Thursday, April 02, 2009

The lawless streets of Papua New Guinea

Interesting article on PNG which appeared in The Australian yesterday. Was notified about it by friends in Australia.

Paul Toohey | April 01, 2009

Article from:  The Australian

SATURDAY night, late January. The incident is, by Port Moresby standards, neither here nor there. We come off an overpass and notice people scattering in light rain. Blocking traffic is an urban response-style light police truck, with a two-sided troop seat in the back. A woman is running, followed by two police. One of the officers punches her hard in the face, then she doubles over from what appears to be a truncheon in the guts

We go through a roundabout and come back. The woman is running now, arms crazy above her head as the police truck pursues her over gutters. Soon after, we find the woman and a group of her friends standing by the roadside, panting and bleeding heavily. One man has a deep gash running across his left cheek. The bashed woman is half-laughing, half-crying. They are drunk on "steam", the local metho-rated liquor cooked in secret stills, flavoured with orange cordial and sold dirt cheap in the markets.

The man with the cut face is leaning through the window, spraying bloody protestations of innocence. I ask why they didn't just run away. All they can repeat is: "It wasn't our fault; we didn't do anything."

Papua New Guineans will stand before they fall. "The trouble is," says my friend, as we drive off, "they are Goilala, which means they probably did do something, anything from holding up a car to illegally selling betel nut by the side of the road."

Goilala are conspicuously short street dwellers originally from the Central Province. They are branded Moresby's most prolific troublemakers, first suspects in any crime.

Programs to rid PNG's capital of crime are earnestly afoot. It won't be easy because criminal behaviour is not confined to street people. Moresby's police wield a brutal form of shoot-first, ask-later justice, and some people see PNG's politicians as notorious pork-barrellers.

When street people are asked to clean up their act, they ask: What about them?

Trust between the citizens of PNG and the authorities is broken. That explains why almost half of Australia's annual $358 million in aid to PNG goes to improving law and justice. Reinstating trust is crucial.

Yumi Lukautum Moresby ("You, me, look out for Moresby") is making a difference by building a bridge between the people of the notorious crime-breeding urban settlements - in which there is no electricity, no toilets, and a few shared taps for up to 5000 people - and the authorities.

Overcrowded Moresby routinely features in top 10 lists of the world's most dangerous cities. These rankings are decided by business or travel magazines, which see Moresby through the prism of tourists or expats, who live safely guarded in hotels or behind razor wire with all-night security guards.

The real test should be whether Moresby is safe for locals.

It is women who suffer most. Domestic and sexual violence is described by Amnesty International as endemic. Women fear reporting domestic violence partly because of their husbands, partly because police have a reputation for raping female complainants.

Dave Conn, Scottish-born executive head of the Port Moresby Chamber of Commerce, says Moresby is improving. Conn, a 30-year resident, is encouraged by his mate, an ex-Australian copper, the tireless Steve Sims, who helps run YLM. Using the chamber, which represents 220 businesses, Conn gently leans on members to give street people jobs.

They go through short skills courses and are placed with companies for work experience. AusAid, through YLM, pays the wages.

"Some are the kids straight out of jail and we're always up-front with employers," Conn says. "But it doesn't seem to bother many of them. Last year we found 70 per cent of them were retained."

Measures such as this are making Moresby safer, Conn says.

"We definitely think so. There are perceptions and everyone's got them. But right now you and I are driving through one of the roughest areas of Port Moresby, Kaugere, and I don't see any rocks coming towards us. A safe place is good for all of us. It's incumbent upon us to get involved."

YLM hunts corporate sponsorship, runs awareness campaigns, gets kids playing sport and works with government. It has organised a toll-free number to evacuate women and children from violent situations using a private security company. In PNG, people can't rely on police to respond to 000. In Australia, this would be seen as a spectacular failure by police. But Conn and Sims, who persuaded two private companies, Protect Security and phone company Digicel, to donate the service, are not interested in exploring the point. In PNG, do it however you can.

Badili police station, near the bayside settlement of Rabiagini, is one of the several squalid Goilala Moresby strongholds.

The occasion today is a presentation by YLM of certificates to young men who participated in a Christmas-safe program, whereby they banded together to protect their community. It is seen as an achievement to get 50 settlement youth to voluntarily enter a police compound.

"A big change has taken place," Badili's chief sergeant Albert Saiyomina declares. "This was one of the worst areas to be stationed in a suburban police station. Since YLM started we have changed our approach and, as a result of engaging the youth, I have seen a very big drop in the crime rate."

Everyone is saying Moresby is safer than five years ago, but you'll still hit the accelerator hard through the several well-known trouble spots. One explanation for the lessening crime rate is that so many leading criminals - they don't much call them raskols these days, it's seen as too cute - aredead.

"This is not Australia," says "Lincoln", an urban-response cop who was retired for a serious indiscretion. "I myself have killed, well, many criminals. Some of them have real guns, supplied to them by the police. Some of them have homemade guns, which only give them one shot.

"Either way, you have to kill them. And if you hit one, another will get up and take his place. You watch how the Pukpuks (PNG's rugby union team) play. You'll see the same thing in an armed robbery. One sacrifices himself so others can go over."

YLM works closely with the National Capital District Commission, Moresby's governance base, on urban renewal. The streets are cleaner and the NCDC's governor, Powes Parkop, has posters of himself pleading with people not to chew betel nut. The red trails of pavement slag are unsightly. Gangs of young men are employed to move betel sellers on, but some have enjoyed their work too much, beating old women with fanbelts and sticks. The betel wars are not winnable; too many New Guineans enjoy a good chew. Nor has the NCDC explained how sellers may otherwise buy food.

Young settlement men are forthright, articulate and neither proud nor ashamed of their long criminal histories. The abyss between crime and work could be bridged if boys had a chance.

"We unemployed youth sell drugs and alcohol, and we also consume both," says Francis Tokai, 28, a Goilala who writes songs for YLM promotions.

