19/04/2013

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:00:17. > :00:21.police operation and locked down in Boston tonight. The prime suspect in

:00:21. > :00:29.the Boston bombing and the killing of a police officer has shocked the

:00:30. > :00:37.nation and his family. I say, if you are alive, turn yourself in. And ask

:00:37. > :00:42.for forgiveness. Who are the brothers? The now dead name-mac-bee

:00:42. > :00:44.and the still at large, name-mac. We have been asking ourselves whether

:00:44. > :00:54.it was home-grown or foreign inspired, but the answer may well be

:00:54. > :00:59.both. Also tonight, and an economic boom for Mongolia as they set out to

:00:59. > :01:03.tap their economic world -- economic wealth. Are they about to become one

:01:03. > :01:13.of the wealthiest countries in the world? It is a vast body of copper,

:01:13. > :01:15.

:01:15. > :01:20.gold and silver. They say it is the size of the island of Manhattan.

:01:20. > :01:24.Good evening. It has been a day of huge drama in Boston but still the

:01:24. > :01:29.19-year-old suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings has evaded the

:01:29. > :01:32.Lancs -- the ranks of law officers swarming the city. His brother and

:01:32. > :01:37.accomplice died following a fire fight with police. Scattered family

:01:37. > :01:41.members have contributed to a picture of the suspected bombers. An

:01:41. > :01:45.uncle in Maryland has called them losers and called his surviving

:01:45. > :01:49.nephew, a medical student, to give themselves up. An aunt in Toronto

:01:49. > :01:53.said the older brother had recently become a devout Muslim. The father

:01:53. > :01:57.in Dagestan said his sons were set up. This report on the dramatic

:01:57. > :02:07.operation still unfolding. Ladies and gentlemen, back-up,

:02:07. > :02:08.

:02:08. > :02:11.back-up. We are being ordered back. A city in lockdown. 1 million people

:02:11. > :02:18.trapped inside a combat zone. We are asking you to stay home, stay

:02:18. > :02:23.indoors. We asking businesses not to open. Move back around the corner.

:02:23. > :02:31.Move now, please. Up to 10,000 officers, heavily armed. In their

:02:31. > :02:36.sights, two suspects, one no dead, one still on the run. It was late

:02:37. > :02:42.last night when the two men finally broke cover. 19-year-old Dzhokhar

:02:42. > :02:43.Tsarnaev, caught on camera in a 711 shopping Cambridge, near the

:02:43. > :02:50.Massachusetts Institute of Technology campus. He and his

:02:50. > :02:54.brother, Tamerlan, were apparently trying to rob it. Police were

:02:54. > :02:58.alerted to a disturbance. First on the scene, 26 old police officer,

:02:58. > :03:03.Sean Collier. He was shot several times and died in his vehicle. To

:03:03. > :03:07.make their getaway, the two men carjacked at the driver of a

:03:07. > :03:12.Mercedes. Keeping him with him -- with them in the car for half an

:03:12. > :03:17.hour before releasing him unharmed at a gas station in Cambridge. The

:03:17. > :03:19.police gave chase. Following the Mercedes into Watertown. Police say

:03:19. > :03:26.that they were fired at and explosive devices were thrown at

:03:26. > :03:35.them from the car. After midnight, there is more gunfire. More bombs

:03:35. > :03:41.are thrown. Tamerlan Tsarnaev is captured, critically injured. He

:03:41. > :03:44.died later in hospital, while his brother, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, escaped.

:03:44. > :03:48.Our immediate concern is for those people in the neighbourhood up

:03:48. > :03:52.there. We have an active search going on by tactical teams to locate

:03:52. > :03:56.and apprehend this particular individual. He should be considered

:03:57. > :04:00.armed and dangerous. It is a threat to anybody that might -- he is a

:04:00. > :04:03.threat to anybody that might score -- might approach and some use

:04:03. > :04:12.extreme caution and stay in your homes. So they stayed inside and

:04:12. > :04:15.this is what they saw. This is our garaged right now. -- our garage.

