Monday, November 01, 2010

North Fly MP wants new Ok Tedi mine extension agreement

North Fly MP Boka Kondra has called for a totally new agreement if the mine life of giant OK Tedi gold and copper mine in the Western province is to be extended from after 2013.
Kondra noted with grave concern that there were some serious outstanding landowner issues that should be addressed properly before the Ok Tedi mine extension.
He highlighted that important issues to be addressed and built into the new agreement should include:
         Proper genealogical survey with full social mapping identifying all landowner tribes in project and affected areas for adequate compensation, royalties and benefit sharing arrangements;
         18% share equity formerly held by Inmet Mining Ltd to be given to an umbrella company representing all local landowner and affected communities; and
         A comprehensive environmental impact mitigation plan with no further disposal of toxic mine waste, tailings and sediments into the already heavily polluted Fly River system.
Kondra said these were pertinent issues that must be addressed fully by Ok Tedi Mining Company, BHP, PNG Sustainable Development Programme, National and Western Provincial Governments and landowners.
"Ok Tedi is an ecological catastrophe," he said.
"There should be no review or 10th Supplement Agreement, but a totally new agreement.
"Failure to do so will fuel existing tensions and landowner concerns.
"My people's concerns must be addressed. If not, the mine must close in 2013 as originally planned."
His comments followed the recent announcement by Ok Tedi Mining Company that it was examining new pollution controls as part of a feasibility study for a seven-year extension of the mine's life.
Ok Tedi mine started producing gold and copper in 1987 and was originally scheduled to close in 2013, but the company was undertaking a feasibility study to push that out to 2022.
The new mine plan would see output reduced by one-third, to around 100,000 tones of copper and 350,000 ounces of gold a year.
Ok Tedi Mining Limited managing director, Alan Breen has said that the new plan would not be the same as current mining operations.
"It's open cut mining which is quite different to what we are proposing in the future," he said.
"The feasibility study that we are currently undertaking would involve the operation of two small underground mines which produce very little waste and an open-cut operation which would produce a significant amount of waste.
"As part of the study though, we are looking at designing and constructing a stable waste rock dump at the mine which would prevent that waste flowing into the river system so quite a substantial change from our current practices."
The extension would create 14 million tones of waste rock.
 Currently waste rock goes into the Ok Tedi River but Breen says he hopes that will change.
"We are looking at designing a stable waste rock dump which would prevent that waste flowing into the river system," he said.
Breen says more engineering work must be done to discover if is the dump is feasible.
Ok Tedi currently generates 20% of Papua New Guinea's gross domestic product.
With big new projects like the PNG LNG project not expected to come on stream until 2014, the extension of Ok Tedi will be an attractive prospect.
Consultations have already begun but Breen says the process has a way to go.
"The process as it currently stands is that our people are currently doing the environmental impact studies and we are well down the track with those, we are probably 75-80 per cent complete on those." he said.
"The next thing we have to do is complete them by the end of October.
"We need to pass this information on to the state and they will have a team of independent advisers who will have a look at the information we have prepared and they will make recommendations and assessments, and provide them to not only government, but the communities.
"On the basis of that feedback, the communities then will have a decision to make on whether or not they can live with those impacts. "
 Breen said the study was to be completed by November 2010.
The company expects to finish consultations with communities and the government by the end of this year.
However, Kondra said in view of the extended mine life, it was imperative for all stakeholders to establish dialogue for a completely new agreement if the mine is to be extended after 2013.