"We have no proper leadership in this settlement. It has broken down. Where you are standing, this was a forbidden zone only a few years ago. You would never have come here. Our reputation is really bad. It is because of unemployment, prostitution, criminality, illegal informal businesses, home brew and drugs: all the things that help us survive.

"We regard these settlements as a temporary place to live, but the truth is we have been here for generations. We have no toilets, no electricity.

"But we won't go back to the hills where we came from. We will live and die here. We have been abandoned by the city planners. For dinner we eat rice and scones. That's all. My government never thinks about us. (Prime Minister)Michael Somare should resign."

Tokai's dad put his son through to year 10 but times are not the same. Tokai, who has two young children, will never afford the fees to send each child to school.

Like 90 per cent of settlement children, his children will never go to school. At the start of the school year, Bank South Pacific ran newspaper ads offering parents school-fee loans. It seemed cruel.

PNG is a small wealthy country exporting timber, oil, seafood, coffee, tea and cocoa. It has one of the world's largest goldmines and big gas prospects. It receives aid from Australia, China, Japan, the European Union and the World Bank. The money doesn't hit the ground.

Bauai Laiam is a Rabiagini settlement leader, a Goilala who describes himself as a reformed criminal. His battered nose and missing teeth tell of many battles with the law.

"I've been jailed for drinking beer, break and enter, attempted murder, armed robbery. It was police who broke my teeth," he says. "I've been bashed by them so many times I've lost count. I've been to prison 10, 20times."

YLM uses ex-criminals such as Laiam to gain a foothold in communities. And settlement people are prepared to turn the corner. But they want something back: free schooling, for starters.

This faith in education is hard to fathom; it doesn't seem to have done the parents any good. There is disbelief when I relate that the north Australian indigenous experience of free schooling and low attendance; equal disbelief that health services are free and that our welfare system paid much better than their minimum wage.

Australian priest Mike Field runs Port Moresby City Mission. He has a few hectares that are home for 120 boys at any time.

"The dream is to take a boy who's been running the streets, give him basic literacy, numeracy, gardening and building skills, and routine discipline," he says. "The boys we deal with are those who need a second chance and those who've never had a first one."

Every fortnight a panel interviews 90 street kids applying for 15 placements. "It's an awful thing to have to make the decision as to who we take on," says Field. The boys stay nine to 18 months, after which YLM tries to find them full-time work.

"The first thing we do is feed them," Field says. "Just eating seems to knock a bit of the anger out of them."

The consensus is that employment is the best chance boys have of not ending up dead from a bullet or in prison.

Moresby has had enough of its war-zone reputation and there is the merest glimmer that it is picking itself up. As well, the place would improve exponentially if Australians forced aside some of their justified scepticism and chose to revisit their old PNG friends or find new ones.

 

Open defiance of the rule of law - a cause for concern Papua New Guinea

By PNG IGO WE NAU

 

In recent times, Papua New Guinea has experienced unprecedented level of crime with one international organisation dubbing Port Moresby as “one of the most dangerous” capitals on the Planet Earth.

Many of us in PNG will argue that that rating is over-exaggerated considering a number of determining factors including population, frequency of crime and others.

But, despite that, the fact is that in the past few years there has been an increase in highly organised crimes committed in PNG.

Concerns have been raised by people from all works of life for immediate and appropriate government action.

This includes the numerous calls for the Government to start acting and implementing the recommendation of the National Guns Summit report headed by Major General Jerry Singirok (retired).

To this date, the government is yet to implement the recommendations and the report is like a number of other government commissioned reports, collecting dust including the finding of inquiries into the former National Provident Fund (Nasfund), former PNG Investment Corporation (Pacific Equities Balance Fund) and the PNG Defence Force Commission of Inquiry.

These inquiries revealed misuse of funds, abuse of process and breach of the country’s law. Yet, Grand Chief the prime minister has seen fit not to act on them and allow the reports to collect dust.

While the government procrastinates on what to do with these reports more crimes are being committed with the use of arms including high-powered guns.

Had the government moved immediately to implementing the Singirok report, the crime situation may not have reached the current situation.

Has the government moved to act on the initiatives of   PNG professional organisations who met on July 11 and 18 2007 and recommended with a programme for the Government to adopting and dealing with the country’s state of crime and corruption?

The recommendations included:

•           Establishment of a Pacific regional peace keeping force, an idea first suggested by former prime minister and currently governor for New Ireland Sir Julius Chan;

•           Australian ECP experts to be actual operational roles right across the spectrum of the PNG public service to set standards in an attempt to week out corruption; and

•           Reforms in the Whistle Blowers Act, Freedom of Information Act, Vagrancy Act, Crimes Act for Stolen State Property, Tribal and Clan Prosecution Act; and

•           Amendments to the National Intelligence Act

Does the nation have to wait for brutal murder or senseless killing of a serving or former prime minister, minister, governor general, governor of a province or a member of parliament before something is done.

The onus is on the government. The buck stops with the Government. It is high time the current executive government to move at lightning speed to act responsibly.

The innocent majority of over six million PNG citizens deserve better than this from the current government.

Why should the defenseless and innocent majority suffer and live in constant fear? Why should our ordinary peace-loving citizens be at the mercy of the gun-trotting, trigger-happy and senseless criminals?

When will the prime minister start implement the Singirok report as well as the commission of inquiry reports?

The possible and the highly likely reason for the current open defiance of the rule of law in Papua New Guinea is because the common, ordinary and grassroots people are fed up of the so-called leaders getting away with punishable offence and crimes.

The rule of law must be observed from the highest ranking state official in Port Moresby down to the ordinary villagers in the remotest parts of PNG.

People everywhere are saying that if the so-called leaders are getting away with serious crimes why shouldn’t the small people do likewise.

As well, the nation has been anxiously been waiting to hear what the government was doing to resolved a number of controversies/scandals confronting this government including:

•           Julian Moti affair of Oct 10 2006 in which an international fugitive was spirited out of Port Moresby to Solomon Islands in a clandestine operation on a PNG Defence Force aircraft ordered by the PM as revealed by the PNG Defence Commission of Inquiry.

