Saturday, February 23, 2013

Can God Save Papua New Guinea?

By

Thomas Friedman
What has been going on in Papua New Guinea is earth-flattening, and it has been on my mind ever since it began. What's important, however, is that we focus on what this means on the street. The media seems too caught up in worrying about their own skins to pay attention to how their people are doing. Just call it missing the battle for the bullets.
When thinking about the recent problems, it's important to remember three things: One, people don't behave like migratory birds, so attempts to treat them as such are going to come across as foreign. Migratory birds never suddenly shift their course in order to fit with a predetermined set of beliefs. Two, Papua New Guinea has spent decades torn by civil war and ethnic hatred, so a mindset of peace and stability will seem foreign and strange. And three, capitalism is an extraordinarily powerful idea: If corruption is Papua New Guinea's glass ceiling, then capitalism is certainly its flowerpot.
When I was in Papua New Guinea last Summer, I was amazed by the variety of the local cuisine, and that tells me two things. It tells me that the citizens of Papua New Guinea have no shortage of courage, and that is a good beginning to grow from. Second, it tells me that people in Papua New Guinea are just like people anywhere else on this flat earth of ours.
So what should we do about the chaos in Papua New Guinea? Well, it's easier to start with what we should not do. We should not let seemingly endless frustrations cause the people of Papua New Guinea to doubt their chance at progress. Beyond that, we need to be careful to nurture the seeds of democratic ideals. The opportunity is there, but I worry that the path to moderation is so strewn with obstacles that Papua New Guinea will have to move down it very slowly. And of course Port Moresby needs to come to terms with its own history.
Speaking with a young student from the unpopular Protestant community here, I asked him if there was any message that he wanted me to carry back home with me. He pondered for a second, and then smiled and said, nama es tubo, which is a local saying that means roughly, "If a son is uneducated, his dad is to blame."
I don't know what Papua New Guinea will be like a few years from now, but I do know that it will probably look very different from the country we see now, even if it remains true to its basic cultural heritage. I know this because, through all the disorder, the people still haven't lost sight of their dreams.
This article was not really written by Thomas Friedman and this site is a spoof of the New York Times. This generator was created by Brian Mayer with content from Michael Ward, used with permission

Oz duo win PNG licence


Australian duo Kina Petroleum and Cott Oil & Gas have been awarded a new licence in the Western Papuan basin, onshore Papua New Guinea.
The pair were successful in their application for licence PPL 437 which covers 18 graticular blocks over a 1104 square kilometre area.
Kina, which will take an 80% stake in the licence, said several leads had already been identified within the licence area.
It added those leads included potential extensions in the north of the acreage of prospects already identified in neighbouring licences, including the Ketu discovery in PRL 21 where Kina holds a 15% stake.
The firm work programme for the first two years of PPL 437 includes seismic reprocessing and acquisition of 50 kilometres of seismic data, with minimum commitments of A$200,000 (US$206,339.92) and A$3 million respectively.
Kina and Cott will also need to drill at least one well, with a minimum commitment of A$200,000, or carry out an additional seismic shoot, with a minimum commitment of A$3 million, if a suitable drilling target is not identified from the first seismic survey.
“The award of PPL 437 builds upon the recent awards of PPLs 435 and 436 and sees Kina take the dominant acreage position in the Western Papuan basin and we will look to attract partners to this acreage as we conduct activities in the near term and exploit the licence’s potential,” said Kina managing director, Richard Schroder.
“This position is consistent with our strategy to grow our footprint in the established and proven Mesozoic gas and liquids play of the Papuan basin and compliments our already strong position in the emerging gas play in the Eastern Papuan basin.”
Kina and Cott were awarded PPL 436 in December last year, just one month after securing a 50% stake each in PPL 435.

PNG farmers see cash in capsicums

By ABC PNG correspondent LIAM FOX


Papua New Guinea farmers are being encouraged to turn to more lucrative crops, as a national economic boom largely bypasses the rural sector.
While large parts of the world have been wallowing in the economic doldrums, PNG is experiencing an unprecedented boom. But the good times have not spread to rural and remote areas.
There, most people live and survive as subsistence farmers.