Utilisation of agricultural biodiversity in times of need

By JEFFREY WAKI and SENIORL ANZU of NARI

PNG has a taro dversity of over 800 varieties
The United Nations proclaimed 2010 to be the International Year of Biodiversity, and people all over the world are working to safeguard this irreplaceable natural wealth and reduce biodiversity loss.
This is vital for current and future human wellbeing.
 It is a concern that is uttered everywhere that rich diversities in biological resources are being lost at an accelerated rate because of human activities.
This impoverishes us all as it weakens the ability of the living systems, which we depend on, to resist growing threats such as climate change.
The biodiversity that is currently utilised and which is continuously sourced to bring about increased dependence on agriculture is under the greatest challenges.
Climate change is imposing an unprecedented threat to livelihoods and food security with great impacts overtime and across diverse locations globally.
This will seriously affect millions of farmers whose livelihoods depend on subsistence agriculture.
The Tsukuba Declaration on adapting agriculture to climate change unanimously declared that throughout the Asia-Pacific climate change will significantly increase regional temperature, reduce water availability and erode coastal land as sea level rises.
Papua New Guinea is known to experience cyclic dry and wet periods induced by El NiƱo and La Nina, which can severely cut back crop production by reducing the duration of cultivation and increasing threats from pest and disease occurrences.
In subsistence communities, a single crop failure can spell disaster for farmers and their families. Already, there appears to be an intensification of pest and disease problems in PNG, including late blight on potatoes, leaf scab on sweet potatoes, varroa mites attack on pollinator bees and cocoa pod borer.
There are projected reductions in the length of growing seasons which could force large regions of marginal agriculture totally out of production.
This could lead to a reduction in crop yield of up to 50% in some countries.
Hence, adaptation strategies are urgently needed!
The PNG agriculture sector needs to mobilise, prioritise and allocate its resources in anticipation of the predicted calamities.
In response, NARI is currently executing a study to match seeds to the needs of farmers for adaptation in times of climate change.
 In this new initiative, agricultural stakeholders of PNG and abroad are focusing on matching local varieties of sweet potato and taro with regions in PNG that are under threat from the phenomenon.
Sweet potato and taro have been chosen because they are PNG’s most important staple crops and that National Agriculture Research Institute (NARI) also conserves highest number under ex situ (i.e. away from their native habitat) condition.
Sweet potato alone accounts for 66% of total staple crop production in the country while taro receives first and second staple status in most coastal regions.
This research supported by the Global Crop Diversity Trust (a multinational organisation) is underway in PNG to screen highland sweet potato germplasm for climate induced stresses.
Other complementary work includes an ongoing project on sweet potato pests and diseases, and sweet potato post-harvest handling.
For taro, a NARI project is identifying hybrid lines that are resistant to leaf blight disease and the Global Crop Diversity Trust project is underway on drought and salinity tolerance in the lowlands.
The project titled ‘Matching Seeds to Needs: using locally available varieties for adapting to climate change and improving the livelihoods of farmers in PNG’ was launched in June 2010 in Lae.
 The activities will be undertaken by NARI and key stakeholders over the next three years.
The initiative is funded by Bioversity International- UK to the value of US$300,000.
The other partners include the Fresh Produce Development Agency (FPDA), PNG Women in Agriculture Development Foundation (PNGWiADF), and the Centre for Pacific Crops and Trees (CePaCT), Fiji.
Under this initiative, the regions in PNG under greatest threat from climate change will be identified by using the global climate models.
Varieties of sweet potato and taro that are well-adapted to the predicted future climates will be matched to these target areas so that they can continue to have optimum yields under future climatic conditions.
Seeds of these adapted varieties will be made available to farmers through community-based seed multiplication and delivery systems with the help of local community based organisations, churches and agri-businesses.
With seeds adapted to their needs, communities at risk will be able to sustain agricultural production despite changes in climatic conditions.
By working with the partners, including local communities and women’s groups, the project’s activities will strengthen the resilience of agricul tural systems by identifying more stress-resistant varieties of sweet potato and taro currently being conserved to ensure that small farmers who maintain native staple crop diversity do not fall deeper into poverty.
 NARI conserves up to 1,500 and 700 accessions of sweet potato and taro respectively collected throughout PNG in various expeditions.
Under the arrangement, Bioversity will be responsible for climate predictions and application of state-of-the-art models for identifying well-adapted crop genetic diversity.
NARI will provide crop passport and other associated information, planting materials and field personnel in conducting the various components of the project.
Both organisations will be responsible for identifying the most useful varieties with participation from targeted farmers.
The CePaCT will maintain elite lines selected through this project and make available planting materials and information to researchers and farmers in PNG and other countries.
Technical contributions, including training will be provided through complementary funding from the Global Crop Diversity Trust.
The PNGWiADF will play a key role in ensuring the participation of women farmers while FPDA will link communities on a broader scale with their established rural network in variety selection and dissemination effort.
By improving the resilience and adaptation of agricultural systems in PNG, this project will safeguard both food security and livelihoods of local farmers.

