Wednesday, February 13, 2013

ADB happy with Lae port progress

Source:  The National,Wednesday, February 13, 2013

By MALUM NALU

THE Asian Development Bank (ADB) has expressed satisfaction with the progress of the K700 million Lae port project and expects it to be completed by the end of next year, ADB vice-president Stephen Groff said.
He told The National after visiting the project yesterday the Papua New Guinea government should be planning now on how it would be using the port once it opened.
The ADD is funding 70% of project costs while the PNG government shoulders the rest of the 30%, with China Harbour Engineering as the major contractor.
“I’m very positive about it. I think that it will be critical that the government anticipates what the use of the port will be.
“It’s not just completing the port and deciding how you’re going to use it,” Groff said.
“The government needs to be thinking now about what the uses will be, what possible private sector partnerships that could be engaged to be part of the port.
“As far as physical completion and progress is concerned, we (ADB) are very happy, but the government needs to pay close attention to this and think ahead about what they’re going to use the port for.
“This is a critical piece of infrastructure for the Highlands Highway, so you need to think ahead in how you’re going to use this port for imports and exports, and moving goods in and out of the area.
“What we don’t want to see at the end of 2014 is physical infrastructure (port) is turned over (by ADB to government)and there’s a couple of years before the port is really active.
“We would hope that the port would be fully functional and active sometime in 2015.”

“We believe that would possible if the government is working now very hard in anticipating what the demand will be, doing preparatory work to enable them to start fully using the port immediately in 2015.”

Asian Development Bank pushing for SOE efficiency

Source: The National,Wednesday, February 13, 2013 
By MALUM NALU

THE Asian Development Bank (ADB) is pushing for efficiency in state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and not privatisation, according to the bank’s vice-president Stephen Groff.
Groff, who is in the country on a three-day visit, told The National in an interview yesterday that SOE reforms were important in many countries, and not just PNG.
“I think one problem when we talk about SOE reforms is people often equate SOE reforms with privatisation,” he said.
“We’re not advocating privatisation in all instances.
“We’re advocating corporatisation, we’re advocating increasing efficiency and increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of the institutions because the challenge is if state-owned enterprises are operating ineffectively, they drag on limited resources that the government has.
“If government has a chance in investing its limited revenues in high productivity areas and low productivity areas, if given the chance, all governments would invest in areas where the return for the activity is highest.
“Problem is in many SOEs, productivity is very, very low.
“Return on the investments is very, very low, which in turn drags on the economy in general because you take away scare resources away from education investments, health investments, and put them in some SOEs that are not functioning pretty good.
“So you’re not translating the investments into better activity and better returns.
“Since many SOEs are involved in provision of services, that is almost a double whammy, because not only is the government going to spend its money instead on investing in infrastructure, you invest these resources in an SOE that is not only inefficient but also providing poor services at the end of the day.”
Groff said the people, who ultimately should be the beneficiaries of revenue, were instead getting a poor deal.
“They (people) are not getting the kind of services they need in order to function as effective members of society and effective contributing members of the economy,” he said.
“This is why we think that SOE reform is incredibly important.
“Again, I stress that this is not just PNG.
“PNG is just one country through the Pacific and through Asia.
“I think the controversy last year was around our Finding Balance report, and again, Finding Balance was a very accurate title.”
Groff said the report focused on making individual SMEs more efficient and more effective.

Rescued

Source: The National,Wednesday, February 13, 2013 
 
POLICE saved two women from being burnt alive in Mt Hagen where a 20-year-old mother of a baby girl was thrown into a fire and burnt two days earlier.
Assistant Police Commissioner and Highlands Divisional Commander Teddy Tei said last Monday, two women were tied to pillars by relatives of a girl they were accused of killing through sorcery.
However, Tei said the eight-year-old girl the women were accused of killing was “gang-raped and killed by two known suspects”.
The women, from Enga’s Kandep district, were being tortured near Kagamuga Airport in Mt Hagen, Western Highlands, were saved by officers who arrived after receiving a tip-off from a witness to the attack.
Tei said police rescued the two women and also arrested 20 suspects who were now behind bars at the Mt Hagen police cell.
He said the relatives of the girl, also from the Kandep, accused the two elderly women of performing sorcery and killing the girl on Jan 29.
The relatives of the deceased engaged a man claiming to possess supernatural powers, commonly known as “glassman” who identified the two women as sorcerers and blamed them for the death of the girl.
Tei said the “glassman” and the two rape-and-murder suspects, together with those ready to set the two women on fire, tied up the women.
“Police know their identities and they will be arrested sooner or later,” Tei said of those who managed to escape from the suspected group.
He appealed to the people not to take the law into their own hands to attack innocent and helpless people.
“What evidence do they have to produce to court for sorcery-related killing and torturing?
“It’s just a belief,” Tei said.
Relatives who were not sure of the cause of the death, were encouraged to take their love ones to the hospital and ask the doctors to carry out post-mortem to determine the cause.
He said people with other motives usually accused others of sorcery.
Tei said the “glassman” was money-driven and could point at anybody to obtain money.
The 20 suspects arrested would be interviewed
and charged accordingly by the police criminal investigations unit.
Tei said police would also arrest and charge the relatives if they helped or assisted in the interrogation and torturing of the two women.
He said police expected to arrest more people in relation to the torture and killing of Kepari Lanieta last Wednesday.
It is understood that police are also looking for Lanieta’s husband for questioning.
Tei said the cases were a priority and they were working hard to solve them.