The Inquiry established that secret operation was ordered by the MP and made startling revelations of the PM’s direct involvement by directing Moti’s escape breaking Civil Aviation, Immigration , Security and Customs laws, breaching the Public Finance (Management) Act and the Constitution of the Independent State of Papua New Guinea. The inquiry recommended for the PM’s prosecutions and all others involved.

However, despite the compelling evidence of breach of the country; laws, the Prime Minister failed to act.

Instead he has sought relieve from the National Court to prevent publication of the Inquiry report.

The current National Alliance-led government is perceived locally in PNG and abroad on the international front as Government that is not transparent, not accountable for its actions and inactions and cannot be trusted.

Simply put, it is a Government plagued, riddled and infested with controversies and scandals.

All relevant state law enforcing agencies including the Judiciary, Ombudsman Commission, Public Prosecutor, Police Force, National Intelligence Organisation, Internal Revenue Commission and others have a paramount constitutional duty to protect and act in the interest of the majority of our people.

It is imperative on the incumbents to move swiftly to perform their Constitutional duties to fully investigate and take appropriate corrective action against all who have been implicated as well as recommended for prosecution.

The Constitutional office holders are empowered by the National Constitution to without fear or favour perform their duties in the best interest of Papua New Guinea.

A number of very important public offices including the Office of the Prime Minister has been brought to disrepute and demeaned by the mere actions of certain individuals.

PNG is being terrorised by highly-organised crime and deep-rooted corruption to an all time high and has reached unprecedented levels which required urgent and resolute response all state law enforcing agencies.

Crime and corruption is systematic and institutionalised and need the fullest co-operation people in all sectors of life to rise and support the professionals and civil society to root out this cancerous crimes from our society.

 

 

 

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

NARI prepares to host Agricultural Innovations Show 2009

By SENIORL ANZU

 

 The National Agricultural Research Institute is preparing the annual Agricultural Innovations Show for 2009 to be staged at its Sir Alkan Tololo Research Centre at Bubia, Morobe, on May 5.

This will be the third year of this ‘information exchange and knowledge sharing’ event in which partner and collaborating organisations in agricultural and rural development will be invited to display and exhibit their innovations and improved technologies and interact with farmers and the general public.

According to the organising committee, the theme for this year’s occasion will be ‘Adapting PNG Agriculture to Climate Change’.

Chief guest will be the Minister for Higher Education, Research, Science and Technology Michael Ogio.

 Other invited dignitaries are also expected for the one-day event.

All NARI research programmes throughout PNG will demonstrate and disseminate many of their new and improved research innovations, technologies and information.

Among them will be research activities and outputs on food crops, emerging food and cash crops, stallholder livestock and resource management issues.

Farmers will have the opportunity to see live plant specimens and learn from posters and other publications.

The new Alan Quartermain multi-purpose Hall at Bubia will be the main arena of the occasion and will be open free to the public.

 

InterOil Corporation celebrates New York Stock Exchange Listing

InterOil Corporation (NYSE-Listed IOC) celebrates the company’s listing on the New York Stock Exchange after moving its listing from NYSE Amex, a U.S. equities market of NYSE Euronext (NYX), the NYSE reports.

In honor of the occasion, Chairman and CEO Phil Mulacek rings The Opening Bell.

 InterOil Corporation is the first Asia Pacific company to move its listing from NYSE Amex to the NYSE since NYSE Euronext’s acquisition of the former American Stock Exchange. 

InterOil Corporation joins the following roster of NYSE-listed companies from the region:  Alumina Limited (AWC); BHP Billiton Limited (BHP); James Hardie Industries N.V. (JHX); Sims Group Limited (SMS); Westpac Banking Corporation (WBK); Telecom New Zealand (NZT); P.T. Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK); P.T. Indosat Tbk (IIT); and Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PHI).

InterOil Corporation is developing a vertically integrated energy business whose primary focus is Papua New Guinea and the surrounding region.

 InterOil’s assets consist of petroleum licenses covering about 4.6 million acres, an oil refinery, and retail and commercial distribution facilities, all located in Papua New Guinea

In addition, InterOil is a shareholder in a joint venture established to construct a liquid natural gas plant on a site adjacent to InterOil’s refinery in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.

InterOil Corporation recently announced that its Antelope-1 well flowed at 382 million cubic feet of natural gas per day (MMcfd) with 5,000 barrels of condensate per day (BCPD) for a total 68,700 barrels of oil equivalent per day (BOEPD), setting a new record rate for the country of Papua New Guinea.

The record breaking gas flow rate confirms other records recently established by the well, such as the largest vertical hydrocarbon column height in a single onshore carbonate reef structure.

The well results establish the country of Papua New Guinea as a world class natural gas resource base in close proximity to the largest and most well developed LNG market in the world. (Source: InterOil Corporation)

 

Samoa attacks on media highlight need for church and media partnerships

 The Pacific Freedom Forum is asking for partnerships with Pacific church leaders in the wake of last weeks attacks on journalists outside the courthouse in Apia.

Samoa media reported a TV crew and photographer were mobbed as they attended court last week, and managed to avoid serious injury when they escaped into the office of the CEO of Justice.

The court case involved a 62-year-old former pastor found guilty in a jury trial of attempted rape and indecent assault involving a 17-year-old woman in his former congregation.

However the presiding judge reversed the verdict on the attempted rape charge and accepted the finding on the indecent assault charge, saying he will pass sentence in August.

“The Pacific Freedom Forum condemns the attacks on media workers going about the sometimes difficult job of informing the public, and we want to stress how important it is that we learn from this and reach out to partner those who need help in understanding our role,” says PFF chair Susuve Laumaea of Papua New Guinea.

“Those who are closest to leaders whom we put on pedestals are often most likely to lash out at scapegoats when their leaders fail them, and it’s important for the public to understand their own anger and disappointment when these highly emotional trials take place,” he says.

PFF co-chair Monica Miller commended the important role of Samoa media colleagues in bringing the trial information into the public domain, within the legal constraints of a name suppression order and the cultural constraints of secrecy involving sexual misconduct amongst religious leaders.

