5/24/2011

Japan logs 1st trade deficit in three months April

Japan's exports fell 12.5 percent in April from a year earlier, marking the second consecutive monthly decline, and posted a trade deficit for the first time in three months, the Ministry of Finance said Wednesday.
The ministry said in a preliminary report that the trade balance was tipped by the adverse affects of the March 11 disasters on production and shipping of goods.
The trade balance fell into a deficit of 463.7 billion yen (5.7 billion U.S. dollars) in the recording period, compared with economists' expectations for a 12.4 percent fall and following a 2. 3 percent revised decline logged in the previous month.
The figure also compares with a 729.2 billion yen surplus logged a year earlier.
The ministry said it was the first time since a 479.41 billion yen deficit booked in January that the balance has swung from a surplus.
The government figures revealed that exports totaled 5.156 trillion yen in the recording period and imports added up to 5.619 trillion yen, marking an 8.9 percent rise from a year earlier as commodity prices increased.
By region, export to the United States fell sharply by 23.3 percent, with the import to the nation increased only 1.8 percent. (one U.S. dollar is equivalent to 82 yen)

S Korea's exports to PIIGS plunge amid fiscal crisis

South Korea's exports to so-called PIIGS nations plunged this year amid lingering fiscal crisis in Europe, the customs office said Wednesday.
The PIIGS is a term used by some investors to refer to debt-ridden European countries, including Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain.
South Korea's exports to Portugal reached 490.5 million U.S. dollars for the first four months of this year, nearly half of 882. 9 million dollars tallied for the same period last year, according to data from the Korea Customs Service (KCS).
Shipments to Greece contracted 15.8 percent on-year to 304.2 million dollars over the cited period, while those to Italy started decreasing in April after three months of growth.
Fitch lowered credit rating on Greece by three notches last week to a non-investment grade of B+ from its existing BB+, and Standard & Poor's cut rating outlook on Italy from stable to negative.
Exports to Spain grew 7.3 percent on-year to 670.7 million dollars during the first four months of the year, but those are much smaller than a 28.6 percent expansion of those to European Union (EU) nations during the same period, according to the KCS.
Exports to PIIGS nations will unlikely improve in the foreseeable future, but its impact to the country's exports is believed to be meager as shipments to the four European nations account for only 1.7 percent of South Korea's total exports.

Marseille striker Gignac out for seven weeks

Marseille striker Andre-Pierre Gignac will be out of action for up to seven weeks after undergoing a successful pelvic operation, said the Ligue 1 club on its website on Tuesday.
The 25-year-old French international has scored just eight goals this season since his multi-million euro transfer from Toulouse last summer.

Boateng completes moving from Genoa to Milan

 Ghana midfielder Kevin-Prince Boateng completed his move from Genoa to AC Milan on Tuesday.
The 24-year-old, who spent the last season with Milan but was part owned by Genoa, was bought out by Milan as the two Italian clubs reached an agreement following three hours of talks on Tuesday.
"Two clubs like Genoa and Milan cannot argue so we've come to an agreement and Boateng is entirely a Milan player," said Genoa president Enrico Preziosi.
As part of the deal part-owned players Alberto Paloschi, Marco Amelia, Nnamdi Oduamadi and Gianmarco Zigoni have transferred to Milan while Greek center-back Sokratis Papastathopoulos has returned to Genoa.
The only player still owned by both parties is young striker Giacomo Beretta, who will play with Genoa next season.

France to play Germany in friendly at Bremen

France have set up a friendly with Germany on February 29 in Bremen's Weserstadion, the French Football Federation (FFF) announced on Tuesday.
The last clash between the former world champions in November 2005 ended in a goalless draw at the Stade de France.

