Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Murder capital

Port Moresby listed among world’s worst

PORT Moresby has been placed among the top five murder capitals in the world, a ranking by a foreign publication that has got Police Commissioner Gari Baki fuming, The National newspaper reports today.

The Washington DC-based Foreign Policy publication, in its edition last September, lists Port Moresby alongside Caracas (Venezuela), Cape Town (South Africa), New Orleans (USA) and Moscow (Russia) as cities where you have a very good chance of getting murdered.

The Foreign Policy website (www.foreignpolicy.com) , on which the listing is still available, says when it comes to brutal, homicidal violence, these five cities stand in a class of their own.

The publication said Caracas, which has a population of 3.2 million, had a murder rate of 130 per 100,000 residents, Cape Town had 3.5 million people and a murder rate of 62 per 100,000 residents, New Orleans had 220,000 people and a murder rate of 67 per 100,000 residents, Moscow had 10.4 million people and a murder rate of 9.6 per 100,000 residents, while Port Moresby had a population of 254,000 (2000 population census) and a murder rate of 54 per 100,000 people.

It described Port Moresby as a place with high violent crime rates, high level of police corruption and gang activity.

A spate of murders in recent weeks, especially the brutal killing of businessman Sir George Constantinou on Dec 16 and Air Niugini pilot Timothy Houji on New Year’s Day, would give critics little to argue against this very negative ranking.

But Mr Baki yesterday expressed disappointment at the ranking, especially when Port Moresby’s population was small in comparison to other world capitals.

He questioned the validity of Foreign Policy magazine’s listing of the world murder capitals.

“As commissioner of Papua New Guinea police, I was shocked and upset over Foreign Policy’s listing because it is simply not true,” he said in a letter distributed widely to be published.

“I have been a law enforcement officer for more than 35 years and I know, for a fact, that we have not had 54 murders in Port Moresby at any one time over the last 10 years.

“In fact, our annual average nationwide was much less,” Mr Baki said.

“It would be interesting to know the magazine’s source of its 2004 figures.”

He said the magazine also did not clearly indicate which year’s murder rates were used in its comparison exercise.

“These facts will have an overall bearing on the end results, especially for anyone making a comparative analysis such as that done by the Foreign Policy magazine.

“The report is grossly unfair on Papua New Guinea and sets back the many positive developments taking place within the country.

“There is no denying that PNG has a serious law and order problem.

“But, PNG and its problems cannot be compared with the four major cities Port Moresby was listed with,” Mr Baki said.

Foreign Policy’s article

Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea

Population: 254,200 (2000 census)

Murder rate: 54 per 100,000 (2004 figure)

What’s happening: The capital of island country Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby might seem like a surprising addition to this list. But its high violent crime rates, along with high levels of police corruption and gang activity, helped earn the city the dubious title of “worst city” in a 2004 Economist Intelligence Unit survey. With gangs called “raskols” controlling the city centres and unemployment rates hovering around 80%, it’s easy to see how Port Moresby beat out the 130 other survey contenders. Port Moresby’s police don’t seem to be helping the crime situation last November, five officers were charged with offences ranging from murder to rape. And in August, the city’s police barracks were put on a three-month curfew due to a recent slew of bank heists reportedly planned inside the stations by officers and their co-conspirators. Rising tensions between Chinese migrants and native Papua New Guineans are also cause for alarm, as are reports of increased activity of organised Chinese crime syndicates.

Port Moresby is one of the murder capitals of the world? Amelia Earhart plane found? Hagen girl tied, burnt to death!

Two good stories on the front page of The National newspaper today, one on Port Moresby being rated one of the top five murder capitals of the world, and the other on a plane wreckage discovery in East New Britain strongly thought to be that of famed American aviatrix Amelia Earhart.The Post-Courier had the horrific story of a young woman being blindfolded, tied up and burnt to death in Mount Hagen.Phew! What a horrific way for Papua New Guinea to start the year!

Details to come.

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

'Penis fire' suspect is charged

An Australian woman has appeared in court in Adelaide charged with murdering her husband by setting fire to his penis, BBC reports.

Rajini Narayan, 44, is alleged to have doused her husband, Satish, with a flammable liquid while he was sleeping.

When she set him alight, Mr Narayan jumped out of bed and knocked over the substance, causing the fire to spread.

Mrs Narayan told the court she had not intended to kill her husband but to punish him for his alleged infidelity.

Prosecutor Lucy Boord said Mrs Narayan had confessed to her neighbours, telling them she was a "jealous wife" and believed her husband was having an affair.

"I just wanted to burn his penis so it belongs to me and no one else, I didn't mean this to happen," Ms Boord quoted Mrs Narayan as saying.

The fire, on 8 December 2008, caused damage to the couple's house estimated at 1m Australian dollars ($715,000, £490,000).

Mrs Narayan was initially charged with arson and endangering life - including the lives of her three children who were in the house at the time.

The charge was upgraded to murder after Mr Narayan died from his injuries last week.