Uron Salum to head international coconut body

Source: The National, Tuesday, February 12, 2013
PAPUA New Guinean Uron Salum has been appointed as executive director of Asia Pacific Coconut Community (APCC), a regional inter-government organisation based in Jakarta, Indonesia.
His appointment is for three years beginning this year.
Salum was appointed at the 49th session of the APCC held in Fiji last month and was the PNG government’s nomination on behalf of Pacific island member countries.
He was one of two candidates for the position.
Salum, 53, from Karkar Island in Madang, has long and extensive experience in the coconut industry.
He holds a bachelors degree in accountancy from University of Technology in Lae.
Trade, Commerce and Industry Minister Richard Maru says the coconut industry in PNG makes a smaller contribution than other major cash crops such as oil palm and coffee.
However, Maru said that coconut still has a strong influence through direct employment, export earning, gross domestic product contribution and food production.
He said PNG produced 146,526 tonnes of copra in 2011 and only 70, 366 tonnes last year due to low prices.
Maru said copra exports in 2011 were only 44% of average and last year only 32% of average.

Anti-PMIZ to visit Philippine tuna canneries

Source: The National, Tuesday, February 12, 2013

By MALUM NALU

THE government, in a bid to appease landowners protesting against it over the controversial Pacific Marine Industrial Zone (PMIZ) in Madang, is taking them to the Philipines to see for themselves how such projects are run.
Trade, Commerce and Industry Minister, Richard Maru said approval had been granted by Prime Minister Peter O’Neill for him and his acting department secretary Gerard Dogimab, to take the landowners to General Santos City.
He said this when asked what the status of PMIZ was.
“The main issue is that they (complainants) have been misled by environmentalists and greenies,” Maru told reporters.
“They were led to believe that if we start a marine park, we are not only going to overfish but also that the environment will be totally polluted.
“We want to prove to them that there is no such thing.
“We want them to look at big marine parks, like the one in the Philippines.
“They want us to take them to the Philipines to take a look at the big marine parks there.
“Once they are convinced that there will be no pollution (at PMIZ), we can proceed with construction.
“That’s the last bit to do now.
“That will be sorted out over the next two weeks.”
Maru said a major investor from France had already been secured and there must be no hold-ups to the project.
“Obviously, we have a big investor from France and we are keen on moving the project along,” he said.
French fishing company Sapmer-Piriou Joint Venture plans to spend US$500 million in a project to be based at PMIZ, which will employ about 2,500 people.
It will build a 300m-long fisheries wharf, a value-added tuna processing plant, a 400m dry dock and a shipyard.
 

Chocolate factory planned for Wewak

Source: The National, Tuesday, February 12, 2013
A CHOCOLATE factory will be set up in Wewak, East Sepik, pending the outcome of a feasibility study to be carried out by the Department of Trade, Commerce and Industry.
Leading Papua New Guinea downstream food processing entrepreneur Micky Puritau, founder of Paradise Spices, has been engaged by the department to lead the team carrying out the study.
The company, no newcomer to PNG cocoa and chocolate production,  already exports PNG vanilla, chilli, pepper, galip nut, cardamon, tumeric, nutmeg, cocoa nibs, ginger, cinnamon, virgin coconut oil and pure vanilla extract to many countries around the world.
Puritau says there is no reason why a chocolate factory shouldn’t be a goer in the country.
“Many overseas companies have told us that chocolate is not viable in this country,” he said.
“I’m totally against this.
“We’ve proved it in the vanilla industry.
“With exports of vanilla, we were getting margins of 40%, but when we produced finished products, we were actually getting 200-500% margins.
“I don’t see any reason why chocolate can’t also reach these margins.
“We have the production on the ground, the issue is when can we do it (produce chocolate).”
Puritau says PNG’s cocoa industry will be on to a winner with the establishment of a chocolate factory.
“Let me say that it’s going to be a successful chocolate company.
“You don’t have to look for markets as there are markets already available.
“People who say that there are no markets are actually telling you lies.
“We believe that downstream processing is the way to go for this country.”
Puritau said Paradise Spices had already proved that chocolate could be produced in the country.
“We did some small-scale chocolate production and I can tell you this: the quality of the chocolate we produced was of high, premium value,” he said.
“Good taste.
Maru said Wewak was chosen because cocoa production in East New Britain, formerly the largest producer in the country, had been decimated by the dreaded cocoa pod borer (CPB).
“Wewak, not because I come from there, but because East Sepik is now the leading cocoa producer in Papua New Guinea,” he said.
“East Sepik is also close to the mass market of Indonesia.
“I will start work with my team on the feasibility study into a new chocolate factory in Wewak.”