Chavez confirms June visit to Brazil

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez confirmed Tuesday that he will visit Brazil on June 6 after a knee injury forced him to cancel a scheduled trip in early May, Brazil's official news agency reported.
Chavez made the confirmation during a telephone conversation with Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff.
This will be the first meeting between the two leaders since Rousseff took office in January.
The visit will serve to reinforce the good relations between the two countries, which were intensified during the government of former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and are expected to be maintained with the same intensity during Rousseff's government.
The leaders will review the main topics of the bilateral agenda, with emphasis on bilateral trade, the evolution of cooperation programs in the areas of agriculture, regional development, popular housing, universal banking services and the Orinoco-Amazon integration.
One of the highlights of the meeting should be the issue of the oil refinery "Abreu e Lima," which is being built in the Brazilian state of Pernambuco. The project is orginally considered as a joint enterprise, but Venezuela had not made financial contributions so far to it.
Another issue is the planned expansion of cooperation in the energy area as Venezuela faces electricity shortage.
In 2010, trade between Brazil and Venezuela amounted to 4.6 billion U.S. dollars, with Brazil exporting 3.8 billion dollars to the neighbor.

Icelandic volcanic ash cloud grounds Ryanair flights between Bratislava and Edinburgh

Due to the latest volcanic activity in Iceland, low-cost air carrier Ryanair on Tuesday cancelled flights between Bratislava's M. R. Stefanik Airport (BTS) and Britain's Edinburgh, a BTS spokesperson said.
Dana Madunicka said that the cancelled flights affected the travel plans of around 300 passengers.
"Those whose flights have been cancelled can claim their money back using a form on the carrier's website, or they may re-book their flights free of charge," she said.
All other flights out of Bratislava scheduled for Tuesday took off normally.
"No cancellations have been announced yet," said Madunicka, noting that passengers should keep an eye on carriers' website updates more often at the moment as the situation may change.
The ash cloud from Grimsvotn, Iceland's most active volcano, has blocked air traffic in Northern Europe. Flights from Scotland have been grounded for now, and the cloud reached the shores of Norway and Denmark on Tuesday.

Brazilian President Rousseff to veto amnesty to deforesters

 Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff said on Tuesday that she will veto any articles granting amnesty to farmers who deforested protected land if an amendment to the country's Forest Code is approved by the Congress.
Rousseff had a one-hour meeting with ten former ministers, who oppose the amendment to the Forest Code, which is expected to be voted later Tuesday.
In an open letter to the president and the Congress on Monday, the ministers condemned the bill which they said is damaging the environment and represents a regression in the conservation regulations.
The amendment foresees a reduction in the share of private properties which cannot be deforested. It also will grant a pardon to some farmers who deforested their lands.
According to Rubens Ricupero, a former environment minister from 1993 to 1994, Rousseff showed solidarity to their concerns.
"The president is willing to prevent regressions in the environmental laws," he said. "She said she will not accept a rise in the deforestation and made it clear that she will veto the amnesty."
Rousseff, however, did not promise to postpone the voting as the ministers requested.
Carlos Minc, who served as environment minister from 2008 to 2010, said Rousseff agreed that the rising deforestation in the Amazon rain forest is related to the expectations for the approval of the new code and the possible amnesty to deforesters.
"She feels the rise in the deforestation in Mato Grosso state has something to do with the possibility of impunity," he said.

Guangzhou issues new guidelines to attract foreign investment

 Senior overseas executives and high-tech personnel in Guangdong's provincial capital will be able to apply for multi-journey visas valid for 2 to 5 years after a new regulation comes into effect later this year.
Legal representatives, general managers, deputy general managers and financial directors from overseas will also be able to apply for a Guangzhou five-year residence permit, according to the Implementation Guidelines for Promoting the Use of Foreign Investment.
The 19-article document issued by Guangzhou city government is expected to come into effect in the second half of the year.
The guidelines require relevant departments in the city to offer "green passage" and simplify procedures for major foreign-funded companies and joint ventures applying for operating licenses and related certificates.
In addition to simplified exit and entry procedures for foreign executives and hi-tech talent, domestic employees of the foreign-funded companies can apply for multi-journey travel documents to visit the Hong Kong and Macao special administrative regions.
The guidelines are aimed at helping Guangzhou, which is located in the center of the prosperous Pearl River Delta, attract more foreign investment and talent in the following years.
An official from Guangzhou city bureau of foreign trade and economic cooperation said the guidelines will help the city further improve its competitiveness in using foreign investment.
"The number of foreign executives who come to Guangzhou to work and do business will continue to grow, due to the city's improving environment, rapid economic development and the myriad business opportunities," said the official who declined to be named.
Harley Seyedin, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in South China, saidthat any effort to make it easier for foreign individuals and small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to establish a business in China is welcome and will help increase foreign investment.
"The vast majority of innovations in the west are achieved by individuals and SMEs. Therefore, further opening business opportunities to SMEs and individuals will result in the arrival of foreign technology in China," Seyedin told China Daily.
"This is technology which is not now available in China but is vital as Guangdong, and especially Guangzhou, work to transform their industries from manufacturing for exports to higher value-added industries," he added.
Chen Xingwen, a Guangzhou white-collar worker, said the guidelines are also good news for domestic workers.
"Local white collar workers will have even more opportunities if more foreign companies are attracted to Guangzhou," Chen said.
To attract foreign investment and foreign high-tech talent, Guangzhou city government will also join hands with relevant ministries and bureaus of the central government to jointly organize an annual Guangzhou International Investment Forum, to expand cooperation and contact with big name international conglomerates and financial groups.
More than 63,000 permanent foreign residents are registered in Guangdong and more than 4 million foreigners visit the province annually.
As well as Guangzhou, the province's foreigners mainly live and work in Shenzhen and Zhuhai special economic zones, Dongguan, Foshan, Jiangmen, Zhongshan, Huizhou, Zhaoqing and other prosperous cities in the Pearl River Delta.