“The fact that charges were laid gave the media an obligation to ensure coverage was fair to both the accused, and the community within which he served.”

“Ultimately, no good can ever come of a situation where the act of reporting on a crime is misunderstood and leads to more crimes being committed,” says Miller, who hails from Samoa. “It is the classic ‘shooting the messenger’ scenario which proves those with the mob mentality don’t understand the rule of law, and the role of their own journalists. The PFF is happy to make the offer to partner with relevant church agencies and build awareness in this regard.”

 

CONTACT:

 

PFF interim Chair

Susuve Laumaea | Sunday Chronicle Newspaper | Papua New Guinea

Mobile: 675-684 5168 | Office: 675-321-7040 | Email: susuve.laumaea@interoil.com

 

PFF interim co-Chair

Monica Miller | KHJ Radio | American Samoa

Mob    684 258-4197 | Office 684 633-7793 | Email: monica@khjradio.com

 

The Pacific Freedom Forum are a regional and global online network of Pacific media colleagues, with the specific intent of raising awareness and advocacy of the right of Pacific people to enjoy freedom of expression and be served by a free and independent media.

We believe in the critical and basic link between these freedoms, and the vision of democratic and participatory governance pledged by our leaders in their endorsement of the Pacific Plan and other commitments to good governance.

In support of the above, our key focus is monitoring threats to media freedom and bringing issues of concern to the attention of the wider regional and international community.

 

Regional bodies urged to step up on Fiji: Pacific Freedom Forum

THREATS to close down Fiji Times indicate a serious escalation in attempts by the interim regime to control all aspects of life in the republic, warn members of the Pacific Freedom Forum.

They also called on Fiji media to do a “stock take” of their ethical performance, including how frequently newsrooms refer to codes of ethics.

PFF’s immediate concern, however, was the threat to close down an entire newspaper.

“Threatening and deporting publishers and foreign journalists is one thing,” says forum chair Susuve Laumaea. “Closing down one of the main sources of information for people in Fiji is quite another.”

Laumaea says carrying out the threat would represent a “serious escalation of assault on human rights, and a precursor to much wider abuses.”

Unprofessional police and army personnel might be emboldened by closure of the country’s leading daily newspaper, to the point where likelihood of serious injury or more deaths increase, he says.

PFF co-chair Monica Miller says closing a newspaper shuts off a much needed safety valve for any society.

“With fewer newspapers journalists, Fiji people will not be able to stay as accurately informed and in touch with what is happening in their own country.

“There is a risk that ill-informed citizens might become inflamed by rumours and gossip, adding to potential for increased violence.”

She said that if the regime was concerned about destabilisation of their rule then facts from a newspaper had much less impact than word-of-mouth, often wildly inaccurate.

Both are calling on the regime and the media in Fiji to closely study the review report from the Fiji Media Council.

Says Laumaea: “Fiji media need to give themselves time out from their busy schedule to review the report, at all levels, from newsrooms to management.”

One of the world’s longest running newspapers, now 139 years old, the Fiji Times has been a leading critic since the first coup in 1987.

Miller says an ethical stock-take would be a small price to pay to avoid closure of a daily that would mean the loss of an institution from Fiji and the region as a whole.

 

CONTACT:

 

PFF interim Chair

Susuve Laumaea /Sunday Chronicle Newspaper/ Papua New Guinea

Mobile: 675-684 5168 Office: 675-321-7040 Email: susuve.laumaea@interoil.com

 

PFF interim co-Chair

Monica Miller/ KHJ Radio/ American Samoa

Mob 684 258-4197 Office 684 633-7793 Email: monica@khjradio.com

 

The Pacific Freedom Forum are a regional and global online network of Pacific media colleagues, with the specific intent of raising awareness and advocacy of the right of Pacific people to enjoy freedom of expression and be served by a free and independent media.

We believe in the critical and basic link between these freedoms, and the vision of democratic and participatory governance pledged by our leaders in their endorsement of the Pacific Plan and other commitments to good governance.

In support of the above, our key focus is monitoring threats to media freedom and bringing issues of concern to the attention of the wider regional and international community.

 

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

The Parable of the Mango Tree.

  An allegorical tale of Papua New Guinea by IONI POKA

 

Many, many years ago we got together, a group of us, and we planted a mango seed. It was a special seed brought to us from Australia. It was called the Westminster Party Mango. We were told by our Aussie friends that its fruit would be very sweet and that by its nature it would provide equal shares of ripe fruit for all of us.

For years my friends and I watered and sprayed and fertilised the growing tree, sacrificing money which we might have spent on our families or on ourselves. But we rejoiced in our anticipation of the day when our tree would bless us with the large, sweet fruit which we expected from it. The fruit which our Australian friends had promised us we would harvest. The tree grew ever so slowly, but we remained optimistic and happy.

After a number of years had passed the tree flowered. The flowers set, and small, green mangoes began to develop. We were overjoyed and sent word to our Aussie friends to let them know that all was going well.

Then, one evening when the fruit had reached a fair size we saw several groups of big flying-foxes converging on the tree. Those bilakbokises circled the tree screaming and making lunges at it, one group fighting the other for ownership of the tree. They fought and settled, screeched, clawed each other and ripped the fruit, and in their fighting and flapping they spoiled large numbers of our beautiful fruit, even though the mangos were still green and very hard and much too sour to eat.

As the mango season went on my friends and I came each evening with sticks and stones, and even an old, rusty shotgun which belonged to someone’s uncle who had been a kiap’s hausboi. All to no avail. In between their fighting and screaming at each other the bilakbokises chewed and clawed our fruit, and sad to say, even defecated upon us as we stood sadly, looking up at our fast-vanishing fruit.

And so it went on, day after day, until the few fruit which survived to ripen were all gone, eaten by the rascally bilakbokises which seemed never to be satisfied. All our hopes, all our sacrifice, all had gone for nothing, it seemed, and we were very sad.