She has been held in police custody pending the results of a psychological assessment.

 

Death Notice and Funeral Notice

The late First Officer Timothy John Houji

 

The family of Timothy John Houji (Air Niugini pilot) would like to advise all relatives and friends of his tragic death in the early hours of January 1, 2009.

Haus Krai is being held at the Houji residence at Six-Mile, Air Niugini Village, Stage 1 (Section 120, Lot 19).

 

Funeral Service

 

Date and time: Wednesday January 7, 2009, 1pm

Venue: Rev. Sino Kami Memorial Church, National Capital District

Funeral will be followed by refreshments at the Houji residence (Haus Krai) and his body will overnight in the family home. Timothy’s final flight will be on Thursday, January 8, 2009, to his home province of East Sepik to be laid to rest at Woginara No. 2 Village.

For further information, please contact Ruth Telek on (675) 6876016 or (675) 72204519.

2009 game fishing titles in Madang

The Game Fishing Association of PNG will hold this year’s game fishing national tournament in Madang.
The Madang Game Fishing Club (MGFC) will play host to the 34th GFAPNG National Titles sponsored by Mobil, Global Internet and Shimano.
The GFAPNG holds the national titles once a year during the Easter period.
Four affiliated clubs in Madang, Lae, Port Moresby and Rabaul alternate the role of host club each year, so that each of these towns hosts a national titles every four years.
“Each year Madang has played host, the number of anglers and non-anglers participating in this nine-day event has increased,” organising committee member Teresa Litz said today.
“This year the MGFC titles organising committee is expecting a minimum of 380 anglers to register, as well as up to 150 non-fishing guests.
“Registration fee is K400 per adult (fishing), K200 per junior (fishing) and K150 per guest (not fishing).
“These fees might seem steep, but they include: tournament bag, tournament shirt, cap, grid map, loads of promotional gear, breakfast, lunch (fishing days only), fuel vouchers and access to sponsored evenings for the duration of the whole tournament.
“Registration forms can be downloaded from www.gfa.com.pg/2009 ."
 The GFAPNG National Titles is a highly prestigious event and each year hundreds of anglers from all over PNG and overseas make the pilgrimage to the host town in order to participate.
The tournament is not just for seasoned anglers; many people who have never been fishing before have registered to fish the National Titles and have had such a great time.
“‘The Titles’ actually has a long record of rewarding the ‘greenies’ who have never touched a rod before!” Litz added.
“The best thing about the titles is it is an opportunity to socialise and meet other people from other towns or provinces; many men, women and children have formed lasting friendships based solely on a chance meeting at the titles.
“The camaraderie and mateship that’s experienced throughout the nine days of the tournament is truly unique and it’s this factor, not the prizes, that has most anglers returning every year.
 “Preparations for the 2009 titles are going very well.
“With up to 50 sponsors, over 400 anglers and guests as well as up to 40 boats, the logistics of holding an event like this require at least 12 months of planning and preparation.
“The titles committee is confident that it will be ready by the briefing night on April 3 and look forward to hosting an action-packed, fun-filled tournament right through to the final day when they bid farewell to visiting anglers at the ‘Crying Towel’ session on April 13.”

Monday, January 05, 2009

Skerah.com out now to promote Papua New Guinea

By ROSELYN VAI

Just a toksave that our 2009 edition of Skerah.com is now out.

Happy to receive your contributions in 2009.

If you got articles/blog articles promoting PNG, then please send them to us for publication with link to your site or blog.

Help us promote Papua New Guinea.

We'll only publish a paragraph or two and then a link to your site.

If you want your blog listed on our homepage and your articles included in our e-newsletter with a link then please let us know.

Our 2008 e-newsletter will carry on in 2009 but due to many contributions it will be on a fortnightly basis.

The first issue is in February.

A sample can be accessed here:

www.skerah.com/2009enews

rgds

Roselyn

Consort continues to train and develop Papua New Guinea seafarers

Captain Sod Baim (left) and Captain Jason Feda, both Consort-trained national captains holding Master Class 1 Certificate of Competency

Consort Express Lines Ltd has been vigorously training and developing Papua New Guinean seafarers within the maritime sector over the years.


The company’s cadet sponsorship programme is a significant component of its overall training and development strategy.


It involves the recruitment of young grade 12 school leavers to undergo four years of cadet training to become qualified ships officers.


The company has a total of 40 cadets currently in training from first year to fourth year.


Its annual cadet intake is five marine engineer cadets and five deck cadets, which represents a substantial investment for the future manpower needs of the shipping industry in PNG. The company has also been sponsoring employees to attend PNG Maritime College in Madang to upgrade their certificates.


Last year, the company sponsored the highest number of students enrolled at the Maritime College for various courses and was indeed pleased with the results.


All its sponsored students for Mate Class One and Engineer Class Two courses have successfully passed both their written and oral exams.


