Monday, December 05, 2011

SIR MEKERE MORAUTA replies to THE NATIONAL newspaper

By MEKERE MORAUTA KCMG MP
Minister for Public Enterprises
 Last week The National newspaper publlished an editorial relating to my decisions and associated comments on various Public Enterprises since becoming Minister in August.
It is my duty to the nation to announce publicly the decisions that I make and to be held accountable for those decisions as the Minister responsible.
Likewise, the former Minister, Mr Arthur Somare, and the former IPBC management, should accept responsibility for their actions.
I regard the performance of the former Minister, and the former IPBC management as grossly negligent. It is beyond argument that they have cost the nation vast sums of money.
Allow me to repeat some facts for the benefit of your readers
  •   The Abu Dhabi loan negotiated by Mr Arthur Somare and the former IPBC management was found to be insufficient, and an extra K900 million has to be borrowed;
  •   Under Mr Somare and the former IPBC management, Telikom engaged in K800 million worth of unauthorised borrowings and expenditure; 
  • When Mr Somare and the former IPBC management were in charge of MVIL, it borrowed K100 million without authorisation and in highly unusual circumstances, and the money is still being held overseas;
  •    The former IPBC management  invested K31 million in the failed US financial services firm Lehman Bros without approval and without due diligence while Mr Somare was Minister responsible. Mr Somare and Mr Blake allowed Ports PNG to undertake a similar exercise to the value of K25 million, with the same disastrous consequences;
  •    Mr Somare was partly responsible for the K30 million bill left behind for using the Somare aerial PMV for doctor’s appointments, shopping, family parties and golf games;
  •   K30 million in subsidies supposed to be paid to Air Niugini, for which Mr Somare and the former IPBC management were responsible, was instead diverted elsewhere, with no explanation;
  • Mr Somare and the former IPBC management sold out Papua New Guinea’s control of Bemobile, the nation’s mobile phone carrier, to a foreign company;
  • While Mr Somare and Mr Blake were in charge, not one SOE has paid a dividend, as they are required to do, since 2007. All are under financial stress and all have failed to improve services or meet acceptable service delivery standards or their Community Service Obligations.
Should I remain silent on these facts? Should I hide them from the people of Papua New Guinea, and hide them from the media? Is The National really suggesting that I should not point out that the appointment of the Somare family’s financial advisor to the managing directorship of the IPBC involved a clear conflict of interest?
I am astonished that a media organisation should call on a Minister to be silent on the facts of publicly-owned businesses and assets, and not explain to the people how they were abused, exploited, manipulated and stolen from, and precisely who was responsible.
Mr Somare is a politician, and he was responsible for the disasters I have listed above. He must be held accountable for them. Indeed, Papua New Guineans are entitled to know what he did, and to make their own judgment about him as a leader.
Your editorial also suggests that I may be making decisions on the basis of personal animosity towards Mr Somare. That is a deeply offensive assertion. I am motivated by one thing, and one thing only: what is best for Papua New Guinea.
I have no personal animosity towards Mr Arthur Somare, but I will not hesitate to take on people who abuse, misuse or waste public assets.
Papua New Guinea must learn from its mistakes, but we cannot do that if the mistakes are swept under the carpet, which is precisely what Mr Somare and the former IPBC management did. Papua New Guineans have a right to know who has wrecked and depleted the public institutions that they own.
Journalists have complained about the lack of transparency and accountability at IPBC and SOEs, including senior The National journalists. They have criticised Mr Somare and the former IPBC management for their secrecy.
Since becoming Minister I have lifted the veil of secrecy from IPBC, and I have explained to the media and to the Parliament the decisions that I have taken and why those decisions were made.
 IPBC is now an open and transparent organisation.
I hope The National is not proposing a return to the bad old days of lack of transparency and accountability. I also hope that it is not trying to muzzle legitimate political debate.