Bewani project sets benchmark for oil palm development


By SOLDIER BURUKA of DAL
  
The development of the 140,000ha multi-million kina Bewani oil palm project in West Sepik province will set a benchmark for agro-forestry development in Papua New Guinea.
A woman performing a fire dance
Abau MP Sir Puka Temu described the historic signing of the project development agreement last Thursday as a major achievement by the local landowners led by Vanimo-Green MP Belden Namah and their joint investor partners from Malaysia.
Sir Puka, who delivered the keynote address at Waramei in Bewani, told the huge crowd that the proposed oil palm development was the biggest in the province and PNG and would bring enormous benefits and boost the economy.
Prosper Group chairman Tee Kim Tee is all smiles flanked by the chairman of four landowner companies and officials at the signing ceremony
 He said the landowners, community and province would experience changes in their living standards, with improved infrastructure and better basic services.
The Bewani project, covering some 139,909ha and involving more than 120 incorporated land groups (ILGs) is a major impact project.
The company plans to develop over 80,000ha of oil palm, making this the single largest oil palm development in the country.
About 8,000-10,000 people are expected to benefit from the project.
Sir Puka said PNG was blessed with vast natural renewable resources as well as non-renewable resources; however, it was up to the resource owners and their leaders to work closely to make these resources to become beneficial and improve the lives of the people. 
company and landowner representatives join hands to seal the agreement
 He commended Namah for his initiative in supporting the oil palm project and ensuring that development took place in his electorate.
Sir Puka also praised the developers for agreeing to provide several incentives as part of the project agreement package, including a 15% free shareholding for landowner companies; a housing scheme to ensure majority of landowners had access to basic housing; provision of subsidies for education, health and church; and establishment of infrastructure and other basic services.
Namah said the agreement was far more beneficial for the landowners compared to similar agro-forestry agreements in other provinces.
He called on his people to give their full support and effort and work hard to make the project a reality and more successful.
He appealed to the people to change their bad habits like drinking and gambling and to focus on getting the project up and running smoothly.
Namah also called on relevant government agencies and the provincial administration to give their full support.
Chairman of Prosper Group of Malaysia, the major investment partner, Tee Kim Tee, said it was a historic occasion for his company to join with Vanimo landowners to develop the oil palm project which would bring benefits to the local people and community.
The oil palm development will create employment opportunities, boost infrastructure and provide basic services for landowners, community and province.
The Prosper Group, he said, had over 30 years experience in oil palm industry with over 32 oil palm plantations, seven oil mills and bio-diesel plants in Malaysia.
The vast experience and knowledge would be put to use in PNG to plant between 6,000-10,000ha of oil palm each year and build four oil mills, making Bewani project the biggest and most successful.
This young lass was among hundreds of villagers who attended the ceremony at Waramei
 Anglimp-South Wahgi MP Jamie Maxtone-Graham said oil palm had great potential in PNG and foreign investors were welcome to invest, however, authorities must ensure that land and resource owners fully benefitted from such development.
He said PNG has many natural resources which must be used wisely to enable the people to benefit.
Provincial administrator Joseph Sungi said 140,000ha was a huge area for the oil palm project and would not be easy to develop.
He said the developers would require massive labor to work on the project.
 He commended all the parties involved for having confidence in the Bewani oil palm project and assured them of provincial administration support.