:04:15. > :04:20.What the hell? And they were not necessarily safe in their homes.

:04:20. > :04:27.I've heard someone empty -- something enter my room. I've found

:04:27. > :04:31.at my desk a bullet had gone through my wall. It had gone through the

:04:31. > :04:36.calendar and the back of my chair, and whenever my head would have

:04:36. > :04:40.been, the bullet came to rest at the foot of my bed. Quickly, a picture

:04:40. > :04:46.emerged of the brothers. Both ethnic Chechens who arrived in the United

:04:46. > :04:48.States ten years ago. Tamerlan Tsarnaev was a boxer. In an

:04:48. > :04:53.interview with Boston University Magazine, he said he aspired to

:04:53. > :05:01.fight for the US Olympic boxing team. Yet he also said that he did

:05:01. > :05:03.not have any American friends. He said I don't understand them. On

:05:03. > :05:09.Russia 's equivalent of Facebook, the younger brother described his

:05:09. > :05:15.worldview as Islam, and asked to identify the main thing in his

:05:15. > :05:20.life, he answered, career and money. What did not become any clear online

:05:20. > :05:24.was what was motivating the two men, a mystery to their father even.

:05:24. > :05:27.TRANSLATION: I have confidence in my children. In their innocence. I do

:05:27. > :05:32.not know what happened and how this came about, only that God Almighty

:05:32. > :05:37.and the person that did it know what really happened. The Almighty will

:05:37. > :05:47.punish them for that. In middle and, an uncle was less forgiving. I say,

:05:47. > :05:48.

:05:48. > :05:58.if you are alive, turn yourself in. And Aske for forgiveness from the

:05:58. > :05:58.

:05:59. > :06:08.victims and the injured and from those who are left, ask forgiveness.

:06:09. > :06:09.

:06:09. > :06:13.He has brought shame on our family. He has brought shame on the entire

:06:13. > :06:17.Chechen ethnicity. It is now approaching 20 hours since the

:06:17. > :06:21.manhunt began. But still they do not have their man. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev

:06:21. > :06:28.remains at large, and many in the city Art, Taoist. -- are

:06:28. > :06:31.traumatised. You do not know what is going on. Something is happening in

:06:31. > :06:40.my community, on my street, but did not know what it was. When I've

:06:40. > :06:43.found out, I cannot talk any more. Tonight, details emerged about the

:06:43. > :06:46.family. An aunt in Toronto claimed that Tamerlan had a Christian wife

:06:46. > :06:53.and a young daughter, that had recently become more devout as a

:06:53. > :06:59.Muslim. Our diplomatic editor has just

:06:59. > :07:03.returned from Boston. How has it come to this? We have one dead prime

:07:03. > :07:09.suspect and the other on the run. An extraordinary end to the trauma at

:07:09. > :07:11.the beginning of the week. What was apparent throughout the week was the

:07:11. > :07:18.incredible pressure the authorities were under to show some signs of

:07:18. > :07:21.regress. Also, we had amateur sleuthing going on, people being put

:07:21. > :07:28.in the frame on Twitter, and none of those images turned out to be these

:07:28. > :07:32.brothers. But there was a stampede to try and out who was responsible.

:07:32. > :07:37.Having done so, they may well have triggered this final Rampage, by

:07:37. > :07:43.indicating to the brothers that their identities would be out there

:07:43. > :07:48.very soon, and that they might as well is -- they might as well start

:07:48. > :07:54.if they wanted a final killing spree. And on the -- and an enviable

:07:54. > :07:57.dilemma. We know that a double amputee told them what he looked

:07:57. > :08:02.like. A description.But to put names to them would have taken

:08:02. > :08:07.longer. Tell me what do you think. Possible radicalisation.