One evening towards the end of the mango season when our tree was completely bare, we sat talking amongst ourselves, talking about what might have been, and as we talked an old friend came along and sat down with us. He was a whiteman, one of those Aussies who took citizenship in ’75 so that he could remain to live out his days with us. Our friend shook his old grey head sadly as he looked at the mess of spoiled fruit and seeds on the ground.

 “I’m sorry,” he said, “I should have warned you. My countrymen were generous to PNG in many ways, and it was kind of them to send you the Westminster mango seed.” He stared up into the ragged branches of our tree as he spoke.

“But they are a strange people, the Aussies,” he went on, “-for all that they hated being ruled by the English in the same way that later they came to rule you, they followed English customs as if they were the slaves of the King, not citizens of a free, self-ruling nation. And one of the silliest things they did was to bring the King and his Westminster party system to rule them instead of starting afresh. Yes, they brought those pesky Westminster Party flying foxes out to Australia and then in 1964 they brought them up here and let them loose in the House of Assembly, and of course they breed like rats, and now you’ve lost the wonderful harvest you were expecting to get from your mango tree. All because of those damned party-foxes which, sadly, now go with the Westminster mango-tree as an inseparable component of the deal.”

Our white friend got up and left us to ponder the problem. Soon, however, we were joined by my country-cousin from the Highlands and Aunty Rabia from the Gulf, and when they heard our story they had plenty to say.

“Oh,” they said, “- don’t you worry, you Moresby fellows, its not just you who have put your faith and your sweat into the hope that you’ll get a good mango harvest. These same big bilakbokises, they’re all over the country now! Even in real bush-places. You go to what used to be a good little outstation, running nicely, providing good simple basic services for the people, and all you’ll find today is a barren mango tree, stripped bare by those blary party foxes!” We looked at each other as Cousin-brother went on.

“ That’s all these Westminster mango trees do, you see, “ he said, “they feed those screaming foxes which do nothing but fight and eat and shit, and the poor people are left with nothing at all!”

“Oibe! Momokani!” said Aunty. “These foxes are a curse on our country. Someone ought to make meamea against whoever brought them here! It wouldn’t be hard with all the shit they leave around!” 

For months after this we continued to sit under our tree in the evenings. Even though it had not fulfilled its promise, it was a convenient, quiet place to sit and talk. Often the conversation turned to our problem and what our old dim-dim friend had told us. And then one evening he came along again, for he often walks along the waterfront to the Weigh Inn for a refreshing glass of cold water with some of the other old dim-dims who gather there.

Our old citizen-brother stopped when he saw us and sat down. And we told him how puzzled we were about the whole thing, especially his story of the party foxes and how our mango dream had been spoiled.

Our friend was quiet for a while but at length he began to speak.

“Well, “he began. “you see, the Aussies did have a good type of mango growing here, one which took root and did well. But someone told them that eating it would cause tribal conflict, so they killed it off. In fact they had two good types of mangoes which did very well together. One was called the District Advisory Council mango, and the other was the Local Government Council mango. They were good, solid, common sense trees and simple to look after, and they drew their nourishment directly from grass-roots, and they provided everyone with the kind of fruit they really needed, local fruit, that people could have some say over and some control over. And of course there were no rascally Westminster Party bilakbokises about in those days, so that wasn't a problem.”

Our friend took a long pull on his mutrus and went on.

“But the Aussies had a big thing about tribal conflict because of something that was going on in Kenya at the time, and for this reason they were scared of regional or tribal mangos. They were so paranoid that at one time some of the real bigmen worried that there was a ‘Kerema conspiracy’ ready to take over the country just because our smart Kerema brothers were to be found as District Office clerks and storemen all over the country. One old ex-Kiap called Ian Downs even wrote a novel showing how such a revolution might come about. And secondly they said that the District Advisory Council mango wasn’t democratic, although the LGC one definitely was, and the two could quite easily have been coupled together. But they had no imagination, those old Konedobu whitemen. So they abolished Legco, set up the Westminster Party system, and straight away all the bright boys wanted to be party members. Well, everyone loves a party, don’t they? And they’ve all been partying ever since, with no thought for the ordinary people.

Here our friend paused to contemplate the stupidity of his erstwhile countrymen.           

“You see, those silly buggers at Konedobu were all scared of a big boss in Canberra called Paul Hasluck. And Hasluck was a Westminster Party Mango man from ‘way back, and a tough little bugger too, and he forced all those silly men at Konedobu to go along with his decree. And  now we are paying for the weakness of the Konedobu mob for not speaking up at the time, and insisting on a direct link between the main mango trees and the grass-roots so that the people could have some say over how the national mango-crop is used. The party system the Aussies gave us was designed to work in England in the eighteenth century where all the mango trees were totally in the hands of a small group of rich people called ‘Lords’, and where the ordinary people had no land of their own and never got the smell of a mango, never mind a feed!” 

Here our friend paused to draw on his mutrus again.

“But here in PNG, “ he went on, “- the system has turned us around from where we all had a few mango trees which provided us with fruit,  to where we have a gang of Lords who eat everything before we even get near the trees! The system has had just the opposite effect in PNG – our Land of the Unexpected. Here, far from putting the resources in the hands of the people, the system has put everything in the hands of a few rich, selfish Lords and their smiling, obliging Public Servant retainers!”

“This has had exactly the opposite effect to what was intended! We can’t go back to where we were in 1964 – that’s obvious. But we need some form of democratic control so that the provinces all get their fair share of the mango crop and the Public Servants obey the will of the people and the foxes either starve or become watch-dogs instead of thieves!”

Saying this our old friend got up and left us, heading towards his favourite watering-hole. But as he turned to cross the street he seemed to think of something else to say, and he turned back towards us.