Growing demand

But an Australian-funded trial hopes to help them cash in on the boom by supplying the growing demand for fruit and vegetables the growers may not have attempted before.
Foreign investment in mining has helped fuel a decade of strong economic growth in the country. The cranes that dot the Port Moresby skyline are testament to the good times. 
But just 40 kilometres away, in the villages dotted among the rolling hills of the Sogeri plateau, there is little evidence of the economic boom.
Farmers are hoping to earn some real money by taking part in a trial to grow what they consider to be foreign crops.
Village leader Simon Iabana says: "We also want changes in our lives like in the city but it’s hard to get money or things like that."
To generate some income, his people grow ginger and sell it at the markets in the capital.
But farmers are hoping to earn some real money by taking part in a trial to grow what they consider to be foreign crops. They are getting ready to plant broccoli, capsicums and tomatoes.
Local capsicums being sold at Vision City.-Picture by MALUM NALU

Learn more

"We want this project here because we want to learn more," Mr Iabana says.
It will be their second crop - the first perished but researchers are learning from the villagers’ experiences.
Philmah Seta-Waken, of the National Agricultural Research Institute. said: "Some things we’ve learnt, like I learnt that pH (measure of hydrogen) isn’t good here, so we teach the farmers how to help their soil in terms of composting, manuring. We don’t have to go high-tech or anything, at their level."
There are six trial sites at three different altitudes funded by the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research.
Down in the lowlands researchers will be growing tomatoes, capsicums and French beans, using different farming systems.
Back in Port Moresby people, pay a premium for imported fruit and vegies.
But the supermarkets would prefer to sell locally grown produce.

Kina Petroleum awarded new Papua New Guinea petroleum exploration licence

Friday, February 22, 2013 by Proactive Investors

Kina Petroleum (ASX:KPL) has secured a new exploration licence in the Western Papuan Basin, Papua New Guinea, in a joint application with Wondecla Limited.
Kina's interest in the block will be 80%.
The licence PPL 437 covers 18 graticular blocks of 1,104 square kilometres and borders PRL 21 to the north and east, where resources have already been discovered.
Kina has already identified potential leads with leads in the northern part including potential extensions of the prospects already identified as well as a lead ot he north of the Ketu discovery in PRL 21.
In the eastern portion of the licence, a lead to the South East of the Ubuntu discovery has been identified.
The company is well positioned to capitalise on potential infrastructure construction to develop the resources already discovered in PRL 21.
The firm work programme over the first two years of the licence comprises seismic reprocessing and acquisition of 50km of seismic data, with minimum commitments of US$200,000 and US$300,000 respectively.
It also includes either drilling a well with a minimum spend of $20 million or an additional phase of seismic with minimum spend of $3 million in place of the well if the first phase of seismic does not permit identification of a suitable drilling target.

Friday, February 22, 2013

CPL builds biggest supermart in PNG

Source: The National, Friday, February 22, 2013

By MALUM NALU

THE CPL group, Papua New Guinea’s largest retailing network, plans to open the biggest supermarket set-up by far in the country between November and December this year, a company spokesman said yesterday.
He said this after taking The National on a tour of the project site at the former Port Moresby Transport yard, just next to CPL’s Waigani Central Stop N Shop supermarket.

Project signboard yesterday.-Picture by MALUM NALU

“This is being constructed under Steamships Properties, now known as Pacific Properties,” the spokesman said.
“Nevertheless, only the fit-out costs is in excess of an estimated K20 million which CPL Group is responsible for.
“It is anticipated that the store will be a new experience to Papua New Guineans as it will be of international standard.
“The new Central Waigani will house all the retail brands of CPL Group.
“It will also have a multiplex cinema.”
CPL Group chairman Mahesh Patel announced last March that it was looking at running the “biggest and best supermarket” in Port Moresby and PNG.
“We’re going to build the biggest and best supermarket in the country,” he said.
“It’s a multi-million dollar project that will take about 20 months to complete.”
 “Steamships own the land, they build, and we lease it.
“We will sign a 15-year lease.”
Patel said the new supermarket would be twice as big as CPL’s flagship Stop N Shop at Waigani Central, which has an area of 2,500sqm.
He said it should not be compared to Vision City, which was a mega mall, as this would be a stand-alone supermarket.
“This thing (new supermarket) will be 5,000sqm,” he said.
“It will be twice the size (of Waigani Central supermarket).
 “There will be a few specialty stores.”

