breakfast to vice-
time to prevent the increases.
Yet those magazine publishers writing editorials and
This means that the British bank will lose its main source of income, which, is the ex- change of foreign currencles into Persian rials and versu.
.
The Cabinet also decided to-
were
night, according to Dr Fatemi, printing articles complaining
to arrest some of the former col- about high taxes and Govern: leagues of the late Premier, ment dedufis.-Reuter,
General All Razmara, who was
assussinated last March,
"high-
Dr Fatemi said that they would be charged with treason" because of an alleged plot to overthrow the monarchy in Perslu
Dr Fatemi said that one of these people, u former БЕССО! police chief, General Sartip Sadeh, had already been arrest- ed..
He refused to disclose the names of the others who are being sought by the pollice.- Reuter.
ROBERT LOVETT SWORN IN
Washington, Sept. 17.
Mr Robert A. Lovett, former Deputy Defence Secretary, be- came the new United States Secretary of Defence tadiny, in
2 30-second swearing-in cere- mony.
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Houter,
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NOW ON THE OIL REFINING MAP
Paris, Sept. 17.
The Persian oil crisis and the closing down of the Abadan refinery will not mean that 'Europe will go short of refined oil, according to a report just published by the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation (ÕEEC) in Paris.
Persia only supplies European countries with 5,000,000 of the 50 million tons shipped from the Middle East each year. Europe itself extracts 3,000,000 tons of crude oil, and the discovery last year of new deposits in Northern Italy may raise this figure to five million tons.
Before the war, Europe relled that European consumption of almost entirely on the United fuel would increase by nine per States for refined oil. But since cent for each post war year. The 1047 it has doubled its own actual increase has been 17 per refining capacity and may be cent. entirely self-sufficient by 1954, according to the OEEC report.
New refineries in Europe, costing a total of $1,000 million (about £333,400,000) partly Ananced by Marshall Aid have helped to put Europe "an the map" in the refining in dustry.
These refineries became cssen- tial to European recovery when America, once the world's biggest exporter of refined oil, itself began consuming more and exporting less immediately after the
wor
At the same time, crude oil extraction in the Middle East, especially in Saudi Arabia, in- creased out of all proportion to its own
own refining capacity, while increased industriul
activity in Europe, with postwar agricul- Tural
mechanisation itself, spelled a sharp rise in the con- sumption of all types of fuel in Europe.
If European countries had not embarked on an ambitious pro- gramme of refinery factory building it 1940 and 1047, OEEC member countries would have had to spend precious dollars to pay for fuel refined in the United States.
LONG-TERM
PLAN
Europe's savings, OEEC ex- perts calculate, are about $400 million about £133,400,000) a year.
Refineries which
before the
war produced 20,000,000 tons of fuel now, together with new factories, are turning out 01 million tons year.
A present, Europe is still importing
about 1 milion tons of refined ull a year, mostly for merchant shipping and overseas territories needs.
The QEEC refinery construe- tion plan calls for production of 65 million tons in 1952-53, and 75 million tons in 1054. The plan is a long-term one, and its effects are necessarily gradual for, as M. Rene Marjo lin,
the OEEC
Secretary General, stressed Press conference, "it takes two, at a recent
and sometimes three, years to build a modern refinery,
To rationalise" the refining Industry in Europe, OEEC mem- ber countries promised to keep the Fuel Committee informed of any steps they proposed lu take to increase their refining capacity, and to abide by the Committee's advice and de- cisions.
CRISIS AVERTED
In some cases, the Committee vetoed the construction of new refineries which they thought would have too small a turn- over or would be too expensive to build.
In
some cases, too, they re- commended countries to scrap existing refineries which were out-of-date uneconomic to
run.
об
of the $1,000 million needed to finance the new reßnery building. about $850 million (about £284 million) worth (in hon-dollar currchey) was put up by Europe, either by the Indus- ries themselves or by Govern- ment subsidy.
About $150 million (about £50 million) in dollar currency went towards the purchase, in he United States, of capital equipment. To this Marshall Aid contributed a much-needed $35 million (about £11,670,000).
Fuel experts here state that Europe would have been faced with a very serious problém, if, instead of expanding and almost re-creating its own refining industry after the war, it had consistently relied
on Persian supplies-Reuter.
Indian Navy's New C-in-C
London, Sept. 17, enr-Admiral C. T. M. Pizey, new Commander-in-Chief of the moted to the Indian Navy...who has been pro- rank of Acting Vice-Admiral, leaves for Indla tomorrow aboard the P. & D. The OEEC Fuel Committee, in liner Chusan. He taktes over whose hands lies the rednery from Admiral Sir Edward programme, estimated in 1047 | Parry early in 'October.—Reuter,
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