By JOHN FOWKE
Former kiap (patrol officer)
Papua New Guinea’s “poorest”
region, the resource rich Western Province, home to the multi billion kina Ok Tedi
mine, ranks just above Zimbabwe
but below the Democratic Republic of Congo in terms of human development.
This
is according to new data unveiled by Deakin
University’s expert
in international development, Professor Mark McGillivray, at the recent PNG: Securing a Prosperous
Future Conference.
“If
PNG’s Western
Province was a country
there would be an international outcry about their plight, given its appalling
low levels of human development,” McGillivray said.
McGillivray’s analysis used the principles of the Human Development Index
(HDI) to create a new measure which specifically looked at the districts and
provinces in Papua New
Guinea.
This has not been done before.
"The
HDI is well-known and widely used in research and policy circles,” McGillivray explained.
“It combines achievements in health,
education and income and is primarily used to compare levels of human development
between countries.
“The
Human Development Index is typically applied at the level of countries, not to
parts of countries.
"This means that it is blind to achievements and disparities
within countries.
“When
we apply the principles of the Index to provinces and districts within PNG, we
find not only huge disparities but levels of human development that are
extremely low by international standards.”
McGillivray said, based on one version of the HDI, PNG is ranked 121 out of 137
countries, so down towards the bottom.
“Robert
Mugabe’s Zimbabwe
has the lowest level of human development and is ranked 137, at the very
bottom,” McGillivray said.
“The conflict-affected Democratic
Republic of Congo is ranked 136.
“Yet
if the resource rich Western Province was a country it would be ranked in
between Zimbabwe and Congo and as such among the three very poorest in the
world in terms of human development.”
And
that’s just the Western
Province.
What about my
dear, poor old Gulf?
What about populous but forgotten places like Gumine, Baiyer River,
all of the Sepik apart from Wewak?
Inland
Morobe?
To
say nothing of the outpatients department at the nation’s largest
hospital at Taurama?
What the hell is wrong?
Why
is it necessary that Angau Hospital, the nation’s second largest, and Tari
Hospital, serving more than 150,000 people, are both under the administration
and operational control of Medecins Sans Frontieres, directed to PNG by a very
dissatisfied WHO some five years ago?
Where is any sign of shame or remorse, or
attempted restoration of efficiency and services here in the 'Land of the Unexpectedly
Well-rewarded Ruling Class'?
And
without any apparent cohesion among aspiring new MPs, aside from stated intent to
remain in power by the existing, damaged and stale “use-by-date-expired”
political groups, what hope is there for real, swift and meaningful
reform? Lets hear something positive from the hopeful 3,000 candidates.
But will we?
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