Big interest in beekeeping in Goroka

By TELLA LOIE

A total of 50 farmers successfully completed a honey bee beginner’s training workshop held in Goroka recently.
The bee farmers and trainers outside  Goroka council chambers.-Picture by TELLA LOIE
The farmers, both men and women from the Goroka district, have had no training previously while others were newcomers to the honey bee industry.
The week-long training was funded by Goroka MP, Thompson Haroquave, and conducted by the bee team comprising of team leader and Eastern Highlands provincial apiculture officer Tella Loie, Isten Hailans Beekeepers Association chairman Jonah Buka, zone coordinator/beekeeper Wilson Tomato, beekeeper Aya Sam and Department of Agriculture and Livestock acting programme manager Joachim Waugla.
Loie and the bee team, which has conducted similar training in Madang and Bulolo, normally train 15 to 20 people but the Goroka one was a big surprise when 50 people turned up.
The one-week workshop enriched those who knew little about the bees while others were very excited about the new concept.
The farmers were taught all aspects of beekeeping, from goals and responsibilities to knowing the hive parts, what protective gear to use against bee stings, honeybee family, how to get started to site selection, beehive management, pests and diseases, swarming and swarm control, queen bees, harvesting, processing, packaging and marketing.
One condition for the participants to qualify for a certificate was for each participant to get stung by a bee.
This was to see if the ‘would be beekeepers’ were allergic to bee stings or not.
Loie said it was the first time that an Eastern Highlands MP had taken the lead to fund beekeeping training.
The MP had also funded a similar training programme on how to grow African yams, an initiative to prepare for the 2012 drought.
Loie urged other MPs to do likewise and fund farmer training programmes in various agricultural activities.
 Participants expressed their gratitude and appreciation to Haroquave for his foresight and vision for the people of Goroka.
Pulex Oti from Hegu village, Kabiufa, said beekeeping could be fun, enjoyable and very challenging if one was serious about it.
Pulex started beekeeping in 2003.
He currently owns 40 beehives.
He sells his honey to New Guinea Fruit Company based in Goroka.
He said the current price for the honey was K9 –K10/kg.
Oti appealed to participants to take beekeeping seriously as it was an impact project and fitted in well into the subsistent way of life.
Buka, on behalf of the participants, thanked Haroquave and the district administration for the commitment towards the training.
He said that the MP had purchased 120 beehives, a honey extractor, protective gear and others.
 He also thanked the bee team for giving the participants life skills training.

Lae farewells Kingal

No public viewing after body ‘had been outside for more than 72 hours’