The Nanhua Miao village in Guizhou


The photo taken on Monday, May 23, 2011 shows a typical cottage in the Nanhua Miao village. The village, as part of Three Trees Town, is located roughly 5 kilometers from the city of Kaili, the capital of Qiandongnan Miao and Dong Autonomous Prefecture, southwest China's Guizhou Province. The cottages (Diaojiaolou in Chinese) are built around the mountain. It is well known for beautiful natural scenery and rich customs of the Miao people.


The photo taken on Monday, May 23, 2011 shows a typical cottage in the Nanhua Miao village. The village, as part of Three Trees Town, is located roughly 5 kilometers from the city of Kaili, the capital of Qiandongnan Miao and Dong Autonomous Prefecture, southwest China's Guizhou Province. The cottages (Diaojiaolou in Chinese) are built around the mountain. It is well known for beautiful natural scenery and rich customs of the Miao people.






 The photo shows the Nanhua Miao village people making Ciba. Ciba is a kind of sticky rice cake, which symbolizes reunion and good luck in the New Year. Miao people make Ciba before the Chinese lunar New Year. So making Ciba itself represents reunion because all members of the family come together with a lot of fun and happiness.




 The photo shows the Nanhua Miao village people making Ciba. Ciba is a kind of sticky rice cake, which symbolizes reunion and good luck in the New Year. Miao people make Ciba before the Chinese lunar New Year. So making Ciba itself represents reunion because all members of the family come together with a lot of fun and happiness.






The photo shows Miao people performing a ceremonial dance called the "united dance" in Nanhua Miao Village. This dance is performed by all villagers including senior and young men and women, as well as married couples.

Leaning tower of Christchurch to be New Zealand's biggest demolition

The 26-story Hotel Grand Chancellor, which has been towering over the earthquake-stricken city of Christchurch at an angle, is to come down in New Zealand's largest-ever demolition, the government announced Wednesday.
The building in central Christchurch, New Zealand's second city, was structurally damaged in the Feb. 22 quake that killed 181 people, and was left leaning noticeably.
Earthquake Recovery Minister Gerry Brownlee said the size and nature of the job meant the demolition could take up to a year.
"This will be the largest demolition ever carried out in New Zealand," Brownlee said in a statement.
"It's also hugely symbolic for the people of Christchurch that the recovery process is well underway."
He said the sooner the demolition of larger unsafe buildings began, the faster the authorities could reopen closed areas and rebuild the city.
"As the hotel comes down in height it will mean that safer access will gradually be possible to nearby buildings and streets. "
The demolition would begin in "the next few weeks", said the statement.
However, further work to reinforce the interior of the hotel would be carried out first to allow the retrieval of property that fleeing guests left behind.