Charles Peni, a Consort-sponsored student was awarded the best student prize in the Mate Class One course.


The company is encouraged and will continue to sponsor more students at the Maritime College this year.


The company employs a total of 230 marine personnel throughout its fleet of vessels of which 95% are Papua New Guineans.


It boasts the services of two senior Papua New Guineans who hold Master Class One Certificate of Competency obtained from PNG Maritime College under full company sponsorship.


Two other senior Papua New Guinean engineers who hold Engineer Class One certificates have successfully localised chief engineer positions on large vessels.


All four senior officers have been trained and developed by the company up to international standards and are qualified to sail on any sized vessels anywhere in the world.


With the recent acquisition of larger vessels, the company now has a significant advantage for its current employees to gain higher level certificates.


The size of the vessels operated and the routes on which they trade, gives the company the capability to offer sea time from cadetship up to Master Class One or Engineer Class One levels with internationally-recognised certificates.


The company has recently seen the successful delivery of its latest vessel the MV Madang Coast, which sailed from the Caribbean to Lae with a 100 % complement of Papua New Guinean officers and crew, who displayed a very high level of professionalism in their jobs at an international level.


This groundbreaking achievement gives the company the confidence to continue to maintain its training and development strategy to meet not only its own future manpower needs but also the needs of the maritime industry as a whole.


The National for all the news from Papua New Guinea

Read the online edition of The NationalPapua New Guinea’s leading daily newspaper – at www.thenational.com.pg for all the news and views from this part of the world.

What a terrible way for Papua New Guinea to start the year!

What a terrible way for Papua New Guinea to start the year!

Terrorism has indeed come to Papua New Guinea!

Murders! Rocket launchers and grenades being found on planes!

At least that’s what went through my mind this morning as I glanced at the front pages of both newspapers.

The National led on its front page with the story of Port Moresby police last Friday arresting five suspects in connection with the arrest of young Air Niugini pilot Timothy Houji, who was brutally murdered in downtown Port Moresby on New Year’s Day.

The five suspects – one of them a PNG Defence Force soldier based at Taurama Barracks -  are all from the the Kombe area of West New Britain province, are at the Boroko police cells and will appear in court this week.

They will all be charged with willful murder, which carries the death penalty.

Mr Houji was of mixed East Sepik and Manus parentage.

He was just 26 years old and just four days shy of his 27th birthday.

He was a first officer on the F100 fleet and was heading towards command training to become a captain of a Dash 8 aircraft this year.

The other frightening story on the front page of The National was that of Mount Hagen police confiscating a rocket launcher along with nine grenades, a sophisticated lens and two CDs from a man at Kagamuga Airport last Wednesday.

A suspect from Nipa in Southern Highlands province was transporting the items on a flight from Kikori, Gulf province, into Western Highland province, when police checked his baggage and confiscated the items.

The suspected was arrested.

The Post-Courier led with the story of the munitions haul in Mt Hagen plus Air Niugini management confirming that a grenade had been found in a passenger seat pocket on a flight between Buka, Rabaul, Lae and Port Moresby.

The national airline has immediately taken steps to boost the checking of planes and luggage in the interests of passenger safety, including sending marshals on every flight to and from Buka.

 

The National for all the news from Papua New Guinea

Read the online edition of The NationalPapua New Guinea’s leading daily newspaper – at www.thenational.com.pg for all the news and views from this part of the world.

Sunday, January 04, 2009

Papua New Guinea culture affecting its growth

This article was first published in The National newspaper on November 26, 2007, but its subjects are very relevant as we start off 2009...