Review of LNG grants sought

Source: The National, Tuesday, February 12, 2013

By MALUM NALU

PAYMENTS of business development grants (BDGs) to LNG project landowners in Angore, Hela, have been put on hold until a review into use of all past grants is completed.
This was announced by Trade, Commerce and Industry Minister Richard Maru yesterday after concerns about how these grants – running into millions of kina – have been used since the signing of the Kokopo umbrella benefits sharing agreement (UBSA) in 2009.
Of a total government appropriation of K120 million – dished out to licenced areas in Hela, Western and Central – about K106 million has already been spent, with K14 million left.
Of this, K12 million is yet to be paid to Angore petroleum development licence (PDL) 8 landowners.
National Executive Council (NEC) appropriation of BDGs for all licences areas include: LNG plant site Portion 152 (K17 million), LNG pipeline area (K16 million), Hides PDL 1 (K20 million, K700,000 remaining), Kutubu PDL 2 (K10 million, K1 million remaining), Gobe PDL 3 and 4 (K8 million), Moran PDL 5 (K6 million), Moran PDL 6 (K4 million), Hides PDL 7 (K15 million), Juha PDL 9 (K11 million) and Angore PDL 8 (K12 million yet to be paid).
Maru said millions of kina had been squandered, with nothing to show because there had not been any proactive and systematic processes put in place for effective and continuous monitoring.
“There are many allegations that BDGs have been used on pokies, etc, and not on starting businesses for impacted landowners,” Maru said.
“By law and by agreement, the nature of BDGs were not cash handouts, but were intended for business capital to empower local communities in the project impact areas.
“There will be a freeze on all payments of the BDGs until the review is complete and a new BDG policy is structured.”
Maru said the review would start after he undertook a visit to the impacted areas to verify with landowners if grants given to them were used for their intended purposes.
He and chief secretary Manasupe Zurenuoc will lead a government delegation to these impacted areas.
Maru said the prime minister fully backed his moves to conduct the review and all Hela MPs would be asked to join the government review team.
“We must go and meet with the impacted landowners, get firsthand what the issues are and incorporate both landowner views and positions before we work out the way forward,” he said.
“This would be a major exercise involving the strengthening of the local content mechanisms on the ground and the relevant agencies of state.
“I am concerned that so far, there are no systems to ensure that public funds were used for spin-off businesses that will directly benefit impacted communities today and beyond the life of the project.”

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Ramu Nico firms tri-nation bonds

Source: The National,Monday,  February 11, 2013 
 
PAPUA New Guinea’s first US$1.6 billion nickel project and fifth largest in the world has the potential to promote and further strengthen the mutual benefits and cooperation between China, Australia and PNG when it reaches its production capacity.
Chinese Ambassador Qiu Bohua highlighted this during his brief visit to Ramu NiCo project’s Basamuk refinery in Madang last Friday to convey the embassy’s greetings and best wishes to Ramu NiCo staff and management on the eve of Chinese Spring Festival.
Qiu was warmly welcomed by board chairman of Ramu NiCo Zhao Shimin, Philip Allcorn, general manager Basamuk refinery and other senior staff and management of the company.
After receiving a site safety induction given by Ramu NiCo’s training manager Jeffers Heptol, Qiu took a guided tour of the Basamuk refinery where he displayed great interests in the progress of the load commissioning and sent his seasonal greetings to the site staff.
“Ramu NiCo is not only China’s largest investment project in the Pacific Islands region, but also the first large-scale project jointly invested by China, Australia and PNG.
“We should make untiring efforts with earnest and down-to-earth spirit and strive for more sincere cooperation efficiency soon, to benefit the people of the three countries and to compose a new chapter of cooperation among China, Australia and PNG.” Qiu said.
He also shared his idea with the company’s management that Ramu NiCo should work towards enhancing the awareness of cooperation and win-win mechanism for the three countries.
He said China did not have a long history of full participation in international economic cooperation but would learn and draw advanced managerial experience and technologies from advanced countries to build a world-class nickel project in Ramu NiCo.
Qiu encouraged the management to promote and intensify awareness on safety and prevent all the potential safety hazards and achieve work safety with zero accidents.
“Ramu NiCo is a world-class large-scale mining enterprise with complicated mining, ore slurry transportation and metallurgical processes as well as high technical standards,” he said.

French group eyes fish project


Source: The National,Monday, February 11, 2013 
 
A French fishing company will spend US$500 million in a fishing project in Papua New Guinea, according to Trade, Commerce and Industry Minister Richard Maru.
He met the representatives from Sapmer-Piriou Joint Venture in Singapore last month.
The joint venture intends to go into a fish-processing facility in PNG.
“Sapmer-Pirious Joint Venture will build a 300m-long fisheries wharf, a value-added tuna processing plant, a 400m dry dock and a shipyard,” Maru said.
“The total cost of their investment is about US$500 million.
“The company has expressed strong interest to lease land at the Pacific Marine Industrial Zone (PMIZ, in Madang).
“Negotiations are being finalised for a project agreement to be signed between the project promoter and the state.”
Maru said this was important, given the duty-free access market into the European Union market for PNG canned tuna and tuna loins, with the project expected to employ about 2,500 people.
“I am very supportive and keen on this project and have proposed to the investors to also include a shipbuilding yard as the first in the country and to teach our people on new trades,” he said.
“The company has shipbuilding operations in Vietnam and Nigeria and I’m insisting that similar operations be merged with the fish-processing plant.”
Maru said the company must also include a waste management processing facility in its plant to avoid environmental damage.
He said the project, when implemented, would be the anchor investment project at PMIZ.