“We’re looking at a number of new initiatives.”

Local fruit wine hits market

Source: The National, Friday, February 22, 2013 
 
A NEW local product made from locally-grown produce and fruits has hit the shelves of major supermarkets and stores around Papua New Guinea.
Winestar, an Eastern Highlands-based company, uses local produce and fruits such as ginger, tamarillo (tree tomato), strawberry, lemon and elderberry to manufacture mild fruit wines.
Proudly PNG-Made Winestar products.-Picture by MALUM NALU

It is a subsidiary of Nowek Ltd, a long-established company in the highlands owned by Goroka Chamber of Commerce and Industry president Terry Shelley, whose prime interest is in coffee.
His daughter Sarah Shelley, who is the master brewer and brain behind Winestar, has travelled extensively throughout the world studying the art of wine-making and wants to take wine-making to the next level in PNG using local produce and fruits.
“Since the start the of company’s operations towards the end of last year, it has provided markets for the locally-grown produce and fruit, employment opportunities for mainly single women from the Kamaliki/Masumave area in Goroka and also has been involved in community activities in Goroka and Kundiawa,” she said.
“There are four different flavours – Roots Mangi Ginger, Strawberry Blonde Simbu, Mama Mia Tamarillo and Besti Elderberry – which come in a 3l pouch (a first for PNG), 2l bottle, and 370ml bottle,” she said.
“The wine product has been tested by the National Analysis Laboratory based at Unitech in Lae and the alcohol content is under 11% per volume, which is under legal requirement for public consumption.
“I intend to expand my operations to Kundiawa in the coming months, and hopefully to other centres such as Mt Hagen, Lae, and Madang before the end of the year.”

Parkop: K100 million road works to ease congestion

Source: The National, Thursday, February 21, 2013 
 
By MALUM NALU

TRAFFIC bottlenecks along the 8-Mile and 9-Mile areas in Port Moresby, where a major building boom is taking place, will soon be a thing of the past with K100 million worth of road works to start this year, says National Capital District Governor Powes Parkop.
He told The National that a flyover would be built from Kookaburra Street at Erima to Jackson Airport, and that the back road from Erima to Waigani and onward to Gerehu would soon be available to traffic.
“We are in the process of planning a flyover from Kookaburra Street across to the airport,” Parkop said.
“Once that happens, it will relieve all the traffic congestion there.
“It will be a four-lane road with a flyover, so it will ease the traffic.
“Our engineers have come up with some plans on how to reduce the congestion there.
“The work will start soon, especially widening the lane going up to 8-Mile with a clear two-lane road, and shutting down the traffic coming from the airport going into Kookaburra Street.
“Once we do that, it will ease the traffic there, but the long-term solution is to have a flyover, and a proposal for an underpass – something that our engineers are working on.”
Regarding the Erima-Waigani back road, Parkop said: “We will link Sir John Guise Drive to Kookaburra Street, and on to the airport.
“We’re also going to start planning to link the back that goes to parliament to Morata, and on to the university and Gerehu Stage 1.
“That will cater for the (Pacific) Games Village when it is built at the university.
“When Pacific Games comes in 2015, the athletes will be based at the Games Village and they can easily come out that way and on to Sir John Guise Stadium, Bisini, and other sporting facilities in the city.”
Parkop said Port Moresby required about K900 million worth of infrastructure development and overseas funding would be sought for this.