By SOLOMON KANTHA

WHEN PNG gained its independence in 1975, there was a lot of optimism that our mineral resource wealth would come to offset the aid dependence and bring about increased growth and development to all sectors of the economy.
PNG’s mineral resources were seen as a reservoir that would catapult the economy forward with higher rates of economic growth, leading to improved standards of living.
The country’s declining social and economic indicators tell us otherwise.
Resource developments did not result in significant improvements even in the lives of those that have resources on their land.
The notion of “development” perhaps has been erroneously equated with having rich natural resources.
East Asian economies have proven that even without an abundance
of natural resources, a country can be economically well-off.
It is therefore important for us to understand that improvements in the well-being of a society and hence the economic success of nations requires small yet crucial intangible factors such the right attitude, values and a culture that spurs growth.
After 32 years of independence, it is fitting to reflect upon some of the crucial factors that underlie our development trajectory.
The economic successes and failures of nations have been attributed to a number of factors including their economic policies, resource endowments, type of political regime, quality of leadership and even the culture of these societies.
Culture is one of the subtle yet crucial issues tied to economic growth and is arguably one of the determinant factors that either impedes or spurs economic growth and development.
How does culture affect the economic growth of countries?
A prominent scholar argues that the success of Confucian societies such as Japan, South Korea and Taiwan can be attributed directly to their cultures.
He argues that:
*Confucian societies universally promote a high level of education;
*Have a desire for accomplishment in various skills (academic and cultural);
*Have a seriousness about tasks, job, family and obligations; and
*Have much less emphasis on advancing individual (selfish) interests.
Another scholar suggests that there are ties between cultural values and economic development and that cultural values help spur growth.
Culture is a system of basic common values that help shape the behaviour of the people in a given society.
It is argued that cultural values significantly shape economic and political institutions and Confucian-influenced economies of East Asia were seen to outperform the rest of the world by a wide margin.
Cultural factors are equally important as economic and political factors in determining economic development.
According to the cultural thesis punctuality, hard work, achievement and “other” individual values are the keys to unlocking the economic potential of poor countries.
Such values can be inculcated through deliberate efforts.
While some of these claims may be disputed when looking at other Confucian societies such as China, they help us understand how the cultural dynamics of a society may affect how the people and political decision-makers behave.
They are also valid in the sense that tribal allegiances, nepotism, and ethnic animosity which is prevalent in tribal and ethnically-diverse societies such as PNG have proven to impact significantly on how institutions function and public officials and political representatives behave which consequently encroaches on the economic performance of a country.
While the tribal societies in PNG have some of the positive attributes such as the communal ownership of land and the ethnic allegiances which creates a form of social capital, the “tribalism”, “regionalism” and “provincialism” that exist among the different groups hinder development.
Tribal allegiance has greatly influenced modern day politics in PNG and tribal fights continue to blight the lives of many.
Perhaps the biggest impact that this process of transition has in PNG’s governance system is the conflict between the traditional and modern institutions, practices and norms which have significantly impacted on contemporary PNG politics.
The strong ethnic allegiances are still deeply rooted and have often led to many unmeritorious appointments to public offices based on ethnicity.
Ethnic cleavages can also have adverse effects on the economic performance of countries and PNG tends to exhibit certain characteristics of this factionalism mainly in terms of appointments to public office.
More so, the big-man system appears to have a significant impact on the role of political leaders as representatives of the people.
Most leaders have taken on the role of a traditional big-man when they assume political office which consequently affects the way they behave as political representatives and carry out their leadership duties and responsibilities.
It is indisputable that our culture is a significant contributory factor to the development enigma in PNG.
That does not mean our traditional cultures are obstacles to growth but rather the evolution of a culture that has unwittingly developed over the years and has become a norm in our society.
This culture is more related to our habits, attitude and everyday practices that have come to form an integral part of our daily lives and have impacted significantly on shaping our society today.
This recent culture can be seen in the lack of respect for fellow citizens evident in an absence of simple courtesy like “excuse me”, “please”, “sorry”, etc, in our day-to-day interaction.
Other examples can be seen in the little regard people in high offices pay to simple security checks at airports and terminals.
When someone is robbed or being attacked there is usually a large number of spectators without anyone stepping in to help the victim.
These are just few examples of this regressive culture.
NCD Governor Powes Parkop recently identified a major regressive habit – betelnut chewing.
It has become so acceptable that the authorities do not haul up anyone who defaces public properties, bus-stops, walkways, roads, buildings and even government offices with betelnut spit.
Betelnut chewing habit affects work ethics, cleanliness, and hygiene and the red stains have become an eye-sore on our streets, roads, airports, shops, markets and office buildings.
Some years ago, Singapore banned chewing gum when it became a problem with proper disposals. Anyone caught doing so faced a fine.
Governor Parkop’s message to rid Port Moresby of the eye-sore betelnut stains and careless spitting habits should be seriously adhered to by all concerned citizens to see changes not only in our capital city’s image but the country in general.
And this should be taken seriously by all citizens in other provinces as well and not just Port Moresby residents.
As we recently celebrated our 32 years of independence, we should pause for a moment and reflect upon our habits, attitudes and behaviour which form a crucial part of development and progress.
It does not require a lot of resources or money to see changes in our society but the right attitude that will generate a culture that spurs growth to see meaningful changes in our society.
It is time we should start having the right attitude in order to see changes in PNG.

Note: The writer holds a Masters degree in political science and is a lecturer in international relations at the University of PNG

Painting the town red

I was on the bus this morning when I noticed the number of people chewing betelnut and spitting without a concern for the world.

This is a major regressive habit that has been declared as public enemy No. 1 by National Capital District governor Powes Parkop.

It has become so acceptable that the authorities do not haul up anyone who defaces public properties, bus-stops, walkways, roads, buildings and even government offices with betelnut spit.

Betelnut chewing habit affects work ethics, cleanliness, and hygiene and the red stains have become an eye-sore on our streets, roads, airports, shops, markets and office buildings.

Some years ago, Singapore banned chewing gum when it became a problem with proper disposals.

Anyone caught doing so faced a fine.

Governor Parkop’s message to rid Port Moresby of the eye-sore betelnut stains and careless spitting habits should be seriously adhered to by all concerned citizens to see changes not only in our capital city’s image but the country in general.