Troubled IMF needs changes

The arrest of Dominique Strauss-Kahn on charges of sexual assault was followed by his resignation as managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). This has sparked a race for his successor, one of the world's top two finance posts.
European leaders were quick off the mark, arguing that a European should occupy the post again according to the old but discredited tradition. It has been increasingly recognized that the convention of a European IMF managing director and an American World Bank president can no longer be justified.
People for the two posts should be selected from any country according to merit, not on the basis of being Europeans or Americans, which is a colonial or neo-colonial principle.
Candidates from developing countries should have an equal chance, especially since the countries have increased their share of global gross national product, and many of them (especially China and other Asian nations) have large foreign reserves.
The international media have mentioned well-known figures from India, South Africa, Singapore and Turkey who could succeed Strauss-Kahn. But the European Commission president and political leaders of Germany, France, Italy and other European countries insist on another European, giving reasons such as Europeans are the biggest creditors, are facing a serious crisis and have candidates of merit.
Ironically, the apparent "front-runner" is another French national, Finance Minister Christine Lagard. Why should a French national succeed another French national who had to resign in disgrace? And why has the top IMF post been held disproportionately by French nationals (for 35 of the 64 years of the IMF's existence)?
European leaders are arguing that the IMF chief needs to be a European because much of the present IMF loans in value are going to European countries such as Greece, Ireland and Portugal, and Europe is facing a serious financial crisis. They argue that a European IMF chief would be best suited to deal with the European crisis because he/she should or would understand the region better.
This is a strange argument, fraught with double standard. When East Asian countries suffered a debt crisis from 1997 to 1999 and the IMF's main clients became Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea, no one argued that the IMF should be led by an Asian because he/she could understand the region's problems more deeply.
Similarly, there was no chance of an African or South American occupying the higher posts of the IMF even when many countries in those regions faced financial crises and were the main borrowers in the 1980s and 1990s.
Veteran journalist and analyst of international organizations and affairs Chakravarthi Raghavan argues that the spreading economic crisis in Europe is indeed a valid reason for a non-European to head the IMF.
In the 1980s, when democratization of international institutions was on the agenda, the United States and Europe argued that since the developing countries are borrowers, they cannot be allowed to control the IMF or World Bank, Raghavan told the IPS press agency. "This logic applies here. No European should be allowed to head the IMF" now, he said. The IMF's rescue packages for Europe have become efforts to protect the interests of French and German banks which are major creditors and bond holders of Greece, Portugal and Spain.
The outrageous demand by Europe that it must continue to monopolize the IMF's top post is a clear case of double standard, especially when Western countries are trying to "teach the principles of democracy and meritocracy" to developing countries.
Despite this, Europe is likely to succeed because of the undemocratic decision-making system in the IMF, as is the case in the World Bank, where European countries hold more than 30 percent of the votes, the US 16.7 percent, Japan 6 percent and Canada 3 percent. If developed countries unite under a single candidate, they will get their way.
Still, it will not be a guaranteed or even an easy win for Europe. One reason is that public opinion (including that of Western civil society) finds European monopoly indefensible and outrageous in the modern world. A group of NGOs have called for a fair, transparent and merit-based process for selecting the next IMF chief.
Many developing countries recently called for an open and democratic selection process for the heads of the IMF and World Bank. Developing and emerging countries together control 44.7 percent of the votes, and the IMF chief must get 85 percent of the votes.
At a meeting in April, ministers of the G24 (a group of developing countries that operate in the IMF and World Bank) repeated their call "for an open, transparent, merit-based process for the selection of the president of the World Bank and the managing director of the IMF, without regard to nationality". They also called for "concrete actions and proposals to be put forward to guarantee this change".
While the developed countries have a majority of the voting rights, the developing countries can theoretically block the candidate put up by Europe or other developed countries.
The reality is that the developed countries tend to unite behind a candidate from among them, while developing countries have not been able to come up with a single candidate of their own who they could support en bloc.
Though the selection of a new IMF managing director is of immediate importance, more important is the reform needed in the IMF's policies and operations.
A South Centre paper, authored by chief economist Yilmaz Akyuz, points to its failure in preventing financial crises, which is its main task. The change of IMF's leadership is a good opportunity to discuss the weaknesses of the IMF and to reform its policies.
The author is executive director of the South Centre, a think tank of developing countries, based in Geneva.