“Hey, Ive just remembered,” he said, “I heard recently about this valley up in the Highlands somewhere, a place where they still have quite a strong LGC, one which still sits every month and holds elections when they are due. And I hear they’ve decided to make it hard for party-foxes in 2012. They say that everyone’s going to vote for a representative appointed by the LGC in 2012; and he’s going to be on a fixed salary plus expenses authorised by the people, and he’s going to be forced bring his parliamentary salary and his slush fund back to the valley in total and deposit it in the LGC’s bank account before a toea is touched; and he’s going to have to obey the LGC electoral committee and report every month to the Council to tell them what he’s doing in Moresby; and he’s going to carry out the will of the people, by lobbying for the valley he comes from instead of filling his pockets by joining a gang of ‘foxes and spending all his time pamuking around and buying into illegal business-ventures. It may be just someone’s dream, but it sounds interesting, don’t you think?”

Our friend headed off towards his watering-hole, and we sat, still and thoughtful under our barren mango-tree. We remained quiet for a very long time.

 

60 pros for SP Export golf

MORE than 60 professional golfers have registered to compete in this year’s South Pacific Export Golf Open from April 30 to May 3 at the Port Moresby Golf Club in Port Moresby.

Tournament director Bernie Morrisey said the increase in numbers clearly showed the popularity of this event amongst the professional ranks, and was largely due to the sponsorship of major sponsor SP Brewery.

The major sponsor has backed the event with a total commitment of K185, 000 for the second year and is also supported by a range of corporate sponsors.

“We are expecting over 190 golfers in total, including the defending champion Joshua Carmichael and last year’s runner-up Chris Taylor,” Morrisey said.

Past winners Troy Kennedy and Chris Downes will also be participating with a host of the region’s top seeded players including Brad Burns, Eddie Barr from Queensland, Heath Reed from Victoria and Richard Gallichan from New South Wales,” Morrisey added.

For only the second time in 15 years, the event will also field two Fijian players, Makesh Chand and Krishna Singh, in the biggest event of the PNG golf calendar.

Morrisey is also appealing to Port Moresby-based golfers and corporate friends of the PNG Golf Association and Port Moresby Golf Club to contact the organising committee through the Port Moresby Golf Club if they are willing to accommodate some of the professional players.

Interested golfers can contact the Port Moresby Golf Club on ph (675) 3255367 to obtain a nomination form and also confirm their eligibility to participate in the event.

Nomination forms have been sent out to all PNG golf clubs.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Insect farm closure raises concern

By MALUM NALU in The National

 

CONCERNS have been raised from within and outside PNG following the recent closure of the Insect Farming and Trading Agency (IFTA) in Bulolo, Morobe province.

IFTA was the only insect collection, farming and trading agency in PNG.

Five employees had been laid off without receiving their final entitlements while IFTA had shifted its operations to Rainforest Habitat at the University of Technology in Lae.

Operators of Rainforest Habitat, Unitech Development and Consultancy (UDC), have been tightlipped over IFTA.

British scientist Rob Small, who in 2004 did his masters thesis on insect farming in PNG, warned in a paper in 2007 that IFTA was behind on payment to village-based ranchers and collectors.

Rising international demand from collectors for the insects of PNG, in particular the endemic birdwing butterflies, has been met since 1978 by the Government-sponsored IFTA.

“Until the onset in Papua New Guinea of large-scale logging and mining in the 1990s, and a crisis of governance, IFTA was widely regarded as a conservation and development success,” Mr Small wrote in an abstract of his 2007 paper.

“However, analysis of its trading records for 1995-2002 showed that this agency is now struggling to sustain payments to village-based ranchers and collectors.

“This failure, combined with the limited number of ranchers and collectors and their restricted geographical spread, casts some doubts on this model of sustainable conservation.”

 

Peace meetings commence in Wau

Peace meetings between warring Watut and Biangai tribes began in Wau today with an indefinite liquor ban to be enforced in Wau starting tomorrow.

Schools are expected to resume next Monday after being closed since the recent violence between the two tribes in Wau.

Acting provincial administrator Patilias Gamato says the process is going to take time but the negotiating team will remain committed to ensuring that peace is restored between the warring tribes.

The negotiating team talked to the Biangais in Wau today and will talk to the Watuts in Bulolo tomorrow.

Mr Gamato called on both sides to clearly put down their demands on paper, which the team will peruse and discuss further next Saturday.

He also called on them to bring out all relevant information including court orders.

Mr Gamato stressed that both sides must list their issues properly.

The negotiating team has asked for both sides to select six representatives to meet with it.

Bulolo MP Sam Basil, meantime, called for peace and common sense to prevail.

“As leaders we will maintain our presence to ensure that the situation doesn’t get out of hand,” he said.

“As Member, I will support the peace process for law and order and peace to be restored.”

Team leader Benson Suang said: “It’s a big problem and both sides must realise that they must allow the peace process to take its course.”

Provincial police commander Peter Guiness said: “Both sides must respect the law.

“Law is law and police will enforce the rule of law.

“Police will not compromise and will do our work.”

Everything has calmed down, with business returning to normal, but the situation remains tense.

Relief supplies continue to flow through, coordinated by Morobe Mining Joint Ventures, operator of the Hidden Valley gold mine.

 

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Wau situation update

Watuts and Biangais to meet peace committee

 

 Watut and Biangai tribes meet with a peace-negotiating committee in Wau and Bulolo tomorrow over the recent violence which left two people dead, several injured, houses and property destroyed, and forced the temporary shutdown of the Hidden Valley gold mine and the evacuation of employees.

The committee is headed by provincial chairman for law and order Benson Suang and comprises acting provincial administrator Patilias Gamato, Bulolo district administrator Nemsin Kibisep, provincial police commander Peter Guiness, Reverend Gedisa Okomaisa of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of PNG and provincial legal officer Kipireng Kevere.

Bulolo MP Sam Basil will also be in attendance.

“What we will do is to meet the Biangais in Wau, and then we’ll meet the Watuts in Bulolo,” Mr Gamato said today.

“We’ve asked the leaders to bring in the grievances they have.

“We’ll talk to them separately at first, and later in the week, we’ll bring the two parties together.”

Mr Guiness today travelled ahead of other committee members to Wau.

“The situation up there is quite,” he said before leaving.