And this should be taken seriously by all citizens in other provinces as well and not just Port Moresby residents.

Port Moresby morgue stinks

I was about to have dinner with my children last night when I saw this story on EMTV that made me want to throw up.

It was about the deteriorating state of the Port Moresby General Hospital morgue to such a state that the many bodies there are literally decomposing.

The morgue is basically a shipping container!

Relatives of the deceased are also to blame as they do not collect the dead bodies of people who die.

Television footage showed people with their hands to their noses at the morgue.

What a shame, given that the Papua New Guinea government has so much money in trust accounts, and yet cannot have a good morgue in its captal city.

My gut feeling now is that if the government does not do something drastic about our deteriorating health and education facilities this year, our social problems are going to get worse and worse.

So rich, and yet so poor!

Meantime, yuck, yuck, yuck at the Port Moresby General Hospital Morgue!

Mythbuster about climate change debate?

THE official figures are not yet in, but 2008 is widely tipped to be the coolest year of the century.

WHILE the official figures are not yet in, 2008 is widely tipped to be declared the coolest year of the century.

Whether this is a serious blow to global warming alarmists depends entirely on who you talk to.

Anyone looking for a knockout blow in the global warming debate in 2008 were sorely disappointed, The Australian reports.

The weather refused to co-operate, offering mixed messages from record cold temperatures across North America to heatwaves across Europe and the Middle East earlier in the year.

Even in Australia yesterday there were flurries of snow on the highest peaks of a shivering Tasmania, while the north of the country sweltered in above-average temperatures.

A cool 2008 may not fit in with doomsday scenarios of some of the more extreme alarmists. But nor, meteorologists point out, does it prove the contrary, that global warming is a myth.

In Australia this year, on the most recent figures, the average temperature was 22.18C.

Last year it was 22.48C. In 2006 it was 22.28C, and in 2005 22.99C.

Senior meteorologist with the National Meteorological Centre Rod Dickson said that based on data from January to November, 2008 might be the coolest this century but it was still Australia's 15th warmest year in the past 100 years.

"Since 1990, the Australian annual mean temperature has been warmer than the 1961-1990 average for all but two years, 2008 being one of those years," he said.

In Australia overall, 2008 on the most recent date, was 0.37C higher than for the 30-year average to 1990 of 21.81C.

Worldwide, 2008 was expected to be about 0.31C higher than the 30-year average to 1990, of 14C. Melbourne, Hobart and Adelaide had well below average rainfall for the calendar year 2008, with just 449mm in Melbourne, compared with an average annual rainfall of 652mm.

Hobart received 407mm in 2008 compared with an average of 618mm. Sydney was also slightly below average at 1083 mm, compared with an average of 1213mm.

Brisbane, Perth and Darwin were all wetter than normal.

Read more on this story at The Australian

Article from: News Digital

 

 

 

 

 

A need to review our policies

The following article, written by young Madang-based businessman Allan Bird, appeared in the letters page of The National newspaper on Tuesday, December 30, 2008, and reflects on the various problems affecting Papua New Guinea. Allan Bird, for those who came in late, stood against Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare for the East Sepik Regional Seat in 2002 and was seemingly poised for a big upset, leading Sir Michael, before Sir Michael made a comeback to win.

By ALLAN BIRD

LAST month, I was privileged to speak at a business and Government leaders summit at the Pacific Adventist University where I highlighted some of the issues that are alienating our people, hence producing citizens like those who killed Sir George Constantinou.

I wondered what it was that kept Sir George here when many of our well-off nationals, including politicians, were buying homes in Australia.

A man of few words; his great deeds and achievements will outlive him.

Will our Government ever deal with the root cause of this problem?

Are we going to forget this after we laid this great man to rest?

After all, this is what we do in PNG, isn’t it?

We all have very short memories: we are masters of the art of knee-jerk reactions.

Sadly, many lawyers are already rubbing their hands with glee, knowing full well the cash cow is waiting to be milked at Tete now that our well meaning, hard working police officers have razed it.

I sympathise with the police commissioner and his men whose job was to remove a viper’s nest.

To begin with, our laws were written to protect criminals, not the innocent.

Criminals know this; that is why they are emboldened and, to some extent, empowered to do what they do. There is no doubt most settlements are the perfect breeding ground for criminals.

I know as I grew up in a settlement 30 years ago. It was only through divine intervention that I did not choose a life of crime like the many friends I grew up with.

Illegal settlements full of young men with little or no education, no skills and little chance of getting a job are going to turn on the rest of us eventually unless we do something about their situation.

Razing the settlements will only move the criminals to another location.

In addition, the police action has given those animals one more reason to make our lives more terrifying; we have destroyed their homes and put their families on the streets.

Quite simply, they will be back to kill some other poor soul in the same manner in some other location.

Today, it was Tete. Tomorrow it could be Morata, Nuigo, Sisiak, Bumbu or Papua compound.

There are many more places with young men who have no jobs, no life, no hope and no future.