Basil spotlights Sir Arnold’s legal inconsistencies

National Planning and Monitoring Minister Sam Basil has called on former Chief Justice and Governor of Madang Sir Arnold Amet to stop “preying” on judges’ ‘emotions and opinions’. 
Basil said that Sir Arnold should realise that he was no longer on the bench as the chief  justice but a politician and a member of the opposition.  
“His continuous media circus is not only contemptuous but subjudicial to the pending Supreme Court decision on the validity of the events of August 2 in Parliament,” he said referring to Parliament’s declaration of vacancy and election of Ialibu MP Peter O’Neill as Prime Minister. 
“Let the judges do their job and stop preying on their emotions and opinions,“ an incensed Basil said. 
“The insinuations that he is portraying through the media pre-empts the outcome of the Supreme Court decision and such does not paint a good picture on the independence of the judiciary. 
"He talks as if the judiciary is in his steal pocket. 
"That is contemptuous and subjudice.” 
Basil, Bulolo MP, said that Sir Arnold seemed to enjoy conducting trial by media with full page advertorial in the newspapers, setting out his legal arguments as he did it over and over again.
 “It is surprising that he has all of a sudden become the self appointed guardian angel of the Constitution,” he said. 
“Some one should look back and see that not too long ago, the following happened:   
  • He allowed the nomination of Sir Paulus Matane as the Governor General at the eligibility vote stage, directly breaching the Constitution which was later nullified by the Supreme Court, and had a senior statesman in the likes of Sir Paulus walking off the public life disgracefully;
  •  He was part of the Somare-led Government’s unexplained adjournment of Parliament sittings, yet said nothing about the Constitutional requirements as affirmed by a majority Supreme Court ruling of which he was the sole dissenting one;
  •  He was a part of the Cabinet that delayed and frustrated the appointment of two medical doctors on the medical condition of Sir Michael Somare for more than three months. Effectively the country was without a permanent chief executive officer for more than three months but Sir Arnold would not arise to defend the spirit of the Constitution;
  •  He even attacked the judiciary just to protect the former kitchen cabinet ministers who were suspended by the Supreme Court pending their leadership tribunal. Now he is becoming the best buddy for the judiciary, making representations as if he had secured the Supreme Court decision in his favour;
  •  He was the controversial legal advisor to the previous government, protecting and advocating the cause of corrupt politicians within government, which was the cause of frustrations that led to the change of government. His controversial advice and the heavy reliance on it by the former Prime Minister and Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare cost the old man his political career, loss of the Prime Ministership and finally the dishonourable dismissal from Parliament.                                            Basil added: “May I remind him to check his hands whether it’s clean before crying foul at the current O’Neill/Namah Government that is trying to address the immediate needs of our people that had been neglected by the previous government.                                                                                         “We respect the judiciary to make its own decisions and we as Government will manage the consequences. The judges are Papua New Guineans and they live in Papua New Guinea. Please leave them alone to do their job.

Sunday, December 04, 2011

Reform and change is never over: a personal goodbye from outgoing NASFUND Joint CEO Rod Mitchel