“We’ve told both tribes to lay down their arms and put together their list of demands, which they will present when they meet with authorities.”

Mr Gamato also denied widely-circulating rumours that the peace-negotiating committee would make some declarations over ownership of Wau town land

“There are rumours that this committee will make some declarations in relation to the Wau town land,” he said.

“What I want to say is that it’s not the responsibility of this committee to declare land.

“The responsibility to declare land is vested with the land court or the courts, and so what we will be basically doing is to invite both sides to provide any court documents in relation to court cases over Wau towns, or any land in relation to the mining operations at Hidden Valley.

“The peace committee will interpret the court decision and inform the relevant parties.

“We are also going to look at government files, dig out old court orders, and properly inform the people so that there is no confusion as to land ownership.”

The March 20 and 21 violence came just before Hidden Valley is to pour its first gold, and resulted in the temporary closure of the mine.

A long-standing land dispute between Biangai and Watut tribes over ownership of the 2076 hectare McAdam National Park between Wau and Bulolo came to a head as the Watuts gathered in Wau in their hundreds and staged an early morning attack on the Biangai villages.

The Biangai villages around Wau comprise of Wandumi, Kaisenik, Kwembu, Biaweng, Ilauru, Were Were and Winima while the Watut villages stretch all the way from Wau to the border with Menyamya,

A Watut man was allegedly killed recently by Biangais over a gold-bearing piece of land on the national park, which is said to have sparked the tension.

 

Morobe Mining Joint Ventures comes to the aid of Wau violence victims

Caption: Hidden Valley Gold Mine general manager Adam Wright (right) presents the K25, 000 to provincial minister for law and order Benson Suang. Picture by SIMON ANAKAPU of MMJV.

 

MMJV donates K25, 000 and logistical support

Morobe Mining Joint Ventures, operators of the Hidden Valley gold mine, has joined the list of donors providing relief for those stricken by violence in and around Wau in the Morobe province.

The company last Friday presented K25, 000 to the overseeing committee of the Wau incident at a small ceremony at the provincial disaster office in Lae.

General manager of Hidden Valley Gold Mine, Adam Wright, presented the money to committee chairman and provincial minister for law and order Benson Suang.

  In addition to the logistical support currently being provided to government and police, MMJV also pledged the services of a small general maintenance team for at least one week to assist villagers in the affected areas to at least erect temporary shelters.

“Wau is a part of the community in which we work and live” Mr Wright said.

 “While the dispute did not involve the mine, it was only right for MMJV to assist.”

  Mr Wright commended the Morobe provincial government and Bulolo MP Sam Basil for their swift response in addressing the matter, as well as police, for their professional conduct in ensuring the Hidden Valley resumed operations on Sunday, March 22, just a day after the violence between Watut and Biangai tribes in Wau.

In receiving the money, Mr Suang extended the thanks of the people of Morobe and especially of the affected people in Wau to MMJV, and pledged that the funds would be used directly in providing relief to the affected.

Representatives of the landowner Nauti, Kwembu, Winima (Nakuwi) Association including president Rex Mauri (Winima), Joel Auwi (Kwembu) and Peter Askai (Nauti) were present at the ceremony.

Mr Mauri acknowledged the return of stability to the area and urged all landowner employees to return to their posts at the mine as soon as possible.

Police confirmed they would continue their operations in Wau for some time and assured the public of their commitment to maintaining law and order in the area.

 