By RIGGO NANGAN

The casket containing the remains of Joseph Kingal at the funeral service in Lae, Morobe, yesterday afternoon
THOUSANDS of Lae residents flocked into the Sir Ignatius Kilage stadium yesterday afternoon to farewell evangelist Joseph Kingal, The National reports.
The people were not allowed to view his body because it “had stayed out for more than 72 hours” after he died when his Toyota troop carrier flipped over four times at Mutzing on the Highlands Highway on Oct 18, officials at the funeral said.
The Joseph Kingal Ministry’s board had kept him at their headquarters at Omili and “petitioned God to return his spirit or give them a sign”.
Church officials did not clarify whether they had received any sign.
His white casket was surrounded by his wife Susan and children Shekiana, 14, Jordan, 10, Joshua, 8, and four-year-old Elshadai. All the children did not show any signs of injury.
Shekiana climbed steadily to the stage and delivered a poem she had written for her father while her mother sat with her head in a scarf under a tent nursing a broken arm and a strapped ankle.
Dignitaries, including Morobe Governor Luther Wenge and Dei MP Puri Ruing, were allowed to lay wreaths along with hundreds of other mourners.
The funeral costs, from the staging at the stadium to the flights to Port Moresby today and then Mt Hagen on Wednesday, were met by the Morobe provincial government.
Wenge’s reason: Kingal had started and based his ministry in Lae.
“Even though he was a Western Highlander, he was a true son of Morobe.
“We, Morobeans, had taken the Good News to the highlands, but he had brought it back to us and taken it abroad.”
Wenge also delivered a cheque for K10,000 to Kingal’s wife to cover costs.
Kingal was born to Tengi Koka and Kimnistengi in Gumanch village, Dei council area of Western Highlands, on Nov 25, 1969.
While still a student at Unitech in 1990, he was baptised at the Bumbu River and was said to have received a prophetic vision to preach the Word of God.
From 1996 to 2004, Kingal moved between settlements in Lae preaching God’s messages. It was during the time in the settlement ministering that he started focusing on ministering abroad.
With help of business friends in Lae, Kingal made his first ministry abroad to Brisbane, Australia, in 1997.
His ministry bought off the old Tanubada Dairy Product facilities at Ngamli Street, Omili, in Lae in 2004 to become the base of Joseph Kingal Ministry.
Ruing said on behalf of the family that they did not know how effective Kingal’s ministry had on people until the funeral where they saw people from all parts of PNG attending.
 “We, the people of Dei and Western Highlands, are surprised to see all these people here today.
“We can see the impact our son’s ministry has had on people,” Ruing said.
He said the families of Kingal were thankful to the Morobe government and its people for their generosity.
Ruing said his families and tribesmen dressed themselves in PNG colours to the funeral, instead of the normal body paintings with mud and clay, because the late pastor was a patriot and a Papua New Guinean.

A$24m micro-finance plan

By PATRICK TALU

THE Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Australian government will support a A$24 million (K62 million) project to help rural communities in Papua New Guinea access credit and financial services, The National reports.
In a statement last Friday, ADB said the microfinance expansion project was  expected to generate jobs and boost growth in some of the country’s poorest and most isolated regions.
ADB said lack of access to finance is a major constraint to rural development in PNG.
It estimated that only 15% of the population had access to formal or informal banking facilities, and many parts of the country still used a non-monetary barter system for transactions.
“This project would help rural areas move from a subsistence to a modern cash-based economy and in the process it would increase incomes and reduce poverty by stimulating informal business activity,” Robert Wihtol, director general of ADB’s Pacific department, said.
ADB’s loan, from its concessional Asian development fund, covers 54% of the project cost of A$24.06 million.
The loan has a 32-year term, including a grace period of eight years.
Interest is charged at 1% per annum during the grace period and 1.5% per year for the rest of the term.
AusAID will provide a grant of A$6 million to be administered by ADB. The government of PNG and project beneficiaries will cover the remaining cost of A$3.09 million.
The project is due for completion by the end of 2017.
The project would extend and build on the experiences and lessons learned from ADB’s microfinance and employment project, also co-financed by the Australian government through AusAID, an eight-year project that began in 2002 and established a solid base for microfinance in PNG.
The new project would strengthen industry regulation and bolster the capacity of lenders to deliver a wider range of financial services and products in rural areas, with a focus on lending to micro and small enterprises, and especially to women, who struggle to access credit and income-generating opportunities.
“Making financial services more accessible to people in rural areas enables  them to save money in a more secure way, provides them with an efficient means of transferring funds for personal and business transactions, and allows them to borrow to start up a business,” Eugenue Zhukov, regional director of ADB’s Pacific liaison and coordination offfice in Sydney.