 Dear NASFUND Members,
Outgoing NASFUND Joint CEO Rod Mitchell
 

As you are aware, I will be leaving NASFUND at year end after serving for nearly 13 years.
It has been a most rewarding time and a privilege to serve the private sector membership of Papua New Guinea. I look back to that time in early 1999 when we began the enormous clean up of the old National Provident Fund, a Fund that was mired in debt of K154 million from the shackles of corruption; an organisation with no policies, procedures, registers, bank reconciliations, with two years of annual reports uncompleted and of course facing imminent bankruptcy.
We took immediate remedial measures, made some very unpopular decisions about member Fund balance write downs and pushed for a Commission of Inquiry to not only reveal the facts about the state of the fund, but also lay the very ground work for reform. 
That reform of course came through former Prime Minister Sir Mekere Morauta who in a heady two year period transformed the financial sector of which the Superannuation Act 2000 was a key piece of the reformist agenda.
Since privatisation in 2001, your Fund has not looked back.
From a net asset balance of K125 million, your Fund is now worth in excess of K2.3 billion – an annualized growth rate of 27.5% - no small feat especially in a decade characterised by  international economic turmoil. We have seen the Fund membership and employer base triple over that same period since the creation of NASFUND, we have led the field in terms of not only returns to members, but also in the range of services and service standards.
The last five years in terms of return and crediting rates have been outstanding with an average return of 17% over five years. 
A far cry from the dismal performance of international superannuation funds in the same period. 
Similarly the Fund has k100 million in reserves – over 4% of the Fund assets.
A deliberate strategic buffer against what we saw as the reemergence of global instability in 2011.
 Similarly in terms of cost we have seen the Management Expense Ratio fall from over 5% to 1.1% over the period, making us the most efficient provider of service in the industry.
I can also look back with some pride that without NASFUND assistance with the early loan capital support, the BSP/PNGBC merger would not have taken place. 
We acted as the “last resort” glue to ensure that Bank South Pacific could emerge as the strongest Bank in the Pacific.
And today we sit with pride with our 10.85% holding, making NASFUND the second largest shareholder in the Bank - and of course with the deeper meaning that private sector workers of PNG through their superannuation have ownership in Papua New Guinea's largest bank.
Moving over the years we have seen an enormous growth in our assets.
From only one major empty building, Deloitte Tower in 1999, to now the most prestigious commercial and residential property portfolio ownership in the country with our Harbour City developments as the jewels in the crown and all 100% occupied.
We also aggressively took control of the Burns Philp site and now we begin the transformation of that area of town, just as we have done with Harbour City and Konedobu. Agents of change always have their detractors but the evidence is overwhelming in that we as an organisation have been key in revitalizing Port Moresby. 
We were also key in developing the new frontier suburbs of 8 & 9 mile for PNG’s burdening population growth.
Over the last decade NASFUND has built nine new high quality either commercial or residential apartment buildings. 
A further three are under construction which will complete before 31 December 2012. It has been a very busy twelve years.
We have also seen strong growth in our equity portfolio over this period.
We were the key investor in allowing City Pharmacy to purchase the Stop ’N’ Shop chain of supermarkets. We took advantage of the ISP revolution by our strategic purchase of Data Nets and when Mainland Holdings had its back against the wall, mired in debt, we became the largest shareholder to which we have now stabilised the company and are returning it to financial health.
When Ramu Sugar Limited began fraying under large debt we also took the initiative to support New Britain Palm Oil (NBPO) effect a take over that ensured that Ramu Sugar maintained a strong balance sheet and we took benefit from this take over through our strategic holding in both NBPO and Ramu Sugar.
 We also took on the tough challenge of liberating the Pacific Balanced Fund from incompetent management by taking a large stake in the units of the company.
Soon we will see the fruits of that intervention when the accounts are finalised and a new unit price is struck. Hopefully our endeavours there will not only help our membership but also some 35,000 “mum and dad” members of the Pacific Balanced Fund that have been treated poorly for far too long.
 Internationally we have also proudly flown the PNG flag, with our majority ownership in the recently constructed Heritage Park Hotel and commercial annex in the Solomon Islands.
Heritage Park in a very short time has become the number one hotel destination in Honiara with strong high 70’s occupancy rates. 
We have now commenced with our joint venture partners the redevelopment of the Grand Pacific Hotel site in Suva Fiji, which also promises to be the leading commercial hotel in that city as well.
 Over the decade we witnessed at NASFUND a determined value system of action and results of which I term NASFUND exceptionalism. 
This is a culture based at its primacy on service delivery, product differentiation and above all actions over “talk talk”. 
We led the way in Branch rollouts going from 4 to 14 nationwide. 
We introduced Text Bal using both push and pull technologies – a first for superannuation world wide. Today some 70,000 members per month use their mobile phones to access their superannuation balances – finger tip client service!
We transformed the governance aspects relating to superannuation with a web based disclosure regime unparalleled in PNG and in most companies internationally.
We also introduced new products like Eda Supa, - a savings vehicle for those outside of superannuation that now covers a large number of self employed and informal sector workers.
We introduced the first ever online will kit, the first monthly electronically delivered newsletter to some 25,000 people per month. 
And of course we built from a small humble education savings of some of our members to a K80 million savings and loans vehicle called NCSL- the fastest growing savings and loans vehicle in the country today.
And to the membership, for the last ten years, the annual report and crediting of interest to member accounts has happened within seven to eight weeks of end of year balance.
No other institution has bettered that efficiency and commitment to its stakeholders.
On the NASFUND staff culture internally, we from day one set out on a programme of equality, pulling down old value structures, replacing them with equal opportunity, better support services, non discrimination on the base of sexuality and more recently a maternity scheme that is probably the best in the private sector today.
We said that staff matter, we showed them that they do matter and they have shown through empowerment the extradordinary capabilities that can be unleashed when management and staff are one.
But I have said continually over the last decade that an organisation that does not talk about the wider societal issues or as we coin it “social responsibility” can never be a leading company.
To be successful in business you must have empathy and context to the community that you operate within. Of all the things we at NASFUND can be pleased about is the role we have played in HIV & AIDS and our direct involvement in the Business Coalition against HIV & AIDS or BAHA. As we approach World AIDS day, how pleasing is the BAHA led wear red campaigns and hang red ribbons from buildings now being seen everywhere.
This is but testimony to the rapid change in thinking by corporates and the general public to this very serious health and development issue.
Similarly the recent setting up of the Serendipity Fund for children under BAHA whose lives have been affected by HIV and AIDS is but the next phase in support for those whose lives have been irreparably been changed by this disease. 
Currently over 100 children are direct beneficiaries of that programme.
 Proudly too has been the introduction of the NASFUND Trainee Directors Programme,- giving young aspiring Directors the opportunity to work and learn by being on a Board in real time.
Hopefully, overtime we will see the fruits of this programme as more and more educated young Papua New Guineans take the directorship mantel going forward.
I am pleased that NASFUND also rescued the Institute of Directors when it collapsed from financial scandal years back and that too is now housed under the NASFUND roof along with two other wonderful organisations – the Coalition for Change – combating family violence and of course the Buk Bilong Pikini organisation under the control of the former Australian High Commissioner of Australia’s wife, Anne-Sophie who has been an extradordinary agent for change in the important process of getting books into children’s hands.
 The other area that has been of immeasurable success is NASFUND’s push into the Arts. 
For 12 years we have promoted Papua New Guinean artists in our annual reports and website.
Recently will commenced the K5,000 annual arts prize at the Luk Save Arts show. 
As much as we can directly promote protection of the family whether it be through reducing domestic violence or HIV awareness, the Arts has always been a marvelous glue that transcends all layers of society  and softens what is an often harsh social environment that we face in the country.
Finally as we look forward, the elevation of Ian Tarutia from joint CEO to sole Chief Executive Officer is to me personally important. 
He along with me has been the main driver of where we are today, and for my brother to take the reigns as sole CEO is but a very proud moment for me too.
I know that as I now leave the organisation, it remains in solid hands tested by a very tiring decade as we built not only the NASFUND foundations, but the foundations for the industry - and at times against some very large opposing forces.
And when I talk about the foundations, I talk about the comprehensive submissions to taskforces, the comprehensive dialogue within the private sector, the NASFUND created Association of Superannuation Funds of PNG and the absorption of small often corrupted or poorly administered Funds into the NASFUND family, which in turn strengthened the Industry and built the necessary confidence for it to flourish.
 To the staff, I say thank you for coming on the journey.
It has been a privilege to work with you and watch us grow as a family together.
And what a weird, often wild and wonderful family we are!
How many times on a Friday night in the staff car park have we had a few drinks and cried with laughter into the midnight hours. 
Of everything that has been achieved, it has been the incredible change I have seen in all of us as we kept striving for the best.  
It fills me with the utmost pride. Thank you for being my family abroad.
 To the men and women of the NASFUND reform era, I personally thank you for your strong support and for being part of the “pedal to the floor revolution” in developing a safety net and retirement savings regime in Papua New Guinea. 
And from what we have achieved, I can look back and say, not bad at all.
And I am sure NASFUND will in the future as has been over this tumultuous decade; continue to be the burning lamp which provides the light for others to follow.
I look forward to what will be an action charged “Tarutia decade” and I know he will not disappoint. 
  To former Prime Minister Sir Mekere Morauta who took the bold decision to reform Superannuation through the Superannuation 2000 Act – I humbly state, Mission Accomplished!

