By MALUM NALU
It’s that time of the year again!
Port Moresby, which has an arid year-round climate, turns green as the rains come tumbling down.
The dry, barren hillsides around the nation’s capital are transformed into lush vegetable gardens.
Presto!
Ordinary men, women and children are suddenly transformed into backyard gardeners.
All forms of gardening are rewarding and satisfying.
But vegetable gardening - largely because the gardener can be in charge of the whole operation from seed collection to consumption - is possibly the most-rewarding.
In addition, well-grown home-produced vegetables cannot be matched for flavour and nutritional value.
And with care, considerable savings – especially in an expensive city like Port Moresby – in the family’s food budget are possible.
Vegetable gardening is also one of the easiest ways to get into small business, especially for the much talked about ‘informal sector’.
During this brief respite during the December to March period, when the rain comes down in buckets, vegetables – especially corn – abound all over the capital city.
The exceptional downpour so far this year has been a boon for corn growers.
The surplus means that the smell of freshly-barbequed corn wafts through the air at just about every street corner in the national capital.
Depending on your tastes, you can also opt for the boiled or mumu-ed variety.
The demand for corn seeds create queues at many gardening shops in Port Moresby, such as major agricultural supplier, Brian Bell.
As early as 7am, a long line of people gather in front of the Brian Bell Plaza at Boroko and the Home Centre at Gordons to buy their supplies of corn seeds.
During this period, corn gardens can be seen all over the city, including precarious hillsides.
The early birds bought their corn seeds from Brian Bell late last year – before the big rain – and immediately started sowing them at their homes.
In a little over two months, you find it amazing when seeds a quarter the size of your thumbnail grow to over six feet.
And when you see the silks and the cobs, you wait in eager anticipation for scrumptious corn on your dinner plate.
You’ve never tasted corn until you’ve tasted home-grown corn!
The cobs from the market, or worse the frozen and canned corn from the supermarket, truly pales in comparison to fresh home-grown corn on the cob.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Growing corn in the city
Historic pictures of Bulolo, Morobe province, Papua New Guinea
Captions: 1. Bulolo No.1 gold dredge as she looked the first night 2. A portion of superstruction being erected 3. Aeroplane loaded to an aeroplane 4. Bulolo approximately 1958 5. Bulolo construction camp 6. Bulolo construction camp from a distance 7. Bulolo Gold Dredging 8. Hobby Centre 9. Junkers VH UOU 10. Logging a tree 11. Main views of Bulolo camp 12. Mens hall,bake haus,single dongas,beverley 13. New airstrip 14. View of pipeline and power plant at Bulwa1 15. View of pipeline and power plant at Bulwa2
Arrows of Eldorado – how the Wau-Bulolo gold rush all began
By MALUM NALU
However, Darling and his team of Orokaiva boys were attacked by the local tribemen and had to exit.
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Two face charges over US$30m Taiwan deal
While the Taiwanese government and media have have implicated Nawaeb MP and Public Accounts Committee chairman Timothy Bonga and Dr Florian Gubon in the the US 30 million deal from, money that was supposed to come to PNG, no action has been taken against them. Taiwan, however, has gone ahead and arrested and charged several of its leaders.
Media reports in
Control Yuan proposed to impeach both high ranking officials of former president Chen Shui-bian’s administration for “their irregularities or dereliction of duty in a US$30 million proposal to build secret diplomatic ties with PNG in 2006”.
A number of PNG politicians and officials flew to
They also denied being paid money from the US$30 million, although a middleman who fled to
Mr Wang told reporters that as executive of the nation’s highest watchdog, he was in a position to raise an impeachment proposal if needed, because “the president of the Control Yuan can fully enjoy the rights and obligations of a member of the yuan”.
When taking office last Aug 1, Wang listed the US$30 million secret diplomacy scandal as one of the major, eye-catching scandals subject to thorough investigations, and claimed that he would play a role in investigating the case.
According to sources close to the Control Yuan, agency members would meet on Friday to discuss a possible impeachment against Chiou and Huang.
Although prosecutors and the Control Yuan did not find the US$30 million flowing into the accounts of Chiou and Huang, they cannot escape their administrative responsibilities.
