Bulolo MP
Tekadu villagers welcoming MPs Basil and Nolam to a fire-making demonstration. |
They do not really know where their hearts lies when deciding on which electorate they belong to.
Being
caught in between Bulolo electorate of Morobe province and Kerema
electorate of Gulf province, the Tekadu people have not seen any air
services for the past nine years.
Other essential services are non-existent.
Children
growing up to be nine years old do not have any formal education and
have not see any planes landing at their rundown strip.
Let us not forget the unfortunate children who have lost their lives through birth and other diseases.
Like
many other airstrips in Papua New Guinea, it is sad to see the
Transport Minister Don Polye, who is also the Deputy Prime Minister,
trying to spend K1.4 billion on Jacksons Airport while neglecting such
small rural airstrips.
We are also
seeing the same in health with Health Minister Sasa Zibe trying to spend
K500 million on the Bautama City Super-Hospital while the rural health
facilities are neglected.
In my
visit to Tekadu last week, I asked the government to properly allocate
the 2011 budget including the 2010 budget surpluses (K800m-plus)
estimated to be totaling over K10b, to rebuild aging infrastructures
such as rural airstrips, national highways, rural health services, and
district road systems to make the lives of rural dwellers easy because
they make up over 85% of PNG’s population.
Almost
90% of Members of Parliament represents rural electorates one way or
another and must have rural people included in all their planning.
The
Bulolo district joint district planning and budget priorities committee
(JDP&BPC) in December 2009 installed a VSAT communication
apparatus in Tekadu which has opened up communications in and out of
Tekadu for almost a year now.
The
reestablishment of air services through North Coast Aviation (NCA) is
just a follow-up service to complement the communication installation.
Revival of essential services will automatically ride on those two very-important services: communication and transportation.
A charter was negotiated and paid for a trip every month at the cost of K110, 000.
The
inbound flights will bring in government workers, building materials
and medicine while return flights will carry sick and pregnant mothers,
as well as buai (betelnut) bags.
It is estimated that 600 to 700kg of buai can fetch close to K6, 000-7, 000 for those rural farmers.
Buai is the only cash crop in the Tekadu while alluvial gold panning is in its infancy stages.
Accessing Bulolo and Wau from Tekadu is very hard compared to using the Bulldog Trail for Port Moresby.
Its takes almost a whole day’s walk into Nukewa followed by dinghy or dugout canoe trip
from Nukewa into Malalaua the next day, then a PMV into Port Moresby if
they are lucky, or wait another day so its takes about three days in
total.
The costs are as follow K100 boat fare K60 PMV far, totalling K160 one way or K320 both ways per person.
So the buai they sell must recoup the fares and pay for porters.
The launching was well attended by all on Monday, Oct 18, while the team took the Bulldog Trail the next day.
The team was accompanied by Queensland State Minister for Transport Rachael Nolam and Max Willies of Australian High Commission.
Nolam took the honors to deliver ducklings to Tekadu villagers under the agriculture programme
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Bulolo
district administration was represented by the Wau rural LLG manager
Judy Pokana, Mumeng LLG manager Amon and Waria LLG manager.
LLG
presidents included Wau Rural LLG’ John Yawa, Mumeng LLG’s Mathias
Phillip, and Buang LLG’s Steven Sep while Waria was represented by its
deputy president.
The Bulolo team,
including the MP, used the walk to see for themselves the hardship and
the obstacles the locals encounter while also collecting data for
headquarters in Bulolo upon their return.
The
people of the Gulf village, Nukewa, had a brief meeting with me and
reminded me that I was the first MP to trek into their village.
They told me of their lack of services and asked me to help revived them.
I
reminded them that I am the MP representing Bulolo electorate and would
bring their concerns to their local Kerema MP, Pitom Bombom.
I
will, in fact, invite him and will accompany him there to also address
the Bulolo people’s concerns in relation to the usage of the track and
share some responsibilities for the wellbeing of Bulolo travellers.
Saying goodbye before taking on the Bulldog Trail for Nukewa village, Malalaua, Gulf province
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The
trip from Nukewa took nine hours along the river system and another
five hours into Port Moresby, with a press conference and tour of
Parliament House.
I housed half of the Bulolo team while the other half was accommodated in a guest house in Port Moresby.
The team returned into back into the electorate on Friday, Oct 22.
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