:08:07. > :08:11.Essentially, the boys are of Chechen origin. Both university students but

:08:11. > :08:18.the older brother locked -- dropped out. Both very clever. It is

:08:18. > :08:23.curious. It is Columbine meets jihad. We hear about the realisation

:08:23. > :08:27.of the older brother, Tamerlan, and we have seen the comments that he

:08:27. > :08:31.made in the piece to the newspaper report. He does not understand

:08:31. > :08:33.Americans. Alienation commie dropped out of college. Some of these have

:08:33. > :08:36.more in common with the traditional trajectory of some of these people

:08:36. > :08:40.who have gone in killing sprees in the United States more recently and

:08:40. > :08:48.we know that there was that element of radical Islam playing in his

:08:48. > :08:52.life. And where does this leave President Obama? And his relations

:08:52. > :08:56.with Russia? The authorities in the region of Chechnya have been quick

:08:56. > :08:59.to say it is nothing to do with them. From the point of view of the

:08:59. > :09:01.Kremlin, you would like to say that they knew nothing about this in

:09:01. > :09:05.advance and these people were essentially Americans, having been

:09:05. > :09:12.there for years. Intentionally, it offers an opening. If the US wishes

:09:12. > :09:14.to use it, to get closer to the government of Vladimir Putin. The

:09:14. > :09:17.issue of elaboration of terrorism has been a thing which

:09:17. > :09:24.intermittently has allowed them to minimise differences over the past

:09:24. > :09:29.12 years and emphasise commonality of purpose. For now, thank you. If

:09:29. > :09:32.anything develops, we will come back to you. Daisy Khan is the Executive

:09:32. > :09:35.Director of the American Society for Muslim Advancement which tries to

:09:35. > :09:39.foster good relationships between Muslims and other communities. That

:09:39. > :09:42.Leonard is a Professor at the Kennedy School of Government at

:09:42. > :09:48.Harvard University and joins us from Boston. Residents there are being

:09:48. > :09:54.urged to stay indoors. Professor Leonard, you are right next to

:09:54. > :10:03.Watertown. Tell me, the atmosphere, the mood of the people you have been

:10:03. > :10:09.talking today? It is a very sombre mood. It has been a tough week and

:10:09. > :10:13.it is a tough day today. You should know that things in Boston are not

:10:13. > :10:18.completely out of sorts. It is important to understand that the

:10:18. > :10:23.actual lockdown in Boston is over a very wide area, on a voluntary

:10:23. > :10:28.basis. The reasons for that is to reduce the demand for services from

:10:28. > :10:35.police and to allow them to have freedom of movement. The actual area

:10:35. > :10:41.that is affected is relatively small. I am right on the edge of

:10:41. > :10:48.that area right now. In a sense, you made a stand is today because after

:10:48. > :10:54.we -- it is Patriots' Day today and he went out. -- you went out.

:10:54. > :11:00.Today is a special day in Massachusetts. I live in one of the

:11:00. > :11:06.towns in which the Revolutionary War began. In the early morning, we go

:11:06. > :11:08.out for what we call the dawn salute. It is a special ceremony to

:11:08. > :11:13.celebrate the patriotism of the Minutemen who stood their 200 years

:11:13. > :11:17.ago and thought for the liberties that we now have. Which is ironic.

:11:17. > :11:23.It is odd to talk to you about that since it was against the British.

:11:23. > :11:26.Maybe that was a big mistake. In any case, to do so celebrates patriotism

:11:26. > :11:33.and the fight of liberty. It is ironic because what you were doing

:11:33. > :11:38.celebrated freedom. The freedom that everyone has but they do not feel

:11:38. > :11:44.free today. That is right. We are worried about that issue. In many

:11:44. > :11:47.ways, this is the nightmare scenario. We have been worried about

:11:47. > :11:54.this for a long time. People in counterterrorism and crisis

:11:54. > :11:56.management are worried about the domestic, home-grown terror event.