PNG seeks more Indian investments

Source: The National,Monday,  February 11, 2013
By MALUM NALU

PAPUA New Guinea is moving to pursue direct investment relations with Asian economic power India, according to Trade, Commerce and Industry Minister Richard Maru.
He told reporters last Friday that despite PNG establishing formal diplomatic relationships with India in 2006, it had failed to bring in direct investments from India.
Maru, who addressed a global partnership summit in India last month,  said statistics from 2010-11 showed that India imported US$100.56 million worth of products from PNG, while exporting US$17.58 million worth of products to PNG.
PNG’s main exports to India are gold, copper, timber, copra, marine products, coffee, vanilla and cocoa.
India’s main exports to PNG are textiles, machinery, food, manufactured goods, pharmaceuticals, surgical items, soap, washing detergents/powder, polishes, paper and paper pulp.
“It’s important that we understand that India is going to be the third biggest economy in the world, second only to China (in the Asia-Pacific),” Maru said.
“India is growing and evolving and its growth rate sits at around 6.6%.”
Maru urged acting secretary for Foreign Affairs Lucy Bogari, Internal Revue Commision commissioner Betty Palaso and Investment Promotion Authority managing director Ivan Pomaleu to fast track finalisation of agreements between the two countries and to work in consultation with PNG’s high commissioner to India Tarcisius Eri
He highlighted that Indian companies had expertise in satellites, private power stations, private highways and private education institutions.
“India is very keen on establishing businesses in the country, including the resource sector,” Maru said.
“There is huge potential and scope to develop and enhance trade and investment relations between the two countries, considering the fact that India is one of the economic powerhouses of the world and is a major hub for a lot of companies and businesses, with strong average annual growth of 6% to 8%.
“India’s engagement has progressively increased with PNG in both trade and investment.
“Their major economic relations with PNG are in the fields of energy, education, telecommunication and information technology.”
Meanwhile, on his return, Maru stopped over in Singapore and met his counterpart minister Lim Hng Kiang and several companies with interest in PNG’s fisheries and financial sectors
“The Singapore government has strongly urged PNG to hold an investment seminar in Singapore to promote PNG’s investment opportunities in the region,” he said.
 

New microbank gets licence

Source: The National,Monday, February 11, 2013
BANK of PNG governor Loi Bakani has presented a licence to the board of People’s Micro Bank Ltd, an entity owned and run by the National Development Bank.
People’s Micro Bank was granted a licence on Jan 15.
“People’s Micro Bank Ltd was licenced under the Banks and Financial Institutions Act 2000, as a licenced financial institution operating as a microbank,” Bakani said.
“The granting of this licence reflects the government’s commitment to make financial services accessible to the rural population through vehicles like microfinance institutions.”
Bakani, in welcoming the board of the new licence holder last Friday, said the Central Bank’s financial inclusion initiatives, which were in support of the Governments Vision 2050 objective for a financially inclusive population, through wealth-creation to reduce poverty.
“Its priorities include the creation of a National Centre for Financial Inclusion (NCFI) to conduct financial literacy training for the unbanked population in the rural and urban areas, develop capacity building programmes for microfinance institutions, develop an appropriate regulatory framework for supervision of MFIs and facilitate access to finance for small to medium enterprises (SMEs) through a risk share facility,” he said.
“The Central Bank has prioritised financial inclusion as one of its key objectives and is working very closely with other partners to achieve it.
“The priority areas included:  continuous promotion of developments in the microfinance sector; the roll out of mobile and electronic banking; advocacy on financial literacy and financial education; and improvement of the national payment system.”
Bakani stressed that having a financially literate population was the key to drive other initiatives.
“If people understand the basics of finance and how one can create wealth with it, it will enable them to make good decisions on where and how to save or invest,” he said.
“People’s Micro Bank Ltd should make good use of its licence to strategically move it forward and is better placed to assist people in rural areas currently underserved in terms of accessing financial services.”
 Bakani also welcomed the new entity to partner the bank in its efforts to reach out to the 85% of the population that was unbanked or underserved. 
 

Hindus urge strong legislation in Papua New Guinea for sorcery related killings

The Jet

Fiji's Community Newspaper

Shocked by the reported brutal torturing and burning alive of a young woman on sorcery accusations on February six, Hindus are urging Papua New Guinea to come up with a strong legislation to deal with growing sorcery-related killings.
According to reports, a 20-year old mother of one was burned alive in front of hundreds of people in Papua New Guinea on the accusation of using sorcery to kill a boy aged six years.
Distinguished Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada (USA), said that this barbaric act was highly unacceptable in the 21st century world.
Hindus urge strong legislation in Papua New Guinea for sorcery related killings
Rajan Zed

Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, suggested Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter Charles Paire O’Neill to take this issue seriously and besides tougher legislation, also launch an educational campaign in the country. Papua New Guinea religious leaders should also help in raising awareness, Zed added.
Moreover, Papua New Guinea also needed to do serious soul searching on the treatment of women, Rajan Zed noted.