Informed sources said the PNG scandal followed the termination of diplomatic ties with
Chiou, then secretary-general of the national security council, instructed Huang, then a foreign affairs minister, to negotiate with diplomatic brokers Chin Chi-chiu and Wu Shi-tsai over a proposal to build official ties with PNG to offset the August diplomatic setback.
Huang then asked his close aide, Johnson Chang, to accompany Chin and Wu to
Later, the accounting department of the ministry of foreign affairs, remitted US$30 million into the accounts of Chin and Wu under the instruction of Huang.
But Chin fled after clearing his account in late December 2006.
In response to the possible impeachment, Chiou said he had been well prepared for the impeachment because it would come sooner or later after the eruption of the scandal.
“This is the greatest ache in my heart over my eight years of efforts in promoting secret diplomacy,” Chiou told reporters.
Chiou stressed that he did commit administrative shortcomings, not irregularities.
Meanwhile, Huang said he felt quite sorry and upset over the eruption of the scandal.
“As a new foreign affairs minister then, I was not in a good position to cast doubts about Chiou’s instruction on promoting diplomatic ties with PNG, yet only to have myself caught in the scandal.”
Control Yuan is one of five branches of the Taiwanese government and is a watchdog of the government.
PNG women killed over 'sorcery'
By Phil Mercer
BBC News, Sydney
Police in
It is believed the victims were tortured by fellow villagers in a remote highland region 400km (250 miles) north of capital
Police believe they were forced to confess to witchcraft after they were stabbed with hot metal rods.
Human rights campaigners say it is not uncommon in
These four women had been accused by fellow villagers of using sorcery to cause a car crash in which three prison guards died.
A senior police officer said it appeared the killings took place last October and that a tip-off from tribal elders had eventually alerted the authorities.
The women's bodies were found hidden in an old pit.
It is not clear if any charges will be laid.
Tight-knit communities
Superstition has always been part of life in
Death and mysterious illness are sometimes blamed on evil curses and suspected sorcerers are often blamed and then killed.
Researchers have found that the victims are usually elderly women with little influence in the village.
Prosecuting those who kill these so-called magic makers within tight-knit communities is problematic, with potential witnesses often refusing to speak to the police.
Christianity is a powerful force in
Those suffering from HIV and Aids are often seen as the victims of witchcraft.
In the past, some Aids victims have been thrown off bridges or dumped into graves to die.
PNG tries to halt sorcery murders
The authorities in
The chairman of the Constitutional Review and Law Reform Commission said defendants were using accusations of witchcraft as an excuse to kill people.
Police say at least 50 people were killed last year across the country.
In the latest suspected incident, a young woman accused of being a witch was burnt at the stake last week.
Correspondents say deaths and mysterious illnesses are sometimes blamed on evil curses and suspected sorcerers are often blamed and then killed.
Prosecuting those who kill these so-called magic makers within tight-knit communities is problematic, they add, and rural courts often acquit those who are made to stand trial.
"It's the easy way out for someone to kill somebody else, and use sorcery as an excuse," the head of the law reform commission, Joe Mek Teine, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
"And you would find that the victim is totally innocent."
Mr Mek Teine told local media that the new legislation would force rural courts to charge those accused of sorcery-related killings with premeditated murder.
"It is a problem that has been existing in the country before the arrival of Western influence, and it's deeply rooted," he told the Post-Courier newspaper last week.
"The churches have done a lot to improve it but it's getting worse every time," he added.
Call to Papua New Guinea actors and artists



“I am emailing from that
“We are a historical museum exploring the sea, ships, stars and time (see http://www.nmm.ac.uk/) and within this historical context I invite contemporary artists to develop new artworks that takes these ideas as a departure point (see www.nmm.ac.uk/newvisions) .
“The reason why I m getting in touch is that our next artist project we are developing has a very particular focus on Papua New Guinea, and I wanted to get in touch with someone who knows the subject much better than me!
“We have invited the British artist Jeremy Millar as our next exhibition: Jeremy is an artist of international influence whose artistic practice takes as its starting point important events in the history of ideas.