:11:56. > :12:01.It is particularly dangerous because it is particularly difficult to

:12:01. > :12:05.prevent. We are a free and open society and we want to have open

:12:05. > :12:10.access. We want people to be able to come and go. The worry is that

:12:10. > :12:15.people who are illegally here and have all the rights that everyone

:12:15. > :12:19.else has will develop radicalisation and will become, for some reason or

:12:19. > :12:25.other, motivated and develop the intention to cause harm. In a free

:12:25. > :12:31.society, they will be able to find the means to do that for a

:12:31. > :12:37.relatively small-scale event, which is what this was. Let me put this to

:12:37. > :12:44.Daisy Khan. Do you feel that? of all, we are devastated by this

:12:44. > :12:51.event. And the loss of life. Here was a beautiful event where all of

:12:51. > :12:59.humanity came together to celebrate human spirit, and it ends up in a

:12:59. > :13:03.terrible tragedy. Do you think it will have a wider impact on the

:13:03. > :13:08.general Muslim community in America? It has already had an impact.

:13:08. > :13:13.Although the event happened in Boston, we got our share of hateful

:13:13. > :13:19.calls saying, what are you doing about it? There is a backlash but I

:13:19. > :13:26.have to say that our law enforcement and federal agencies have exercised

:13:26. > :13:31.a lot of restraint in the message. I think the general public, although

:13:31. > :13:36.fearful of what might come in the future, the messaging is very

:13:36. > :13:41.tempered. That has had a positive effect on the community because we

:13:41. > :13:47.do not need -- we do not use terms like Islamists. They have not use

:13:47. > :13:54.terms like jihad S. We have been dealing with the actions of

:13:54. > :13:59.terrorists. This is the complaint. Of course, it must be disturbing to

:13:59. > :14:04.talk about these boys, American boys at University, ten years away from

:14:04. > :14:11.Chechnya. Although with strong links. But they were following, on

:14:12. > :14:18.YouTube, it radical preacher who preaches some pretty awful things.

:14:18. > :14:20.Do you go on -- do you go along with the idea that there might have been

:14:20. > :14:26.some radicalisation relatively recently? Is that possible?

:14:26. > :14:31.course, this is the action, not the action of a devout Muslim, but of a

:14:31. > :14:38.twisted psyche. How it got twisted as anybody's guess, but Muslims are

:14:38. > :14:41.very concerned about these radical websites that have grown from 200 to

:14:41. > :14:47.2000 now. We have asked the government to shut them down or

:14:47. > :14:52.tweak them. -- treat them like training grounds. Muslims who wants

:14:52. > :14:58.to counter this are not allowed to go into these websites, so we want

:14:58. > :15:05.to do our share of eliminating terrorists from our community, but

:15:05. > :15:12.we're not allowed to do the job, and How much monitoring is going on do

:15:12. > :15:15.you think? I completely agree with Daisy Khan about this issue. It's

:15:15. > :15:18.really important not to think of this as being Islamic in any way.

:15:18. > :15:22.We don't, first of all, we don't know what the motivations of these

:15:22. > :15:25.people were yets. We don't know enough about who they were. We have

:15:25. > :15:30.to be very careful not to be so curious about this specific ef vent

:15:30. > :15:37.that we assume that all events will be like this. Timothy McHave a was

:15:37. > :15:44.a Christian. He killed -- McVeigh was a Christian and he killed

:15:44. > :15:48.people in Oklahoma City 15 years ago. It's how you deal with

:15:48. > :15:53.radicalism. You deal with it by trying to understand where it's

:15:53. > :15:56.happening and try to prevent it, try to see people who are becoming

:15:56. > :16:00.radical aislesed and see them as individuals not as members of a

:16:01. > :16:05.larger group. The other thing you have to realise is that in a free

:16:05. > :16:08.excite society we want to have open access. We want to continue to have

:16:08. > :16:13.events like marathons. Marathons are particularly difficult to

:16:13. > :16:16.defend. I was in Doha a month ago and talked specifically about this

:16:16. > :16:22.kind of scenario. Marathon which gathers a lot of people, is a great

:16:22. > :16:26.celebration, has a high density of people, has a 55-mile perimeter

:16:26. > :16:29.that's impossible to police all of that all of the time. We are going

:16:29. > :16:31.to have, continue to have vulnerable events. Part of our

:16:31. > :16:35.strategy has to be to look for the individuals who are becoming

:16:35. > :16:38.radicalised and treat them as individuals and to cope with them

:16:38. > :16:43.and try to prevent. But the other side of it is we have to be

:16:43. > :16:49.prepared to take a certain level of risk in our ordinary lives because

:16:49. > :16:52.we don't want to be in lockdown in the way we are today all the time.