Enter InterOil’s ‘Pandora’s Box” via Wabo




ONE hour and 45 minutes flying time by Twin Otter aircraft due west of Port Moresby is sleepy Wabo outpost (pictured above).
It’s a place never visited with frequency by the administration of Gulf Province or by the province’s political leaders until election time when political opportunists go looking for votes from the people who live there.
Wabo’s significance to Papua New Guineans and the world at large is it being pointer on the map to the location of Papua New Guinea’s latest and biggest natural gas discovery. Wabo is the entry point to InterOil Corporation, Gulf Province and PNG’s latest “Pandora’s Box” – the massive 382 Million Cubic Feet of Natural Gas per day (MMcfd) Antelope-1 natural gas well with 5,000 barrels of gas condensate per day (BCPD) which translates to 68,700 barrels of oil equivalent per day.
Prime Minister grand Chief Sir Michael Somare and spouse Lady Veronica Bura Somare and their eldest children daughter Betha and son Sana made a rare appearance as PNG’s First Family at the head of bevy of PNG VIPs, national international corporate heavies and a strong media contingent in this Gulf Province backwater on Monday, March 2, 2009 where Sir Michael flowed and flared the awesome Antelope-1 discovery.
It’s a record PNG and Southern Hemisphere vertical find of its kind for the last 20 years in the Asia-Pacific region.
Wabo is a makeshift station in the upper reaches of the Purari River in Gulf Province and is the only inhabited locality.
Further downstream is InterOil’s supplies staging camp and barge ramp which is about one hour away if one motored down the river in a banana boat dinghy powered by a 40 horsepower engine.
Wabo is an important destination for emerging PNG-based energy house InterOil Corporation – the Canada-registered vertically integrated oil and gas Company that calls Papua New Guinea home.
Wabo is also location of the nearest airfield where chartered short take-off and landing (STOL) aircraft land to offload InterOil’s exploration, drill and rig staff and the occasional VIP passengers who then hop onto waiting helicopters for the short but scenic 10 minute shuttle flight to the company’s Elk and Antelope gas fields located 200 metres vertically and anywhere from two to five kilometres horizontally above the banks of the ever meandering Purari River.
The Elk and Antelope gas field wells at Elk-1, Elk-4 and Antelope-1 are actually strutting above geologically pear-shaped and overlapping subterranean reef structures located within a radius of 10 kilometres on a tropical forested knoll above the swampy Purari flood plains.
No traditional villages are located in the immediate locality of the well heads or the respective drill sites.
Baimuru district station is located some 80 kilometres east of Wabo.
In the last 12 months political leaders and administration officials of Gulf Province were only able to make it to Wabo and the drill sites at Elk-1, Elk-4 and Antelope as invited guests who “piggy-bagged on the company.
Even the presence of so-called Port Moresby-based landowner leaders is seen at this remote outpost before, during or after field trips made there by this writer to the area in the last 12 months.
So when relatively junior officers of the Gulf Administration and so-called landowner leaders make public comments about non-inclusiveness in pre-development participatory and benefits sharing checklist in the media from the comfort zones in Port Moresby or Kerema station one has to take their claims, allegation and assertion with not just a grain of salt but with the whole bottle.
What has been discovered at Elk and Antelope is natural gas resource of a magnitude that will transform the economic profile of Gulf Province and Papua New Guinea by 2025. The resource is awesome and it’s mind-bogglingly massive.
It does not require disoriented and misinformed little Gulf Province political, administrative and landowner opportunists to cry foul when nothing beyond exploration and discovery has taken place. InterOil Corporation must be given praise and accolades for taking the risk 10 years ago to go exploring – when no one else including the world’s biggest or Peak Oil companies would not touch PNG even with a 10-foot pole -- for oil and gas in an area many learned geologists and armchair experts wrote off as “dry bed”.
There was nothing to be discovered there, so they all said.
After spending K100 million on seismic surveys and spending up to US$35 million a piece on each of its drills in a persistent “never say die” fashion, InterOil Corporation deserves its massive success at Elk and Antelope.
The Antelope-1 and Elk discoveries initially provide the basis for InterOil to develop a single train natural gas liquefaction plant in Papua New Guinea.
The flaring of Antelope-1 on Monday, March 2, 2009 underpins a first train of 3.5 million tons per annum capacity plant at an estimated cost of US$5 billion.
There is scope for that project to be improved to two, three or more trains from the resources at Elk and Antelope and from adjacent unexplored and undrilled prospects.
Gulf Province people must not feel left out or ignored in this pre-development period. Having discovered the resources to develop a viable Liquefied Natural (LNG) project, InterOil Corporation as the developer needs to complete all its “midstream and downstream” prerequisite plans, preparations, contracts and logistical arrangements in place.
These arrangements also include completing social mapping, landowner identification and integrated landowner groups registered, getting the environmental impact study approved and certified and completing a schedule of preliminary developmental and benefits identification consultations with Gulf Provincial Government and resource and project area landowners.
InterOil’s primary goal is to establish a “win-win” peaceful and value-added development and benefits sharing partnership and understanding with all stakeholders right from the beginning.
There is enough resource there for Gulf Province, PNG through its State-owned company Petromin Limited and InterOil to share, develop and prosper together for a long, long time after the first 35-year operations of the LNG plant.
There is scope for primary aspects of the natural gas conversion and gas condensate preparations to take place within the Purari area prior to being piped to natural gas liquefaction plant adjacent to InterOil’s oil refinery in Port Moresby.
Such development promises a minimum life-span of 35 years on a single train operation and scope gets bigger and the life-span increase two-fold or three-fold as additional trains are added to the LNG plant.
And so the majority of Gulf Province people -- including landowners, provincial government, provincial politicians and potential politicians, little officers at the dysfunctional Gulf Province administration and Port Moresby-based pseudo-landowners, skeptics and cynics – must remain cool, calm and collected.
They must listen to the voice of reason and wisdom from wherever that comes from – National Government, InterOil Corporation, the Gulf Provincial Government or from Gulf’s learned sons and daughters – and accordingly to maximise their benefits, ownership and inclusiveness.
There are massive spin-off and sub-contractual works to come out of this project for Gulf Province people and provincial government to ride on to realise the province’s future development and prosperity aspirations.
The last thing Gulf people want to do is talk down their opportunity, speculate on issues that are neither here nor there, deny their chance of inclusiveness in benefits to share and to parochialise this awesome economic and social development chance with divisive and partisan politics or creating conflicts through doubtful and questionable land ownership claims.
The economic and social opportunities and potential for the future development and prosperity creation of Gulf Province overall is massive. This opportunity requires the absolute support and cooperation of every man, woman and child of Gulf Province.
The facts are clear. InterOil Corporation went out of their way to explore for oil and gas initially to find feedstock for their oil refinery in Port Moresby because they could not access Kutubu light crude directly.
InterOil has had to compete with international competitors on the open market overseas to buy Kutubu crude at the going international premium price to refine at its Napa Napa oil refinery. InterOil applied for exploration license from the Government of PNG to go exploring.
InterOil also spent its money generously to persist with the exploration when others preferred to stay away because of the nation’s economic meltdown commencing from around 1995 and finally easing off around 2005.
Opportunists that have emerged from the closets need to be mindful about the damage they can do to all the goodwill that InterOil is prepared to share to ensure a win-win success of its LNG project development.
Probing questions pertinent to intent and motive have to be asked when approaches are made secretively to the Prime Minister to grant a certain so-called landowner development association from the Baimuru District legitimacy as being representative of all the landowners and K5 million mobilization funds without the knowledge of immediate drill-head landowners.
No one will dispute traditional ownership of land or immigration of people with traditional land ownership to and fro within the Purari delta region and its remote head waters from the time of Adam and Eve.
Obviously there are people who have migrated west and spread along the way as far as the eastern bank of the Fly River and east as far as Mapenairu at the mouth of the Purari River and the western most villages and hinterlands of Ihu District.
From a low flying helicopter one can appreciate the sweeping vastness of the mangrove and nipa palm swamps that one over flies for 35 minutes to the coast from Wabo or for 35 minutes of the 45 minutes flight to Kerema airstrip.
There are landowner groups emerging overnight like mushrooms after one of those Gulf of Papua rainfalls.
Nearly all the opportunist landowner groups are new and therefore unknown to the company’s community affairs field workers who are permanently operating in the Baimuru District.
Ends.

*Susuve Laumaea is an award-winning veteran PNG journalist. He works for InterOil Corporation as the company’s Senior PNG Manager for Media Relations & Public Affairs. He also writes a weekly Public Affairs column for the Port Moresby-based weekly Sunday Chronicle newspaper.