Wingti bids farewell to Pora

By YVONNE HAIP

THOUSANDS of people turned up last Saturday at the Tega ceremonial grounds to bid farewell to former Mt Hagen MP Paul Pora, The National reports.
After a funeral service, the late Pora was finally laid to rest at Kum Kona in Dobel where he grew up as a child.
Former prime minister Paias Wingti also attended the burial among family members, friends, the Yamka people, community leaders and business people.
Wingti paid his respects and praised Pora for quality leadership that he had displayed during his reign as a three-term parliamentarian.
Wingti described Pora as an honest and humble leader who came from humble beginnings with a vision to lead with transparency and accountability.
He said today’s leadership was infected with corruption and malpractices.
He said that there were some who were living off government handouts and, due to these bad habits, leaders were travelling around with heavy police escorts unlike in the past.
Wingti said when Pora was finance minister during the height of the Bougainville crisis, he had run the country on a budget of K1.8 billion compared to the current K6 billion.
He said Pora had managed the people’s money well and was a true leader who had the heart for his people.
Wingti added that Pora was a businessman before he entered politics, and did not steal the people’s money.


Speaker holds key

SENIOR coalition leaders in government are trying to talk Speaker Jeffery Nape into preventing the notice of a vote of no-confidence in the prime minister from being entertained when parliament convenes in two weeks, The National reports.
Sources in Waigani told The National that two senior government leaders visited Nape, who was holidaying in Cairns, Australia, last week.
Nape had been unimpressed by the failure of the government to release funds he had requested to carry out urgent maintenance in parliament since the house rose in July.
A notice of a motion of no-confidence was already with the speaker to remove Sir Michael Somare as prime minister. It named Sir Puka Temu as the alternate prime minister.
“The notice is there, and it is up to the speaker to bring it to the floor to be entertained,” a source said.
“I believe the speaker will allow the vote to take place.”
The opposition does not have the numbers at present, and would have to rely on government MPs breaking ranks to topple the PM. And, if the last sitting was any indication, it could happen.
It was understood the opposition was talking to factions in government, and would likely nominate a highlands MP for prime minister to attract the numbers to remove Sir Michael.
Leader of PNG Party Belden Namah reiterated last night the opposition was committed to removing the Somare-Polye government in this month’s sitting of parliament.
“The opposition is confident of forming the next government so long as the speaker is impartial and does not hijack the democratic and parliamentary processes,” he said.
He said that the people did not believe in the manner in which the country was run by a kitchen cabinet and there was a need for change.
Sir Puka, who travelled with Namah to Vanimo last week for the Bewani oil palm project signing, said the government needed to change with most indicators going backwards.
Also in Vanimo were member for Anglimp-South Waghi Jamie Maxtone-Graham, Markham MP Koni Iguan and member for Telefomin Peter Iwei.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Vision 2050 is flawed

By JAMES WANJIK

THE New York Times was very correct.

Its story "Papua New Guinea is little prepared for gas wealth" published October 26, 2010 made it clear that Waigani has no working knowledge of the national economy of our country.

Following e-mail communication with the New York Times I obtained a copy of ‘Endorsed Working Strategic Policy’ on Vision 2050.

The first two pillars are very badly approached.

First, the human development pillar has no linkage with the national goal on integral human development.

Besides, it does not propose solution to lack of human development in the last 35 years of independence.

Secondly, the wealth creation pillar identifies minerals on the economic power house of PNG but it has no solution.

We are actually being taken on same path of development in the last 35 years.

Role of advisers is to advise managers manage and leaders lead.

Vision 2050 has no leader.

Like Vision 2050 the national goals had no leader.

Were leaderless vision achieved anywhere in the world?

Certainly not.

We in PNG are lied to then by Vision 2050 advisors and consultants.

PNG people must be aware that advisers and consultants work for money.

They are not public servants.

No money, no work and vice versa.

Lot of truths are out but advisers and consultants of Vision 2050 did not expose them for Waigani and its bureaucrats to lead PNG to prosperity.

Here I expose some of the issues for the benefit of our people.

"1. Integral human development.

We declare our first goal to be for every person to be dynamically involved in the process of freeing himself or herself from every form of domination or oppression so that each man or woman will have the opportunity to develop as a whole person in relationship with others."

The goal was set at independence.

Thirty five years on we are still not aware what to do.

PNG leaders are money leaders.

They vilify our people for money.

That is why goal of integral human development was not achieved.