:16:52. > :16:56.That means that we have to borrow from your British traditions

:16:56. > :16:58.actually of keeping calm and carrying on, as you did during the

:16:58. > :17:03.Battle of Britain and during the IRA bombings. Thank you both very

:17:03. > :17:07.much. I'm sorry for the delay on the line from Boston. Thank you.

:17:07. > :17:10.A deal between the Government of Mongolia and the mining giant Rio

:17:10. > :17:14.Tinto could transform a country from one of the poorest to one of

:17:15. > :17:19.the richest per Capita in the world. Mongolia, once thought to be cursed

:17:19. > :17:25.by being sandwiched between Russia and China is now in a perfect

:17:25. > :17:32.position to exploit its untapped mineral wealth. Gold, copper,

:17:32. > :17:35.silver, tungsten and the desert has it all. One it's full little

:17:35. > :17:40.operational, it will account for a third of the country's GDP, but a

:17:40. > :17:47.disagreement between the company an the Mongolian government over the

:17:47. > :17:51.mining revenues threatens the operation.

:17:51. > :18:01.For millennia, the only people who have managed to eek a living from

:18:01. > :18:01.

:18:02. > :18:06.the Gobi Desert are nomadic camel herders. Not any more. Soon the

:18:06. > :18:14.Gobi could be generating a substantial income for every single

:18:14. > :18:19.Mongolian thanks to this. It's a new copper mine rising up from the

:18:19. > :18:27.delz ert scrub. It's causing controversy across the country and

:18:27. > :18:32.not just because of the scale of the operation. This is just the

:18:32. > :18:39.beginning. Underneath me is one of the largest untapped mineral

:18:39. > :18:49.reserves in the world. It's a vast body of copper, gold, silver. They

:18:49. > :18:49.

:18:49. > :18:54.say it is the size of the island of Manhattan. The Anglo-Australian

:18:54. > :19:01.mining giant Rio Tinto has spent �4 billion on the mine so far and

:19:01. > :19:11.expects to spend a few billion more to get this place fully operational.

:19:11. > :19:12.

:19:12. > :19:16.We have... This is a former yak herder who is turned geophys sifts.

:19:16. > :19:19.He's now vice-president of the mine. He was part of the team that first

:19:19. > :19:25.discovered the vast deposit. It was very exciting. It became more and

:19:25. > :19:30.more bigger and bigger. We're talking about 30 million tons of

:19:30. > :19:34.copper and more than a thousand ton gold. The revenue figures are

:19:35. > :19:41.pretty striking too. The mine is expected to generate more than �5

:19:41. > :19:46.billion a year every year for the next 40 or 50 years. One third of

:19:46. > :19:52.the GDP will be from this mine. Hold on a second, one third of the

:19:53. > :19:58.entire country's GDP? Yeah.From this one, single mine? But these

:19:58. > :20:05.are early days. Oyu Tolgoi produced its first copper, this modest mound

:20:05. > :20:10.of powder, during my visit earlier this year. The prospect of the

:20:10. > :20:14.profits from this place are already helping power and extraordinary

:20:14. > :20:19.economic boom in what was, until recently, one of the poorest

:20:19. > :20:24.countries in the worl. -- world. They've taken down the Statue of

:20:24. > :20:29.Lenin that used to stand here. For 70 years Mongolia was a rock solid

:20:29. > :20:32.sal lite of the Soviet Union and the Communist Party that used to

:20:32. > :20:37.run it was based right here. If you want to see how this country is

:20:37. > :20:44.changing, just take a look at its new neighbour.