Monday, February 11, 2013

We'll defend Manus to the hilt: PNG

By Eoin Blackwell, AAP Papua New Guinea Correspondent

PAPUA New Guinea's government will "defend to the hilt" a legal challenge being brought against the Australian-run detention centre on Manus Island.
Lawyers acting on behalf of PNG Opposition Leader Belden Namah are seeking to have the Manus facility declared unconstitutional and will ask the court to temporarily stop asylum seeker transfers until it has made its final decision.
A camp on Manus Island
The asylum-seeker detention centre at Manus Island is facing a court challenge in Papua New Guinea. Source: AAP
But Attorney-General Kerenga Kua says the government has not been served with any court documents notifying them of the challenge in the Court of Human Rights on Tuesday morning.
"We are informally aware of its existence and of the need for tomorrow's scheduled mention in court. Somebody will be attending as a friend of the court to find out what's going on," Mr Kua said.
"If we haven't been served, nothing can happen, it can't be heard and we want to be heard ... we will defend this to the hilt."
Loani Henao, of Henaos Lawyers, who is bringing the challenge on behalf of the opposition, says the government was served with the documents on February 2.
"The government's lawyers have acknowledged that," he said.
"They have filed a notice of an intention to defend."
There are 274 detainees at the temporary Manus facility - including more than 30 children - living in conditions that have been widely criticised as inhumane.
Mr Kua has argued the site is legal under the nation's immigration law, which grants power to the immigration minister to set up a processing facility.
Mr Henao says that's unconstitutional.
"The memorandum of understanding between Australia and PNG is unconstitutional on the basis that it allows the PNG government to bring in asylum seekers from a foreign country, and the minute they put their foot on PNG territory, they are arrested," he said.
"We're saying every person - whether you're a national, PNG citizen or a foreigner - when you come into the country you have your personal liberty guaranteed under the constitution.
"They were made to come in and then were arrested."
Mr Kua has in the past rejected the definition of the site as a detention centre.
"We are providing them with a place to live," he told AAP in January.
"It's not a detention centre, as people call it.
"There is no law in our country that authorises us to establish a detention centre. But under our migration act, the minister can set up a processing facility."
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees recently labelled the centre unlawful.
The agency released a damning report on February 4 slamming conditions at the facility - which mostly comprises tents - and called for the transfer of children there to be suspended.
It said the situation was at odds with Australia's international obligations, and children should not be transferred there until all appropriate legal and administrative safeguards were in place.
Australian Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young, who visited the site in late January, said children were witnessing self-harm and suicide attempts by adults.
The Australian government announced a deal with New Zealand on Saturday to send 150 refugees a year across the Tasman from centres such as Manus and the one on Nauru.
The court hearing is expected to start at 1030 (AEDT) on Tuesday before Justice David Canning in Port Moresby.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

The ‘paper farmers’ of PNG


This article first appeared in The National Weekender on Friday, February 8, 2013

The Department of Agriculture and Livestock needs a complete overhaul, writes MALUM NALU

PRIME Minister Peter O’Neill admission last week that bogus farmers swindled up to K300 million from the National Agriculture Development Plan (NADP) fund from 2009 to 2011 is a sad story of con artists stealing from the genuine, hardworking farmers of PNG.
All pictures are of fresh vegetables being sold in Goroka Market, Eastern Highlands, by genuine farmers.-Pictures by MALUM NALU

Further to this, revelations that the Department of Agriculture and Livestock (DAL) overspent its budget by K40 million last year, raises questions whether or not it should exist at all – in this, Peter O’Neill’s ‘year of implementation’.
I have grown up with agriculture, have worked within the industry for the Coffee Industry Corporation, and have covered it widely over the last 25 years as a journalist.


Nothing, however, has been more saddening than the saga of the “paper farmers of Waigani” and the non-performance of the DAL.
In my wanderings around the country, I have stories about these insidious, grim reapers using their ill-gotten funds to buy expensive new vehicles, drink beer and play pokies, and even campaign for the 2012 elections.
Back in 2009, one of the best-ever former secretaries of DAL, Mathew Wela Kanua, warned at the Consultative Implementation and Monitoring Committee’s national development forum that the NADP should be abolished.


At the very same forum, vice minister for agriculture and livestock Jimmy Simitab, dropped a bombshell when he declared that his department was no longer capable of running agriculture in PNG.
More than three years later, and with millions of kina lost to the “paper farmer” con artists, it now looks to me that the government should have listened to the words of Kanua and Simitab.
A number of speakers at the 2009 forum questioned where the funds for NADP in the last two years were and what the programme had achieved.
Kanua fired a broadside at the NADP as well as the DAL, which he formerly headed, saying that it should be abolished.
In a no-holds barred comment at the forum, Kanua said it was the overwhelming feeling of the agriculture sector that it was getting nowhere, despite the massive K1 billion to be poured into the NADP over the next 10 years at K100 million annually.
Kanua, who was outspoken in his fight against corruption at DAL during his tenure as secretary, also bluntly told the forum that the DAL should be abolished as it was unproductive.
“It is worrying and it is sad that we are getting nowhere,” he said.
“It seems to be an overwhelming concern from the agriculture sector that we are getting nowhere.
“What are we going to show for the K1 billion?
“What are we going to have in 10 years time to show for it?”
Kanua said this money should be spent in partnership with the private sector to grow agriculture in PNG.