Thank you


Rod Mitchell

Saturday, December 03, 2011

Message from United National Secretary General on International Day of Persons With Disabilities

“Together for a better world for all  including persons with disabilities in development”

It is 30 years since the United Nations first observed the International Year of Disabled Persons under the theme “Full Participation and Equality”.  
During that period, there has been significant progress in raising awareness about the rights of persons with disabilities and in strengthening the international normative framework to realise those rights – from the World Programme of Action (1982) to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (2006).
More and more countries are committing to protecting and promoting the rights of persons with disabilities.  
However, many challenges remain.
 Persons with disabilities experience higher rates of poverty and deprivation and are twice as likely to lack health care.
 Employment rates of persons with disabilities in some countries are as low as one-third of that of the overall population.
 In developing countries, the gap in primary school attendance rates between children with disabilities and others ranges from 10 per cent to 60 per cent.
This multi-dimensional exclusion represents a huge cost, not only to persons with disabilities but to society as a whole.  
This year’s International Day of Persons with Disabilities reminds us that development can only be sustainable when it is equitable, inclusive and accessible for all.
 Persons with disabilities need therefore to be included at all stages of development processes, from inception to monitoring and evaluation.
Addressing negative attitudes, the lack of services or ready access to them, and other harmful social, economic and cultural barriers will benefit all of society. 
On this International Day of Persons with Disabilities, I call on governments, civil society and the global community to work for and alongside persons with disabilities to achieve inclusive, sustainable and equitable development worldwide.