“For us he will be starting with a very specific incident of a journey to Papua New Guinea: ‘On the morning of 9 June 1914, the young Polish-born anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski caught a train at Fenchurch Street station bound for Folkestone, embarking on the first stage of a journey that would take him half-way around the world to attend the Congress of the British Association of the Advancement of Science in Adelaide that August. Accompanying him on this long voyage was his boyhood friend, the artist and writer Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz.
Le Feuvre said the pair planned to travel from
“The voyage, however, was interrupted by the outbreak of World War 1 and Witkiewicz left to join the Tsarist army, leaving Malinowski to continue his venture alone,” she continued.
“On reaching the
“This methodology would become the foundation for modern anthropology’."
“This historical context forms the basis of this project. Jeremy proposes to ask the very simple question: what if Witkiewicz would have continued on this venture?
“What photographs might he have taken in the Trobriands?
“Although Witkiewicz never reached
“His most celebrated play, Metaphysics of a Two-headed Calf: A Tropical-Australian Play, was set in
Le Feuvre said Millar intended to retrace Malinowski and Witkiewicz's steps to Port Moresby in May 2009 with the very same camera Witkiewicz would have used to create a series of contemporary portraits has he continued his journey.
“He is also interested in working with a local theatre group to stage the play Metaphysics of a Two-headed Calf: A Tropical-Australian Play - rather than directing it himself, Jeremy would like to simply work with a video recording of the event, screened within the exhibition,” she said.
“I feel that this is a very important project that engages with many concepts and ideas that are not only at the heart of this national museum's activities, but also central to far wider debates and ideas.
“We are very keen to work with Jeremy on this project as we really see this project as making a significant impact on future art histories, and it will be a real honour to work with an artist of his standing.
“We will be starting to plan the trip in the next few weeks, and I really wanted to just get in touch with a few key people to see if there was any special advice they could give “about the trip, an also about finding contacts of any small theatre companies who might be interested in staging the play.”
“Thank you in advance for your help.
“This has become a somewhat long email, but it seems very important to give as much information as I can.
“There is of course so much more about the project I can say... so please do let me know if you need anything else.
“With many thanks in advance.”
Lisa Le Feuvre
Curator of Contemporary Art
National Maritime Museum,
020 8312 6590
The Day God Dropped the Paint Box
We live on an awesome planet.
Make it an awesome day.
Peace to All and May God Bless You
Live simply.
Love generously.
Care deeply.
Speak kindly.
Leave the rest to our Creator
David Billings on the Amelia Earhart saga
Malum,
I have been meaning to say something about your figures and directions which you continually post on your blog........ You need to get your facts right before committing pen to paper and what you have written for the world to see is incorrect in the areas I am about to explain to you.
The basis for this email to you is that:
1. Your figure of 8 Tonnes for the weight in fuel carried by the Electra is wrong.
2. Your figure of 4600 Kilometres as the distance from Lae to
3. Your direction of the course "North" from Lae to
There are many "conversion" websites on the www. for finding out figures in Tonnes and Kilograms Metric and changing these to Tons and Pounds Imperial. The sites will also convert Kilometers into Statute Miles or Nautical Miles
Basically a Metric Tonne is 1000 Kilograms; an Imperial Ton is 2400 Pounds (weight).
1 Kilogram (Kg) = 2.205 Pounds.
Basically a Kilometre is 1000 Metres and a Statute Mile is 1760 Yards.
I Kilometre (Km) = 0.621 of a Statute Mile.
1 Statute Mile = 1.61 Kilometres.
A simple luk-luk (by you) of the world map showing the area from Papua New Guinea to Howland and Baker Islands out in the Pacific Ocean will indicate to you that the direction from Lae to Howland is anything but "North". In fact the True track to Howland is 078 degrees (True), which is hardly a northerly direction. I hope you understand what I mean by "True" if you do not then ask.
Let me first explain to you "what" the Electra could carry in fuel.
The tankage of the Electra c/n 1055 was a maximum capacity of 1151 United States Gallons. That's "
1. So to fit your figure of 8 Tonnes of fuel into the Electra would require the tanks to hold:
8000 Kg x 2.205 lbs = 17,640 Pounds = 2940 USG.
Current opinion is that Earhart and Noonan left Lae with 1100USG of fuel = 6600 Pounds in weight.