“That was the reason why we created the National Agriculture Development Plan,” he said.
“When I left the department, I said that it should be closed, because it was completely incapable.”
Simitab made the frank admission that DAL was incapable of running the much talked about NADP and all overriding functions should be taken over by the National Agriculture Council (NAC).
The minister recommended the establishment of the NAC as the apex body in agriculture be given high consideration by the forum and the CIMC.
Simitab said one of the most-important recommendations of the Public Sector Review and Monitoring Unit (PMRSU) in 2005 was an overhaul of the DAL; however, this had not been implemented over the last five years.
“The findings of this review remain unimplemented, hitherto, the sad state of affairs in DAL over the last five years,” he said.
Simitab said it was perceived that the NAC, once legislated, would recognise existing commodity and statutory bodies, with overriding powers to maintain and sustain the NADP.
“In fact, the national government, in approving and adopting the NADP in March 2007, had directed that a further institutional and legislative reform be undertaken to improve the management of the sector with NADP,” he said.
“Given the state of reforms that have occurred in agriculture to this point, it is obvious that DAL is neither a capable nor an appropriate ‘lead agency’ without an entity such as NAC as its apex body.
“The suggestion that NAC be chaired by the minister for agriculture and livestock, with membership of no more than 10 people appointed by the head of state on advice, has great merits, on a number of fronts.
“First, it will act independently of all agencies of the sector, and has links to DAL only for policy and technical guidance.
“Secondly, it will establish its own sub-sectoral liaison mechanisms to capture development resource requirements of each sub-sector as well as from each district, for budget purposes and for monitoring and evaluation.


“Thirdly, the entity shall provide a one-stop-shop for investors, and coordination of donor support for agriculture.
“Finally, it shall provide an effective mechanism for the policy coordination of the sector, and the management of annual fiscal support for agriculture through NADP.”
Simitab said the concept of an ‘agricultural council’ being an apex body for the sector was not a foreign concept as it had already been practiced in several emerging Asian economies, including Taiwan and South Korea.
Magical Tambul, Western Highlands, on the foothills of the mighty Mt Giluwe, is one of my favorite places in the country where the ‘bestest and freshest’ vegetables in PNG grow.
In fact, it is the single biggest producer of fresh vegetables in the country such as potatoes, broccoli, cabbages and cauliflower.
In March 2011, while in Tambul for the National Agriculture Research Institute field day, I bumped into Tambul-Nebilyer MP and then civil aviation minister, Benjamin Poponawa.
He says the lessons of the massive corruption involved in the NADP must never be repeated if 
agriculture in PNG is to prosper.



Poponawa has, in the past, been blunt in his anger at NADP funds being stolen by “paper farmers” in Waigani who may have never touched a fork or spade in their lives.
“We already know the experience of the NADP,” he said.
“The people who ran the NADP did not think about the people, rather, about filling their own pockets.”
Poponawa called on the government not to forget about agriculture, despite the massive resource developments in the country such as gas, minerals and oil.
“Agriculture will be with us all the time,” he said.
“Gas, oil and gold will run out.
This week, visiting ANZ CEO, Mike Smith, talked about the enormous potential for PNG agriculture in the ‘Asian Century’.
No “implementation”, however, Mr O’Neill, in the face of ‘paper farmers’ and the farce that is the DAL!

Will horror force Papua New Guinea to protect its women?

By: Rowan Callick, Asia-Pacific Editor 
 The Australian

FEW people in Papua New Guinea die, however elderly or frail, without someone in their often vast extended family or neighbourhood muttering darkly: "Em I no indai nating." ("They didn't just die.")
In this world view, there must be a reason beyond the mere physical. The shadow world of spirits is ever-present - and available for manipulation by those with the arcane keys.
These are sanguma men or meri - male or female sorcerers, people who for the most part conceal their skills cunningly.
There are benign sorcerers, who are available to help heal, improve food garden productivity, obtain good exam results or, of course, lure an attractive person to fall in love with you - for a consideration, of course. Some offer a tariff list.
In a remote world lacking scientific explanation, in which life could be brutish and short, it was natural that people sought not only a way to understand how their world worked, but also to find a way to take a measure of control over it.
But that magic retains the degree of influence it does in PNG disappoints the mainstream churches, which claim the allegiance of most of the seven million population, and points to the failure both of the education system and of economic development. The shocking death this week of Kepari Lanieta, 20, from Porgera in Enga province, the mother of an eight-month-old baby, has riveted the country.
A six-year-old boy had died after complaining of stomach and chest pains in hospital in Mount Hagen, the largest city in the Highlands.
His relatives, who come from the same area as Lanieta, pointed the blame at her, branding her a sorcerer, invading her home, torturing her with a hot iron bar, stripping her naked, tying her up, setting her alight and throwing her on a rubbish heap.
Passers-by photographed the scene with mobile phones.
Appallingly, such sorcery killings remain comparatively common in PNG. Although the perpetrators often seek admiration for their crimes, few end up in court.
No one has yet been charged in Mount Hagen, even though PNG police commissioner Tom Kulunga described the murder as "shocking and devilish", and "totally unacceptable in the 21st century".
Prime Minister Peter O'Neill has also spoken out forcefully against such "barbaric killings", pointing out that it is usually "women, the old and the weak" who are the targets, the scapegoats for ignorance, fear and revenge.
It took the rape and murder of a 23-year-old Indian student in a New Delhi bus to galvanise parliament and the justice agencies to take crimes against women seriously.
Is it possible that Lanieta's brutal killing could trigger a similar popular campaign in PNG, which could lead to appropriate legislative and educational reform, and to a tough response from the police and courts?

Papua New Guinea: Mass Insanity . . .