Money is the reason for Vision 2050.

The Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) was to underpin Vision 2050.

Unfortunately, this is not reflected in the two pillars of human development and wealth creation.

Politicians will be nervous when people pose questions.

There are questions already in people's minds.

What we need to do is to jot their memories with history.

Be as it may, dare I say Vision 2050 is dead. This is why.

"5. Papua New Guinean ways

We declare our fifth goal to be to achieve development primarily through the use of Papua New Guinean forms of social, political and economic organization."

LNG is a foreign investment.

It is a money business.

Now LNG has made inflation go high.

In a very short time lives have been lost.

Sowing seed of discontent LNG proponents did not want to follow PNG law.

They wanted their way and not PNG way.

Our leaders obliged and changed our laws.

Now signs of discontent are appearing. LNG's contribution to Vision 2050 will be known then.

Now let us make some truths about PNG's resource development known.

LNG Project and other mineral projects which are of economic importance do not necessarily lead to human development.

Human development is the first national goal in our National Constitution.

 It is about whole person human development.

A person has body, heart, mind and spirit.

According to Steven Covey from USA, each of the components of a person has different function, need and attribute.

LNG and minerals can make money and money can buy basic necessity of the body like food, clothing and shelter.

Money cannot buy love and compassion only the heart gives.

 Money cannot buy vision and passion for service of fellow human person.

These are functions of the mind and spirit.

PNG has many mines.

These are operated by Western mining companies.

Panguna mine was the first.

It ended up causing environmental damage to land, river and way of life of people.

Ok Tedi mine was second.

 It has killed the Ok Tedi River and its environmental damage is going down into the Fly River.

Third is Misima mine.

It operated a deep sea tailings placement and closed shop in 2005.

Then Porgera mine came on.

It has environmental issue on the Strickland River and recently Amnesty International found human rights abuses by police when called in by the government to assist the mine maintain its presence.

Lihir is eating PNG minerals and funding activities of Newcrest mines of Australia.

And now we have Ramu mine with a first Chinese company as majority owner and project operator.

 It has been accused of human rights violations and an environmental law suit has been in court this year that has rocked it a bit.

Kutubu oil fields brought in a lot of money and nobody talks about it these days.

PNG is very vulnerable to manipulation and control by the miners.

Its leaders have been enlisted and disabled. Laws have been tampered with to suit the miners.

Regulations have been put in miners’ hand.

Vision 2050 will see PNG mortgaged to ExxonMobil as its base is the promised money from LNG.

We are racing against time set and dictated by ExxonMobil.

It is our country but we are not in charge.

James Wanjik
Papua New Guinea
27 October 2010

Well-known Papua New Guinea bird scientist dies

By MALUM NALU

Papua New Guinea’s first ornithologist (bird scientist) Paul Igag –internationally renowned for his work  in the Crater Mountain area of Eastern Highlands province - died suddenly last Friday night in Goroka.
Paul Igag…a lifetime passion for birds