6600 Pounds = 2993 Kg or 2.993 Tonnes.
The normal full fuel of a stock passenger carrying Electra in airline use was 398 USG or 2388 Pounds in weight.
If we say then that on leaving Lae, Earhart and Noonan had 6600 lbs as against the "normal" 2388 pounds, then they were 4212 Pounds overweight which equates to 1910 Kg or very nearly 2 Tonnes.
Now on to the distance.
LAE-HOW as Earhart and Noonan thought was 2556 Statute Miles distant but there had been an error in the last sextant fix and Howland was actually a further 6 Statute miles to the East so the true distance was 2562 Statute Miles.
2. If we convert 2662 Statute Miles (SM) to Kilometres (Km) we get:
2662 SM x 1.61 Km = 4285 Kilometres. (Not 4600).
Now to the direction Earhart took.
3. There is a position report stated in "The Chater Report" which is times at 0518GMT, 5 Hours and 18 Minutes after Earhart left LAE. It was recorded over the static of the radio as being only 247 SM from LAE which is impossible as the Electra would only have been travelling at 49 SM per Hour groundspeed. It is likely that the position given meant that Earhart and Noonan were close to
If you have not read "The Chater Report" it is on the www, try Google.
There had been a reported storm just south of
At Nukumanu AE & FN would then be able to pick up their "true" course, turn right onto 078 True and continue on to Howland. The dogleg by
As I say, the direction of "North" is completely incorrect.
There are lessons to be learned Malum, before you put pen to paper.
The facts have to be correct or you will look foolish.
Incidentally, when you write that I have denied that the Ip River wreck recently reported is the aircraft I am looking for, that too is an incorrect statement. I refuted the notion that the Ip River wreck is the aircraft I am looking for. There is a difference. Please get your facts right.
Lukim,
David Billings.
Monday, January 12, 2009
About Amelia Earhart
Captions: 1. Date with destiny...Amelia Earhart and her Lockheed Electra at Lae, Morobe province, in July 1937 before her flight into oblivion. 2. Amelia Earhart...put Lae on the world map with her disappearance.
The mystery – that of the disappearance of Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan – intimately involves Papua New Guinea as Lae was her last port of call before she disappeared somewhere over the vast Pacific Ocean.
Amelia Earhart, darling of American aviation, went missing in July 1937, after leaving Lae for the longest stretch of her around-the-world flight.
The mystery and a long fruitless search – costing many millions of US dollars - had begun.
Today, 71 years after her final takeoff from Lae, the mystery is still to be solved.
Old Lae residents used to recall entertaining the couple in the Hotel Cecil the night before their departure, and then seeing them off the next morning.
Their Lockheed Electra was so overloaded with its eight tonnes of fuel that it was still barely clearing the waves as it disappeared from sight, flying east along the Huon Gulf coast on its way to Howland Island, 4600km to the north.
Today, a plaque to her memory stands at the Amelia Earhart Park, opposite the famous old Lae airport.
US embassy aware of potential crash sites
The US Embassy in
In a statement issued in light of the various findings of crash sites, including one in
However, until further investigations confirm the site as being associated with an American loss, the embassy was not able to comment on the recovery process, the statement said.
It said recovery operations would require a great deal of resources – personnel, equipment, money and time.
“Before the resources are committed, the
“In general, we welcome help locating sites but ask that (locals) not disturb the sites.
“We also ask that (locals) help us protect potential sites until we can get there, which often means not advertising its location,” the embassy statement said.
The mission of the Joint Prisoners Of War and Missing In Action Accounting Command (JPAC) is to account for all unaccounted Americans from past wars.
JPAC’s mission is strictly humanitarian and team members are held to the highest standard of conduct and respect for the laws and cultural differences of their host countries.
JPAC encourages anyone with information relating to an American loss to contact them directly or through the US Embassy.