I’m shaking my head after reading yet another article about the depths to which people stuck in warped superstitious belief systems of the past will sink:
CBC Newsworld has a report out of Papua New Guinea about a young woman accused of witchcraft who was stripped, bound and tortured and then burned alive in front of hundreds of witnesses.
Apparently, CBC is reporting, “Some of the hundreds of bystanders took photographs of Wednesday’s brutal slaying. Grisly pictures were published on the front pages of the country’s biggest circulating newspapers, The National and Post-Courier.”
To quote an old Bruce Cockburn song: “If I had a rocket launcher, I would retaliate . . .”
Stupid, stupid, stupid, ignorant people! But they do know how to use cameras and to light fires.
Moral of the story: stay far, far away from Papua New Guinea, unless you can cast a spell on the imbeciles there and make them disappear.
Just sayin’ . . .
Jillian

Hindus urge strong legislation In Papua New Guinea for sorcery related killings‏

Written by


February 7, 2013

Shocked by the reported brutal torturing and burning alive of a young woman on sorcery accusations on February six, Hindus are urging Papua New Guinea to come up with a strong legislation to deal with growing sorcery-related killings.
According to reports, a 20-year old mother of one was burned alive in front of hundreds of people in Papua New Guinea on the accusation of using sorcery to kill a boy aged six years.
Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada (USA) today, said that this barbaric act was highly unacceptable in the 21st century world.
Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, suggested Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter O’Neill to take this issue seriously and besides tougher legislation, also launch an educational campaign in the country. Papua New Guinea religious leaders should also help in raising awareness, Zed added.
Moreover, Papua New Guinea also needed to do serious soul searching on the treatment of women, Rajan Zed noted.

Saturday, February 09, 2013

BHP Billiton versus Papua New Guinea

From the halls of political power in Port Moresby to the corporate boardroom of BHP Billiton in Melbourne, a battle is emerging over the continued mining for copper and gold at the Ok Tedi Mine in Papua New Guinea’s far western Star Mountains.
800px-OkTediMine
Ok Tedi mine

PNG Prime Minister Peter O’Neill is warning his government might not extend the life of the mine, once licenses expire later this year, unless BHP agrees to some changes to the terms of ownership. O’Neill has also requested assurances over environmental safeguards.
Environmental issues plagued the project in the 1980s, and the Australian miner reported that mining operations had caused major environmental damage to the Fly River in 1999.
Ownership of the operation was then restructured with BHP’s 63.4 percent stake placed in the PNG Sustainable Development Program (PNGSDP).
The governments of PNG and Western Province hold the remainder of the balance in PNGSDP, a trust headed by economist Ross Garnaut. The trust effectively indemnified BHP Billiton against environmental damage while PNGSTD acted as the mine’s operator.
BHP took a step back from the operations while the fund amassed $1.4 billion to be set aside for the people of PNG. Garnaut said that this “was going to be certainly the largest act of corporate philanthropy”. Control of those funds has been cited as a core issue, although O’Neill has denied this.
Garnaut recently retired, and BHP’s practice of appointing three of the seven board members has ceased, giving room for the PNG government to have a larger say. This led to charges that BHP has not done enough to protect the environment and O’Neill has said he’s not convinced the mine is worth it.
He went so far as to say that BHP needed to shed its “colonial era” mentality.
The dispute has a familiar ring.
Mining has provided PNG with one of its few steady income streams. The Ok Tedi Mine contributed more than 25 percent to the government’s bottom line, while plans are well advanced for a massive expansion of the industry over the next two decades.
However, around the region the argument over environmental damage and the distribution of wealth from the mining industry – with little trickling down to those living in the immediate vicinity of a mine – has been heating up, particularly in Indonesia, Malaysia and The Philippines.
In PNG, there seems little to gain by pointing the finger.
O’Neill is well liked and his government is considered a breath of fresh air in light of the corruption and political infighting that plagued previous governments. Of equal importance, BHP is among the world’s largest miners, but it has also been a heavy promoter of sustainable development since the 1990s.
How these two resolve this dispute should become a focus for governments around the region who are obviously attracted to the wealth a mine can generate, but who also fear a voter backlash over environmental and wealth distribution issues.

United Nations denounces "sorcery" crimes in Papua New Guinea

GENEVA (Reuters) - A woman was burnt alive in Papua New Guinea this week after townspeople accused her of sorcery, the United Nations said on Friday, citing the "heinous crime" as part of a growing pattern of vigilante attacks on people accused of witchcraft.
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay called on authorities in Papua New Guinea to investigate such crimes and bring their perpetrators to justice.
A 1971 law defining sorcery as a crime in the South Pacific nation should be repealed, Pillay's spokeswoman said.
"We are deeply disturbed by reports of the torture and killing of a 20-year-old woman accused of sorcery in Mount Hagen, Papua New Guinea, on February 6," U.N. human rights spokeswoman Cecile Pouilly told a news briefing in Geneva.
Kepari Leniata was burnt alive in front of a crowd by relatives of the 6-year-old boy whom she was accused of using sorcery to kill, she said. Attempts by law enforcement officials to intervene failed.
"We note with great concern that this case adds to the growing pattern of vigilante attacks and killings of persons accused of sorcery in Papua New Guinea," Pouilly added.
The U.N. human rights office was able to document a case of five people, three of them women, who were tortured for 20 days and killed last November after being accused of using sorcery to kill others in Jiwaka province, she said.
"We think it is clearly under-reported, because many of these cases happen in rural areas and go unreported. It is clearly deeply rooted," she told reporters.
Rashida Manjoo, U.N. special rapporteur on violence against women, met victims of sorcery during an investigative mission to Papua New Guinea last March. Widows or other family with no family to protect them are particularly vulnerable to such attacks, she said in a report to the U.N. Human Rights Council.
"I was shocked to witness the brutality of the assaults perpetrated against suspected sorcerers, which in many cases include torture, rape, mutilations and murder. According to many interviewees, sorcery accusations are commonly used to deprive women of their land and/or their property," she wrote.
The country's Constitutional Law Reform Commission has held consultations on the 1971 Sorcery Act and called for its repeal but has yet to present its report to the parliament, Pouilly said.
"We welcome the proposal by the Constitutional Law Reform Commission to repeal the Sorcery Act and we call for a stronger legal response to such killings," she told Reuters.