To them their life has little value, so why should your life or that of our loved ones be worth anything?

They have nothing to lose while we have everything to lose.

It is my hope that what happened to Sir George will end there but I am not confident because, in this country, we have a poor record of solving problems.

For starters, we need to plan resettlement areas for people in settlements. Such areas need to be properly zoned, have services like schools, health centres and so on.

These places need to be located in areas where the population density is low. These people need to be engaged productively so that they can pay for the land they have been given over a period of time.

This will give them meaning and a chance at a future, better than no future at all.

We need to make drastic changes to our education system. We have to decide how to train our young people. Should we train all of them for a life in urban areas or rural areas? For as long as I can remember, we have been training people for life in towns. But we have not been able to generate employment opportunities.

When that fails, we try to solve the problem by relocating our half-educated, non-skilled young citizens to the villages and expect them to become farmers.

They have no rural skills, having just spent eight to 10 years in a classroom. They don’t know the meaning of hard work, sweat and toil and we expect them to become farmers?

We need to change the way we educate our children and be more honest about their chances of getting jobs in towns and cities.

We should take a hard look at how we distribute wealth in this country.

Since independence, we continue to spend 80% of PNG’s wealth in the National Capital District and, to a lesser extent, Lae city. I am not aware of plans to change this anytime soon.

How are we to provide opportunities for our people, direct them away from crime and make them useful citizens when we lack the will to move a fair share of the nation’s wealth outside NCD and Lae?

I have not seen coffee or cocoa plantation, a mine or even an oil well anywhere in NCD, yet the best part of the PNG cake is consumed there.

How do our policy makers expect to make even the tiniest amount of difference in this country when they lack the courage to move sufficient resources elsewhere?

We have 20 provinces in this country, not two.

The riches of Bougainville, Ok Tedi, Misima, Porgera, Lihir and Kutubu are miles from NCD. This situation needs to change.

We need to toughen our laws so that murderers and rapists are summarily put to death.

Just because other nations say it does not work is a lame excuse not to exercise this punishment here.

My people used to put murderers and rapists to death in the past; it was part of our culture and we accepted it.

Such crimes were unheard of in the past but now they are common.

We are not Europeans. We are Melanesians; we should act like one and hold onto those facets of our culture that served us well in the past.

Even the least educated of our people understand this.

Lastly, the leaders of this land need to lead by example.

How can we expect our people to live life away from crime when our leaders live lives that leave little to the imagination?

Every nation on Earth succeeds or fails as a direct result of leadership or lack thereof.

It is ironical that Sir George, a man who strived to create work for so many less fortunate, it was those very people he tried to provide opportunities for who took his life.

The nation owes him a great debt. PNG is now a poorer nation because one of our giants was cruelly taken from us.

Allan Bird

Madang

Friday, January 02, 2009

Condolence for death of Tim Hauji, Air Nigini pilot

Fellow citizens,

Sad beginning of the year 2009 where the country is deprived of a young professional through a very unnecessary and tragic situation (see story below).

Everyone in PNG citizens need to have a drastic change of mind set.

Planti ol jealous pasin istap namel long ol "professionals" na ol lain olsem policeman na soldiers, which we all have seen and experienced one way or another.

Another is the general "mi tasol no care attitude" to our other fellow citizens and visitors. One just needs to travel to Melanesian countries like Solomons, Fiji and Vanuatu to see the difference.

We are all Melanesians, and God has made us all the same with same intelligence etc, but we in PNG still have this very bad attitude and of course the result is the generally bad image of PNG citizens.

May God Bless his soul and give courage to his wife and other family members

Regards

Max Kuduk

* E-mail: max.kuduk@gmail.com
Stop Think Plan Act and always stay safe

Post Courier, Thursday 02 Jan. 2009

Bloody New Year

By TODAGIA KELOLA

THE killing of an Air Niugini pilot and the murder of a father trying to rescue his daughter from criminals were among five New Year deaths reported by police in Port Moresby.
NCD operations superintendent Chief Inspector Andy Bawa said the pilot was stabbed to death as he was leaving a major hotel in Port Moresby.
According to the police brief, there was an argument inside the hotel between the pilot and some others guys gathered there to celebrate New Year.
After witnessing the New Year, he left and was walking to his vehicle when he was allegedly stabbed. The man, whose parents were from Manus and East Sepik, died on the spot.
Another wilful murder occurred at the Erima Wildlife settlement when a man from Enga was attacked after 15 men went to his house and tried to abduct his daughter.
He went to rescue his daughter but the mob turned on him and bashed him to death.
Two other people who tried to help him were also attacked.
Both are in a critical condition at the Port Moresby General Hospital. Ten suspects have been detained by police.
The third murder was reported at Vanapa along the Hiritano Highway where a man returning from a function was stabbed to death.
The other two deaths are a result of two separate motor vehicle accidents in NCD and Central Province. One was reported to have occurred at Gaire along the Magi Highway and the other one was at the city’s Waigani traffic lights.
Police say the one at Waigani was allegedly caused by drink driving. The driver of the vehicle did not stop for the red light, police say, and ran into another vehicle.
One person died instantly and three others were admitted to the Port Moresby General Hospital.
A police officer, who declined to be named, said most of these deaths could have been avoided if there had been a total ban on alcohol during this festive period because most of these deaths were linked to alcohol consumption.
Meanwhile, Port Moresby residents kicked off New Year celebrations at Ela Beach when they witnessed fireworks at 7pm and were entertained by various musicians before going back to their homes to wait for the New Year.
Many flocked to nightclubs in the city and partied all night with friends and relatives while some treated it as just another night of the year and slept through the noise and revelry of the New Year celebrations.