Meanwhile, a letter writer to The National, Capt Keith Hopper, said in an email that the aircraft found in the Ip River in
Plane wreck could belong to US army
By CAPTAIN KEITH HOPPER
I KNOW very little about Amelia Earhart and so cannot comment on recent reports in The National..
However, I do know a great deal about United States Army Fifth Air Force operations in the southwest Pacific area, that is, PNG.
One of the greatest mysteries of the Fifth during World War Two was the loss of Fifth bomber command’s commanding officer, Brig Gen Kenneth N. Walker.
The 43rd bomb group B-17 Flying Fortress that he was in, was shot down by Japanese fighters whilst exiting the target area (Rabaul) on Jan 5, 1943.
He had been involved in a mass daylight raid on Japanese shipping in
However, it was early in the war and
The Fifth Air Force was suffering heavy losses and
When Gen Kenny heard of the loss, he nominated
To date, the wreckage of
So it is a very real possibility that the recent aircraft wreck discovered in
The
I would like to thank The National for reporting the find, and look forward to future updates as more information comes to light.
Port Moresby not a murder capital
Police Commissioner Gari Bari on Friday, January 9, 2009, wrote to The National newspaper defending himself from criticisms leveled at him by David Williams (see earlier posting)
By GARI BAKI,
A LETTER to the editor (Jan 8) by David Williams of Port Moresby challenged me to get my facts right in response to my comments over an international report by Foreign Policy magazine listing Port Moresby as the fifth murder capital of the world.
I stand by my statement that
The writer had put forward statistics arguing otherwise.
Murder is the intentional and unlawful killing of one person by another and is not the same as deaths or killings, which could be from a number of causes.
I hope the writer and Foreign Policy magazine are not getting these three confused.
As Police Commissioner, I will not allow such misleading reports to go unchallenged because, over time, it will be accepted as fact.
It is these kinds of reports that contributed to our poor world credit ratings and will have serious negative implications on our development aspirations.
We do have a serious law and order problem but to rank us alongside major world cities was totally unfair.
That was the point of my argument.
I would like to ask the writer – what is your point and what have you done to address this growing concern?
Law and order is not a police problem.
It is a societal problem.
It is everybody’s problem.
People like the writer conveniently shy away from what should be a collective responsibility to fight crime.
You do not have to join the police service or take up arms to fight crime.
Your involvement can be subtle and, yet, still send a powerful message.
Here are three ways you can help in the fight against crime:
* Refuse to be in the company of or entertain relatives/friends you know who are involved in a life of crime;
* Refuse money, food or other gifts which are proceeds of crime; and
* Report to police if you know of a crime that had been committed, is being committed or will be committed in the near future.
Many so-called law-abiding citizens are doing none of the above and are just as guilty as the man who pulled the trigger or robbed the bank.
I totally concur with the view that there are no innocent bystanders.
I would like to ask not only the writer, but also readers, when was the last time you saw something wrong and did something constructive about it?
I consider myself a strong nationalist and have dedicated my entire life to protecting and serving the people of
Policing in PNG is very difficult, given the various constraints such as having access to appropriate or adequate resources, equipment and funding, but we are doing the best we can.
As Police Commissioner, I have initiated programmes which will see the creation of a highly trained and professional police service committed to serving the six million-plus people of
Finally, to the writer, if you are a Papua New Guinean you should hang your head in shame.
If you are an expatriate, then you are being well fed, so either shut up or leave PNG because you cannot contribute meaningfully to our development.
Gari Baki
Commissioner of Police
Royal
Get your facts right, Baki
Check this letter to The National newspaper which appeared on Thursday, January 8, 2009, and the reply above from Police Commissioner Gari Baki above.
By DAVID WILLIAMS
With due respect, I believe Police Commissioner Gari Baki is completely out of touch with reality when he said that “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.”
I would go so far as to say, that if Mr Baki genuinely believed this was the case, then he should resign immediately.
The National, on Nov 2, 2007, (http://www.thenational.com.pg/110207/ Nation&209.html) reported: “Statistics showed that there were 424 murder cases reported this year and 496 last year.
Please wake up, Mr Baki. – David Williams,
