South Sydney Rabbitohs kick pre-season trials off with win over PNG Kumuls

By Ian McCullough 

AAP

South Sydney have opened their NRL pre-season campaign with a comfortable 38-12 win over Papua New Guinea in Saturday's trial encounter at Redfern Oval.
With owner Russell Crowe watching on from the stands, a largely second-string Souths side dominated possession for most of the game, but were thwarted on several occasions by some fine defending from the competitive tourists.
George Burgess
Promising ... George Burgess gets a feel for it in the Rabbitohs' win over PNG. Source: Rohan Kelly / News Limited
Coach Michael Maguire handed debuts to winger Bryson Goodwin, an off-season acquisition from Canterbury-Bankstown, and prop Thomas Burgess, the fourth member of his family to turn out for the club.
His twin brother George was also included in the starting line-up with older brother Sam joining the remainder of the Rabbitohs' first-grade squad on the sidelines.
Back-rower Ben Lowe opened the scoring for the hosts, crashing over from close range after nine minutes, but the Kumuls' response was immediate when halfback Israel Eliab got his fingertips to Dion Aiye's grubber-kick for a try.
Souths continued to press, but the tough-tackling PNG side kept them at bay before taking a shock lead on the stroke of quarter-time.
Eliab, who has been watched by a number of NRL clubs, picked off an erratic Souths' offload and raced 80 metres to put the ball under the posts, then added the extras.
The second period followed a similar pattern with the Rabbitohs seeing a lot of the ball and the Kumuls working hard to defend their goalline.
But that resistance was broken when Dave Tyrell darted over for his side's second score, with Goodwin kicking the conversion and, just before halftime, skipper Jason Clark restored Souths' lead from close range.
As the combative Kumuls tired, tries from Chris McQueen and Aaron Gray iced the game for Maguire's side, before Bennett Leslie and Clark added some extra gloss to the scoreline.
Goodwin finished with four goals for the game and Apisai Koroisau was also successful with a kick in front of the posts.

Shares jump as Newcrest digs up more gold

Sydney Morning Herald

Date
Newcrest Mining, Australia’s largest gold producer, reported first-half profit 9.6 per cent higher than analyst estimates, pushing the company’s stock to its biggest gain in almost five months.
Net income was $320 million for the six months ended December 31, the company said today in a statement, compared with analyst estimates of $292 million. Earnings were 51 per cent lower than the $659 million a year earlier, which were boosted by price gains and an asset sale.
‘‘Production is expected to be higher in the second half of the 2013 financial year,’’ it said. Newcrest produced 953,331 ounces of gold in the six months to December 31, 18 per cent lower than a year earlier, the company said.
Newcrest shares climbed 5 per cent to $24.52 at the close in Sydney, their biggest advance since September 14. Output for the full year, estimated at the low end of a range of 2.3 million to 2.5 million ounces, will be driven by expansions at Cadia East in New South Wales and Lihir in Papua New Guinea, Newcrest reiterated today.
Newcrest kept its interim dividend unchanged at 12 cents a share. Three analysts in the survey had predicted a payout of four to 15 cents a share.
The company will consider a higher dividend in the future, while keeping a long-term goal to reduce gearing ratio to around 10 per cent from 16.9 per cent, chief executive Greg Robinson said on a conference call after the earnings.
The dividend ‘‘indicates the board’s comfort with the cash generating outlook for the company,’’ Credit Suisse  analysts Michael Slifirski and Sam Webb said today in a note to clients. ‘‘This is a vote of confidence in both Cadia East and Lihir that has perhaps not yet been recognised by the market.’’
Gold producers are expanding mines and boosting output to cope with rising costs and benefit from prices that have increased for 12 consecutive years as Asian demand rose and central banks boosted purchases.
Spot gold, up 4.9 per cent in the six months to December 31, was little changed at $US1672.30 an ounce.
The lower first-half profit was ‘‘primarily due to the lower production and more reliance on higher cost ounces,’’ it said today.
Sales fell 23 per cent to $1.81 billion in the first half, while cash costs declined 6 per cent to $973 an ounce. Newcrest is implementing a close review to improve performance of its 50 percent-owned Hidden Valley operation in Papua New Guinea following a 17 per cent drop in output in the period, it said.
‘‘For the remainder of the 2013 financial year, Newcrest expects higher production in line with achieving the bottom end of guidance, and a subdued cost environment,’’ the company said.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/business/earnings-season/shares-jump-as-newcrest-digs-up-more-gold-20130208-2e2t7.html#ixzz2KLL5ICcg