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Japan defence minister 'faces sack' over gaffes
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Jan 7, 2012


Japan's defence minister faces the sack, reports said Saturday, after a series of gaffes including describing the rape of a 12-year-old girl by three US servicemen as a "sexual orgy incident".

Yasuo Ichikawa, who has only been in office for four months, was censured by parliament's opposition-controlled upper house in December, as was consumer affairs minister Kenji Yamaoka, who backed an alleged pyramid sales firm.

Both men are expected to be removed in a cabinet reshuffle by Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, Jiji Press news agency and other media reported.

Noda, who took office in early September, is considering dismissing them in a bid to gain cooperation from the opposition to pass a budget and a package of tax and social reform bills through parliament, they said.

Ichikawa has committed or been linked to a series of gaffes that have offended the people of the island of Okinawa, reluctant hosts to a large US military presence.

One of his officials was dismissed after likening the government's foot-dragging on plans to relocate the US military base to forewarning a woman of the intention to rape her.

In 1995 three US servicemen raped a 12-year-old girl on Okinawa, a crime that galvanised islanders' resentment of the US presence.

Ichikawa claimed not to know the details of the rape, and at a press conference called it a "sexual orgy incident".

He also skipped a palace banquet in November in honour of visiting royals from Bhutan in favour of a political fundraiser he said was "more important".

As well as being admonished for alleged ties with shady business groups before he became consumer affairs minister, Yamaoka has come under fire over comments he made in a New Year address.

"I privately think the next biggest tsunami that will come soon may be the collapse of the euro," he said, remarks seen as belittling the victims of Japan's March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, which left 20,000 dead or missing.

Noda, the latest holder of Japan's revolving-door premiership, is expected to conduct the reshuffle possibly on Friday or in the following week, before parliament reopens in late January, the reports said.

The main opposition Liberal Democratic Party has threatened to boycott the legislature if the pair stay in place.

Jiji said Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura had told all ministers to make sure that they attend a cabinet meeting set for Friday, while economy minister Motohisa Furukawa had cancelled a January 11-15 visit to the US.

But the reshuffle could be delayed to early next month to coincide with the planned launch of a new government agency tasked with reconstructing areas devastated by the March disasters, the reports said.

Kyodo News agency said the reshuffle would be minor.

Possible candidates to succeed Ichikawa as defence minister include ruling-party lawmaker Yuichiro Hata, a son of former prime minister Tsutomu Hata, Kyodo said quoting anonymous sources.

In recent polls ratings for Noda's government have fallen to 30-40 percent from 50-60 percent soon after its launch, amid criticism over his handling of the nuclear crisis that followed the quake-tsunami and plans to raise taxes.

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US army officer sentenced in kickback scheme
Washington (AFP) Jan 6, 2012 - A federal judge in Alabama sentenced a former US Army major to 12 years in prison Friday for his role in a bribery and money laundering scheme with government contracts that supported the US military in Iraq.

Eddie Pressley, 41, was convicted of steering government contracts to specific contractors in exchange for kickbacks while he served as a US Army contract procurement officer.

He also must forfeit $21 million along with real estate and several automobiles.

"Taking in nearly $3 million, he enlisted his wife to help him conceal the nature of his bribes and created phony paperwork to keep the scheme going," said Assistant US Attorney General Lanny Breuer in a statement.

Pressley is one of 17 defendants who have pleaded guilty or been convicted in an ongoing Justice Department corruption investigation focusing on Camp Arifjan, a US military base in Kuwait.

Pressley, and his wife, Eurica Pressley, were found guilty at trial on March 1, 2011, of one count of bribery, one count of conspiracy to commit bribery, eight counts of honest services fraud, one count of money laundering conspiracy and 11 counts of engaging in monetary transactions with criminal proceeds. A sentencing date for Eurica Pressley has not yet been set.

The Army authorized Pressley to award supply contracts at Camp Arifjan between 2004 and 2005 while he also held undisclosed business interests in several contracting companies, including Freedom Consulting and Catering Co. and Total Government Allegiance, a Justice Department statement said.

Terry Hall, one of the contractors who admitted to paying Pressley and a co-conspirator more than $1.6 million in bribes, agreed to testify against him at trial.

Hall said that in exchange for contracts to supply bottled water and fencing to the US military, Pressley demanded that Hall and his associates put the bribe money in a bank account set up in the name of a phony company, EGP Business Solutions Inc.

Pressley's wife assisted by setting up other bank accounts in Dubai and the Cayman Islands to receive and conceal the money through wire transfers. The Pressleys allegedly hid the bribes further by writing up invoices for ill-defined "consulting services," according to court testimony.



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Fernandez shakes up Argentine military
Buenos Aires (UPI) Jan 6, 2012
Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has reshuffled the country's military command, a move seen by critics as indication of continuing tensions between her administration and the defense establishment. Fernandez announced major changes at the top of the military command structure just before she was hospitalized for treatment of thyroid cancer, which, for presidential loya ... read more


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