Worrying power supply

Chinese power companies are trying hard to make a big fanfare about the urgent need to raise the price of electricity to avoid the country's worst power shortage in decades.
The country's leading power distributor, State Grid Corp, warned on Monday that some 26 provincial regions will suffer combined power shortages of 30 million kilowatts this year.
Should that be the case, enterprises should brace themselves for a long, hot and dark summer since the power distributor has already made it clear that it will prioritize power supplies for residents, hospitals, schools and other public facilities. Nevertheless, should policymakers take such a warning at face value?
The government will by no means tolerate widespread blackouts. Hence, the answer is definitely no, unless the power industry can compellingly prove that its spare generating capacity is left idle out of necessity.
Admittedly, the severe drought that is plaguing both agricultural production and hydropower generation across the country has lent some credence to the claim that the country's power supplies will fail to meet the growing demand. It is also obvious that the long-term contradiction between the market-oriented coal pricing mechanism and State-controlled electricity pricing system has seriously eroded power companies' profit margins.
While consumer prices for electricity largely remain unchanged to help fight inflation, rising coal prices have led to a short supply of relatively cheap thermal coal and forced power plants to purchase more expensive coal, which means they generate electricity at a loss.
Under such circumstances, it is understandable that power plants may want to make use of the current tight supply of power to raise electricity prices for businesses in order to cover their losses.
A considerable hike in electricity prices is not that unthinkable in China given that much of the environmental cost associated with power generation has yet to be included in the bill. In fact, if the country is to aggressively embrace environmentally friendly and energy-saving growth, dearer power prices are only a matter of time.
However, it is quite another thing to raise power prices in the face of soaring inflation simply to improve the balance sheet of State power companies that boast a salary level far above the national average.
Some thermal power companies argue that the national grid takes too big a share of the power industry's total profits. Statistics show that in the first 11 months of 2010, China's grid made a profit of 59.2 billion yuan ($9.1 billion), 42 percent of the power industry's total profits. So redistribution of profits between the State power plants and State grid companies might thus be needed.
Unstable power supplies do not justify a dearer power bill for corporate interests but rather a thorough review of the operation and regulation of this powerful industry.

Worst drought in 50 years along Yangtze



Photo taken on May 24, 2011 shows a row of fishing boats left along a stream near the Honghu Lake in Honghu City, central China's Hubei Province. Plagued by a severe drought which is spreading throughout China's southern regions, Honghu Lake has dwindled by a third in water surface and dropped down to less than 40 centimeters in its deepest place.



The worst drought in 50 years to hit provinces along the Yangtze River may continue to plague Central China.
The China Meteorological Administration warned on Tuesday that little rain is expected in the coming 10 days and highs of 36 C are likely to hit the central and southern parts of China.
These regions will mostly see hot, dry weather during the coming week, the administration said, adding that local departments will activate cloud seeding when weather conditions are fit.
Data indicated that rainfall in these regions is 30 to 80 percent less compared to normal years, while the provinces of Anhui, Jiangsu, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, Zhejiang and Shanghai municipality continue to suffer the worst drought since 1954.
Between January and April, the Yangtze River basin received 40 percent less rainfall than the average level of the past 50 years.
The water area of Dongting Lake in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River was 73 percent less on May 20 than the same day last year, according to statistics from the administration.
As of Monday, the lingering drought in Hubei has affected nearly 10 million people, about one sixth of its population, and influenced 1.2 million hectares of farmland, causing direct economic losses of 7.1 billion yuan ($1.1 billion), according to the provincial civil affairs department.
Since the end of last autumn, most areas of Hubei have received 50 percent less rainfall than the same period in 2010.
The Office of State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters asked the Three Gorges Dam to increase water discharges to up to 12,000 cubic meter per second (about 3,000 cu m per second more than the water flowing in) from May 25 to June 10, in order to raise the water level in the middle and lower reaches.
The water level in more than 1,300 reservoirs in Hubei province have dropped below the allowable discharge level for irrigation, said Yuan Junguang, director of the reservoir management office of Hubei provincial water resources department.

BookExpo America kicks off in New York



People visit the BookExpo America in Javits Center in New York, the United States, May 24, 2011. The BookExpo America, the largest book fair in America, opened on Tuesday with about 1,200 exhibitors. 