:20:44. > :20:48.A mall packed with the world's most exclusive and expensive brand names.

:20:48. > :20:56.Just across the square is other evidence that the Mongolian boom is

:20:56. > :21:02.not all it seems. They are off. Trading has opened on the Mongolian

:21:02. > :21:06.Stock Exchange, but this place is not exactly Wall Street. The

:21:06. > :21:10.Mongolian Stock Exchange is supposed to be driving the nation's

:21:10. > :21:16.new capitalist economy. It has grown rapidly, but it is still one

:21:16. > :21:20.of the smallest exchanges in the worldment -- world. This stock

:21:20. > :21:25.market thing is quite a new thing in the country, but so far, there's

:21:25. > :21:29.been only exploration, construction and development projects. There

:21:29. > :21:32.hasn't been yet any production or mining started yet. With the start

:21:32. > :21:42.of mining, with the start of production of all those, the real

:21:42. > :21:43.

:21:43. > :21:49.boom will take place. But that boom is desperately needed because of

:21:49. > :21:53.the deepening poverty elsewhere in Mongolia. It isn't just economics

:21:53. > :21:59.that's reshaping the country, local people say the climate is changing

:21:59. > :22:02.too. Mongolia has always suffered the

:22:02. > :22:06.occasional extreme winter. They call them zuds here. They are

:22:06. > :22:14.becoming more frequent and they're helping drive a great exodus from

:22:14. > :22:19.Mongolia's countryside. This migration to the city

:22:19. > :22:22.represents an incredible change in Mongolian society. They call this

:22:22. > :22:32.place the Ger district after the traditional round tents the nomads

:22:32. > :22:36.

:22:36. > :22:41.use. Once the morning smog clears, you get a sense of its real scale.

:22:41. > :22:46.A quarter of of the entire Mongolian population has given up

:22:46. > :22:55.its traditional herding lifestyle and set up their gers in this

:22:55. > :23:05.sprawling shanty town. This story is typical. They were nomadic

:23:05. > :23:18.

:23:18. > :23:24.herders until disaster struck, a Millions of animals have died in a

:23:24. > :23:34.series of these zuds over the last few years. For Samma and other

:23:34. > :24:00.

:24:00. > :24:08.herders, it meant the end of their But they haven't lost touch with

:24:08. > :24:16.their roots. They've invited me to a concerts of Mongolian folk music

:24:16. > :24:26.in town. But it is the mineral boom that's

:24:26. > :24:30.preoccupying some of Mongolia's other musicians. G is a rapper who

:24:30. > :24:40.is sceptical about the benefits of opening Mongolia to foreign mining

:24:40. > :25:00.

:25:00. > :25:03.Most Monday goalians would disagree with you. They'd say they -- most

:25:03. > :25:13.Mongolians would disagree with you. They want the things the resources

:25:13. > :25:15.

:25:15. > :25:21.can bring. People in the Ger I'm from the Ger district. You are?

:25:21. > :25:26.Yes. It's my hood. I'm from the Ger district. That may be so, but the

:25:26. > :25:32.fact is a third of Mongolian families still live below the

:25:32. > :25:41.poverty line. The shanty towns have no sanitation, no formal

:25:41. > :25:46.electricity grid and few roads, other than dirt tracks. Just before

:25:46. > :25:50.the general election last year, politicians bowed to the pressure

:25:50. > :26:00.to spend, awarding every Mongolian adult a one-off payment worth

:26:00. > :26:08.

:26:08. > :26:12.hundreds of pounds. What due spend Do you think that's the right way

:26:12. > :26:22.fortd Government -- government to use -- for the government to use

:26:22. > :26:37.

:26:37. > :26:40.the money from Mongolia's mineral The payment also made the investors

:26:40. > :26:45.in Mongolia's mining industry anxious. The money came from

:26:45. > :26:49.another mine in the Gobi, a vast coal mine. It helped create a cash

:26:49. > :26:58.crisis that led to a temporary shut down and now, the government has

:26:58. > :27:03.Mongolia's biggest mine in its sites. It is chilli today, minus 27.