Details of his death were not immediately available today, however, the scientific community in both PNG and overseas is mourning the death of Igag, PNG’s first national expert on birds from PNG, who held a PhD
From Madang province, he was one of the first scientific staff at the young Research and Conservation Foundation of PNG, became one of the first scientific staff at the Wildlife Conservation Society PNG Programme, and then became a founder of the PNG Institute of Biological Research.
Igag was a leader in PNG's movement toward greater scientific autonomy.
Dozens of students and his co-workers affectionately called him "Uncle Paul”.
Close friends and scientific colleagues have created an online memorial in memory of Igag, which they hope will create a good profile of his life and a last record and tribute of all of his accomplishments.
“Paul (Igag) was PNG's first home-grown ornithologist,” said longtime colleague Dr Andrew Mack.
“He bridged the world of village PNG and Western academia. 
“In the field Paul worked well with local assistants and he always trained up a good team of young men and women to help with his various field projects. 
“Back in town, Paul collaborated with top ornithologists worldwide.
“Paul's research covered many topics, but his real passion was large parrots. 
“He made important discoveries about palm cockatoos and vulturine parrots that have and will continue to help guide conservation of these threatened species.
“We all grieve, but we should also celebrate how lucky we were to have been in the presence of such a wonderful man.”
Igag had worked on the conservation biology of various species at Crater Mountain since 1999 with the support of the Wildlife Conservation Society (New York).
With generous support from the Pacific Biological Foundation, he came to the Australian National University in 2001 to study for a Masters degree under the supervision of Rob Heinsohn and Sarah Legge.
The aim of Igag’s research was to outline the breeding biology and likely causes of threat to three species of large parrot found in the New Guinea rainforest.
Palm cockatoos (Probosciger aterrimus) and Pesquet’s parrots (Psittrichus fulgidus) are threatened by over-exploitation for food and the thriving trade in their feathers, and along with Eclectus parrots (Eclectus roratus) are threatened by loss of habitat.
In January this year, the work of Igag and PNGOBR colleague Miriam Supuma, was featured on a high-acclaimed BBC documentary by international environmental icon David Attenborough on the increasingly-rare birds of paradise.
The documentary followed Igag and Supuma as they went about researching how killing birds of paradise for feathers for ceremonial headdress was endangering rare species.

Friday, October 29, 2010

APEC Ministers to tackle new socio-economic growth

Issued by the 8th Telecommunications and Information Industry Ministerial Meeting

 

Okinawa, Japan, 29 October, 2010 – APEC inisters will focus on development of broadband infrastructure and advancing information and communications technology (ICT) in critical areas such as education, health, energy and the environment when they meet here this week.

 At the October 30-31 meeting, Ministers will also address ongoing efforts to develop free and open markets in the Asia-Pacific region for the telecommunications and information technology industries, including regulations that encourage increased competition and investment in APEC economies.

 Meeting under the theme ICT as an Engine for New Socio-Economic Growth, Ministers will turn to initiatives aimed at developing and sharing best applications of ICT to address problems such as energy and resource constraints and environmental degradation, as well as enhancing the effectiveness of emergency preparedness in the region.

 “APEC is developing next broadband goals and initiatives aimed at using ICT to address social-economic challenges in areas such as the environment, emergency response, medicine, education and energy efficiency,” said Yoshihiro Katayama, Japan’s Minister of Internal Affairs and Communications, who is chairing the meeting.

 Measures to strengthen cyber security, including effective policies to protect personal information and security of networks as well as efforts to protect vulnerable groups from online threats, will also be addressed by the Ministers.

 APEC Cyber Security Awareness Day will be held in conjunction with the meeting to highlight the importance of sharing information between member economies on this issue and collaborating on region-wide efforts to address cyber security.

 The meeting is expected to prove crucial to shaping APEC’s long-term growth strategy which will be finalised for Economic Leaders at their annual meeting, to be held next month in Yokohama.

The strategy includes promoting economic growth across the region through fostering innovation and a knowledge-based economy.

 Telecommunications and ICT have, throughout the years, revolutionised the way the region’s citizens communicate, do business, interact with governments and educate and inform themselves.

 Internet broadband subscriptions have increased from .2 per 100 inhabitants in the region in 1999 to 10.8 in 2009.

Similarly mobile phone subscriptions have rocketed from 10.5 in 1999 to 76.6 per 100 inhabitants in 2009, according to data from StatsAPEC, an extensive database showing economic performance in the Asia-Pacific region. 

Ministers are committed to achieving an ambitious goal, set in 2008, of universal access to broadband in the APEC region by 2015.

APEC economies have achieved the goal of tripling internet access in the region, and largely achieved the goal of universal internet access by 2010 in terms of ICT infrastructure.

 

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For more information, contact:  Trudy Harris +65 98983710 or th@apec.org

                                                       Michael Chapnick +65 96474847 or mc@apec.org