An exhibitor (R) introduces books to a visitor at the BookExpo America in Javits Center in New York, the United States, May 24, 2011. The BookExpo America, the largest book fair in America, opened on Tuesday with about 1,200 exhibitors. 






People visit the BookExpo America in Javits Center in New York, the United States, May 24, 2011. The BookExpo America, the largest book fair in America, opened on Tuesday with about 1,200 exhibitors. 






A woman visits the BookExpo America in Javits Center in New York, the United States, May 24, 2011. The BookExpo America, the largest book fair in America, opened on Tuesday with about 1,200 exhibitors. 

100-day countdown to 1st China-Eurasia Expo



A volunteer representative waves a volunteer flag at the 100-day countdown ceremony of the 1st China-Eurasia Expo in Urumqi, capital of northwest China's Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, May 24, 2011. Urumqi was engaged in a series of activities marking the 100-day countdown to the 1st China-Eurasia Expo, which will open in the city on Sept. 1, 2011. Once known as the Urumqi Fair, the Expo features commercial, cultural and ministerial interactivities among Asian and European countries.




Workers pave a road on the construction site of the Expo venues in Urumqi, capital of northwest China's Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, May 24, 2011. Urumqi was engaged in a series of activities marking the 100-day countdown to the 1st China-Eurasia Expo, which will open in the city on September 1, 2011. Once known as the Urumqi Fair, the Expo features commercial, cultural and ministerial interactivities among Asian and European countries.




A worker operates an excavator on the construction site of the Expo venues in Urumqi, capital of northwest China's Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, May 24, 2011. Urumqi was engaged in a series of activities marking the 100-day countdown to the 1st China-Eurasia Expo, which will open in the city on Sept. 1, 2011. Once known as the Urumqi Fair, the Expo features commercial, cultural and ministerial interactivities among Asian and European countries.




Students take photos of the countdown timer made for the 1st China-Eurasia Expo in Urumqi, capital of northwest China's Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, May 24, 2011. Urumqi was engaged in a series of activities marking the 100-day countdown to the 1st China-Eurasia Expo, which will open in the city on Sept. 1, 2011. Once known as the Urumqi Fair, the Expo features commercial, cultural and ministerial interactivities among Asian and European countries

Key emerging economies say IMF chief selection should reflect new realities of world economy

The selection of the next head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) should reflect the changing realities of the global economy, and should not be made on the basis of the tradition that requires a European chief, the fund's executive directors for five key emerging market economies said on Tuesday.
"The convention that the selection of the managing director is made, in practice, on the basis of nationality undermines the legitimacy of the fund," said IMF directors for China, Brazil, India, South Africa and Russia, or BRICS countries, in a joint statement, rejecting that the successor to former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn should continue to be a European.
The recent financial crisis which erupted in developed countries, underscored the urgency of reforming international financial institutions so as to reflect the growing role of developing countries in the world economy, noted the statement.
The new global economy requires "abandoning the obsolete unwritten convention that requires that the head of the IMF be necessarily from Europe," it said.
"We believe that, if the fund is to have credibility and legitimacy, its managing director should be selected after broad consultation with the membership," the IMF directors said, adding that the new IMF boss should be chosen on the basis of competence, not nationality.
The directors said that they are concerned with public statements made recently by high-level European officials to the effect that the position of managing director should continue to be occupied by a European.

Death toll in shipwreck in Brazil reaches seven

The death toll in a shipwreck in Brazil's capital Brasilia rose to seven after bodies of three more victims were found in Paranoa Lake on Tuesday.
According to local Fire Department, the victims included a seven-month baby boy and a 10-year-old girl, and three people remained missing.
Ninety-three people were rescued after the boat Imagination carrying over 100 people sank into the lake late Sunday.
The rescuers were still combing the lake, but low visibility made the search efforts more difficult. According to Fire Department Col. Marcos Negrao, the bodies of the missing people might be trapped inside the boat.
"It is possible that, when the boat careened, people were trapped by objects," he said.
Causes of the accident were being investigated, but overloading seemed to have played a part in the disaster. The boat has a maximum capacity of 92.
In addition, authorities said divers found fissures in parts of the boat.
The boat will only be recovered from the 17-meter-deep bottom of the lake after the search mission ends.

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