:27:03. > :27:07.This wedding cake of a building is the Mongolian Parliament and

:27:07. > :27:11.Presidential Palace and the current government looks set to bow to the

:27:11. > :27:16.temptation to spend the profits of Mongolia's mineral wealth today.

:27:16. > :27:20.It's written a couple of hundred million dollars of extra income

:27:20. > :27:25.from Oyu Tolgoi into this year's budget, income that depends on a

:27:25. > :27:29.renegotiation of the contract with Rio Tinto, a renegotiation that

:27:29. > :27:34.hasn't taken place. Where does the new Mongolian

:27:35. > :27:41.President think that money is going to come from? I think we are now

:27:41. > :27:45.going to negotiate that. And our government doing that. Is that a

:27:46. > :27:52.renegotiation of the contract? never said that from our government

:27:52. > :27:57.and from myself, you know, we never say that re-open or renegotiate.

:27:57. > :28:03.You say you want hundreds of millions of dollars more from Rio

:28:03. > :28:06.Tinto. That say change, isn't it? No, no, no. That's not changing the

:28:06. > :28:10.contract. Of course viewed from Rio Tinto's London headquarters the

:28:10. > :28:17.perspective is very different. a good project. It's good for

:28:17. > :28:21.Mongolia. It's good for Rio Tinto. What I need to ensure is that our

:28:21. > :28:26.shareholders are protected. Certainly we're in discussions with

:28:26. > :28:32.the government of Mongolia, but importantly, they need to recognise

:28:32. > :28:36.that this is a major project. It will be 30% of the country's GDP.

:28:36. > :28:41.Speaking on behalf of Rio Tinto, and in fact commenting on behalf of

:28:41. > :28:46.other people investing in Mongolia or potentially investing, certainty

:28:46. > :28:49.is critical when you're bringing on projects of this scale.

:28:50. > :28:54.implication is clear - when you're investing billions, you don't take

:28:54. > :28:58.it kindly if the government changes the rules halfway through. Isn't

:28:58. > :29:02.there a dainker that Mongolia gets a reputation for being -- danger

:29:02. > :29:12.that Mongolia gets a reputation for being unreliable? You know Mongolia

:29:12. > :29:29.

:29:29. > :29:36.is not a lawless country. Change Why are you asking the government

:29:37. > :29:43.not to address those issues? should be no surprise that

:29:43. > :29:48.Mongolians are demanding a proper account of their giant new mine.

:29:48. > :29:51.But this is a dangerous game. Mongolia needs partners like Rio

:29:51. > :29:55.Tinto if it's to exploit its mineral wealth and if it starts to

:29:55. > :30:05.break contracts and demand extra cash, it may find the big mining

:30:05. > :30:33.

:30:33. > :30:40.The danger is if the government misjudges its hand, the Mongolian

:30:40. > :30:44.mineral boom could disappear back into the desert sands.

:30:44. > :30:49.Tomorrow morning's front pages. Of course everything is dominated by

:30:49. > :30:55.that search for the prime suspect in the Boston bombings. The Daily

:30:55. > :31:01.Telegraph - a city in the grip of terror. Then a picture of Margaret

:31:01. > :31:06.Thatcher's first boyfriend from the dra goon guards. The guardian next.

:31:06. > :31:10.Police probe brothers' links to Chechnya. Massive manhunt sees the

:31:10. > :31:15.city in lockdown. The Independent - a series of pictures and swat teams

:31:16. > :31:20.go door to door in search of suspects.

:31:20. > :31:24.Boston lockdown in hunts for the bomber says the Financial Times.

:31:24. > :31:28.Bad day for -- bad week for Osborne at the bottom there.

:31:28. > :31:32.A different story in the Daily Mail - the news the Duchess of Cambridge

:31:32. > :31:36.will move in with her mum for six weeks after baby is born, rather

:31:36. > :31:40.than having a maternity nurse. On the right side, Rolf's lawyers try