Antelope-1 gas strike

InterOil has struck gas at its Antelope-1 well in the Gulf Province.
The top of the subterranean reservoir was intersected at 1,748 metres with gas being encountered at the same depth.
It’s the third gas strike made by InterOil during drilling at its Elk-Antelope prospecting site.
Previous test results from the Elk-1 and Elk-4 sites have shown the existence of a major gas reservoir of “potentially substantial deliverability”.
Rates of up to fifteen million cubic feet per day have been achieved while circulating out gas kicks during drilling operations in the upper section of the structure.
Further testing will be required before the exact size and potential capacity of the Antelope-1 find can be fully assessed and determined.
InterOil President Bill Jasper said the company is “most encouraged” by the initial test results.
“I am extremely pleased with the confirmation of gas and the associated gas flow”.
“It bodes well for the potential of Antelope-1”.
Mr. Jasper said Antelope-1 is currently being evaluated by independent experts.
“Based on what we’ve seen to date, we are hopeful that Antelope-1 (an appraisal well) will eventually go on to become a significant gas discovery”.
“This recent find is in line with our initial expectations of this field”.
It is expected that gas from the Elk-Antelope structures would feed the proposed Liquid Niugini Gas project (of which InterOil is a foundation partner) should it proceed.

For further in formation please contact

Susuve Laumaea

Senior Manager Media Relations InterOil Corporation

Ph: 321 7040

Mobile: + (675) 684 5168

Email: susuve.laumaea@interoil.com

Sepik Blu Longpela Muruk

I was please to receive an electronic version (e-book) of the novel Sepik Blu Longpela Muruk, written by Australian David Hall (pictured), a former resident of the East Sepik province, recently.
I’m currently going through the e-book and will do a book review as soon as I complete reading it.
Below are details of the book and the author:
In the seclusion of pre-independent and post-independent Papua New Guinea, we find a group of expatriates, from an eclectic yet progressive Dutch priest to the money
grabbing John Pietro.
Among them is James Ward, an Australian Malaria Control Officer in the East Sepik District where this story begins.
James Ward, in confronting his own values and those of the New Guineans, is on a humorous path of life, at once real and imagined.
Tortured by religious scruples and sexual desires, James’s life becomes a trajectory of impulses and aspirations without lasting resolutions.
In this novel, the many personalities are scrutinised, as it were, in a fishbowl, exposing the traits and attributes that distinguish them in their frontier society.
Some cope and endure, while others simply enjoy life.
They are at times like the haughty and elusive cassowary or muruk of the jungle; at other times, they are attractive and tender like the Sepik Blue orchid or Sepik Blu.
In the colonial Sepik District, many expatriates had an adventurous lifestyle in their personal relationships, and in implementing administration policies of justice, political education, health and
commerce.
The expatriate legacy, for better or worse, is part of the history of Papua New Guinea.
The characters of Sepik Blu Longpela Muruk are portraits of people formed by the time and place they lived in.
There are no easy answers to the complex question of the morality of colonial rule in the lives of many of the expatriates.
For James Ward, he embarks on a quixotic adventure in early independent Papua New Guinea that spells out his kismet.
About the Author
David Andrew de BĂ©rigny Wall was born in Melbourne in 1936 and educated in Sydney at Saint Ignatius’ College, Riverview.
After leaving school, he worked in Papua New Guinea on plantations and for the Department of Health for 18 years.
In the 1970s he returned to Sydney and qualified as a teacher librarian, subsequently working in high schools for the New South Wales Department of Education.
He resides in Newtown, Sydney with his wife, Deborah.
They have two grown-up children, Andrei and David Augustus.
The years he lived in Papua New Guinea have left him with an abiding interest in the country and its people. Contact Wall on email mahal362000@yahoo.com.au if you want to buy a copy of the book.

Malum, thanks for the piece on my novel. I would be happy to send an online copy to anyone; just email me: mahal362000@yahoo.com.au or there is a version available on my blog: http://deberigny.wordpress.com/I read your blog with interest. Kind regards, Dave

A Happy and Prosperous New Year

A Happy and Prosperous New Year to the many readers and followers of this blog from all corners of the world.

I spent Christmas Eve with my four children at home.

We all stayed until midnight to watch the fireworks explode all around us.

On New Year’s Day I took them for a spin in a taxi, bought some food, and brought it home to cook.

I’m back at work with The National newspaper where I am supplements editor.

It looks like it’s going to be a very busy year for me.

Malum

Poker machines: luck or computer programmes?

By PANU KASAR

 

The human brain is still by far the most advanced phenomena in the whole universe. Most people deny that fact. That is why many couldn't learn about computers. They are afraid to learn. Always remember that humans created computers. That's why when I teach my technicians on repairs I make sure they have confidence in themselves. Human also using their brains created computers to even trick other humans. Poker machines are standardised systems used to make profit. Computer games such as pokies are simply custom built computers made for generating profit. To think of it a poker machine is calibrated to make money for its owner. Even though how hard you try you can never win. Of course you will win but that will be after the machine gets what it wants. It is designed to let you get only a small percentage of what it collects. Say it collects 95% and you get 5% of its takings. You don't realise that because players who came before you already gave the 95% that it wants and you came in time to collect the 5%. Why would pub owners' waste money on equipment that uses electricity all night making a lot of noise? Simply because it helps them by making you give them your money. They know it and will never tell you.  Most of the time you are so drunk to figure that out.

 

The poker machine runs on a microchip integrated with a computer program written by programmers. Usually it's what programmers call a loop. A loop is a string of codes that run in a repeating sequence to execute its code. The poker machine is a computer program designed to make you contribute to the gaming industry. The machine simply executes how its code is written. The loop executes sequence of its code in many ways some times in random order. The codes are long and can last for months before it repeats making it hard for people to study the winning pattern. Of course the programmers know that nobody will work out the code because usually most players will be drunk. Now you know why the pub is close by the poker and they serve you jugs while you play.

 

Some follow random codes where they pay out on a spree then start collecting to make up their program percentage. Therefore poker players may notice that some machines don't pay for some time even longer periods. Simply because they are executing the program loops where the takings are being collected.

 

In large casinos the owners knows exactly how much a single poker machine will make in a year. Whether you win or lose it doesn't matter a machine will still give its owner how much it is programmed to make. Just like you buying a new radio and realizing that it will produce 200 Watts of sound power output. Poker machines are like that it just give its owner according to how it is designed. Some generate up to K500, 000 per year. When a buyer wants a machine he can choose to buy according to the output. You shocked? Yeah and some of that money comes from you. So if say you own five poker machines in your water hole that keeps spinning the whole year you are a millionaire.

 

The music from the poker machines also plays a part. Of every invention there is psychology involved. The music teases the mind and the color from the display develops an inviting lust for the drunken victims. Therefore as for the victims it's a matter of winning a game getting hooked and even losing sometimes but managing to win back. The winning then suddenly stops but the memory of the wins keeps the gambling going. The losses are not remembered by the way. As one gambler said "In all the time I've spent in the proximity of poker machines, I've never seen one taking anything from anyone who didn't willingly give it. I have never seen a poker machine preventing someone from doing what they want to do, or imposing its own personal will or preference on a single inhabitant of planet Earth".

 

Usually the maximum payouts are a fraction of the annual profit generated by the machine. A machine having a maximum payout of K5, 000 may have an annual profit of K500 000 but when it makes the payout the music and the lights celebrate with you making the small payout a grand event. These figures are just an illustration of the revenue concept of poker machines they real figures may never be known. Well kept secret of the industry.

 

Game programming is a lucrative trade; the industry employs the best computer programmers to design the best profit making machines. That is why poker machines are perfectly designed to lure money. The new designs do not have gears or matching slots like you see on the screen. They are just visual representations. When you open a machine you only see a main board with an integrated micro chip.   

 

The gaming sector is simply the cash cows of the entertainment industry. That is why the government cannot get rid of it. To them it is simply a way of making people willingly pay their taxes. A person will criticise huge tax cuts in salary then retire to the pub to play poker.

 

On our path we help you realise that as far as computers are involved there is no such thing as luck. Computers work on a chip programmed to execute code and just that. In pokies your wins are set ups. You get so hooked that you forgot how many times you lost. In fact the losses were more than the couple of wins. What a sad story, being fooled by a machine which was designed to exploit hard earned salaries.

 

In Australia about 90% of clients who attends Wesley Gambling Counseling services are addicted to poker machines. ''Most of the people we counsel have hit rock bottom and about 10 per cent have thought about suicide,'' said Wesley Mission, Sydney superintendent, Reverend Keith Garner. These counseling services fortunately are funded by the gaming industry. Just like the warnings on cigarette packs.  

 

In Papua New Guinea most people in the working class who frequent pubs are hooked into poker machines. It is the main cause of domestic financial strains. I think by now you all should know how mean these machines are. This article is my New Year gift to the citizens of this country, hope it helps those resolutions you have in mind. Happy New Year 2009. Keep those emails coming: pkasar@mail.com