K100 million hydro plant set for launch in Bulolo


Source: The National, Thursday,  February 21, 2013 
 
By MALUM NALU

THE K100 million PNG Forest Products’ (PNGFP) Upper Baiune hydro power project in Bulolo, Morobe will start full commercial operations on March 2.
The revamped power plant is the oldest surviving power station in PNG since the Morobe gold rush days in the 1930s.
This is the first time that a private organisation will supply electricity to PNG Power.
“Testing and commissioning began on Dec 23, 2012 and the new power station is now actually operating and supplying power to PNG Power’s Ramu grid,” a PNGFP spokesman said.
“The project is a major undertaking for PNG Forest Products and is the first such project in PNG, whereby a hydro power station has been built by a private organisation, purely as a commercial venture to supply power to PNG Power,” the PNGFP spokesman said.
“It has an installed capacity of 9.4MW.
“In addition, the project is constructed on customary land, which has been sub-leased by the Katumani integrated land group (ILG) landowners to PNGFP, and therefore the Katumani landowners are also important partners in the project.
“This project also conforms to the PNG government’s public private partnership (PPP) policy concerning infrastructure development.”
The company has operated two hydro power stations at Baiune with a combined capacity of 5.5MW, which were built pre-war to supply power to the gold dredges.
Today, they supply the total power requirements for the company township of Bulolo and also Wau and Highland Products at Zenag.
“All the gold dredges were driven by electric motors and as more dredges were added, firstly the lower Baiune and then the upper Baiune hydro-power stations were built,” according to the company’s website.
“These power stations were sabotaged in 1942 as part of the Australian army’s Scorched Earth policy.
“Consequently, extensive rehabilitation work was required after the end of WWII.
“The electrical plant to rebuild the power stations was manufactured in 1944 and commissioned in 1946-47.
“However, a fire in 1984 destroyed the upper Baiune power station and was rebuilt in 1985.”
The Baiune hydro-electric power stations supply all the electricity consumed in the Wau and Bulolo areas.
Although the technology used is old, the equipment was manufactured to an extremely high standard.
The Lower Baiune station has operated continuously since 1947.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Arise, skeptics in Papua New Guinea

LEO IGIWE
This is a wake up call to skeptically minded people in Papua New Guinea. This is a call to action- a call to become active and involved in transforming the society; a call to become visible, to discard the garb of passivity and anonymity and don the robe of social engagement. From the recent news and reports, there is a tendency to think that the country of PNG is a nation of stone agers, of barbaric people who are trapped in the past, of unrepentant witch believers and blind adherents to blind magic and sorcery. Of course the scale of murders and abuses in the country is appalling and horrifying. It is indicative of the prevalence of the  belief in the occult. But sorcery related abuse is not unknown in human history or in other parts of the world.
Like other societies in the world, PNG is diverse, comprising people who entertain different opinions and views. Surely all PNGuineans do not profess the same belief in the same way.
PNG may actually be dominantly christian or witch believing, but there are hierachies of belief and unbelief. There are those who doubt, question or disbelief. Though they may not doubt or question aloud; though they may not be organised or visible in the country’s demography. The doubters and disbelievers in PNG exist and constitute part of the population.  I am strongly persuaded that there are people in Papua New Guinea who do not believe in sorcery or in the alleged powers of the occult and the supernatural. There are people in Papua New Guinea who are ashamed of the wave of sorcery  related murders, and the underlying mindset. There are PNGuineans who think that such misconceptions and killings should not be associated with the PNG of the 21st century. There are rationally minded people in the country. There are critical thinkers, philosophers, scientifically tempered persons who regard sorcery as superstition, as lacking any basis in reason, science and common sense. Surely these enlightenment minded individuals are few. They may be an invisible minority but they are right there in PNG. So there are people in Papua New Guinea who are skeptics or who are skeptical about sorcery related claims. There are people in PNG who are suspicious or doubtful of allegations of witchcraft or of malevolent magic.
So, will the skeptics in PNG now stand up? This is because now is the time to be counted. Now is the time to make their voices heard. This is the time to apply skeptics’ rational compassion to dispelling the looming dark age in the country. This is the time to put the skeptical resource at the country’s disposal as it grapples with the problem of puripuri.
Ending sorcery related murder in PNG requires not only the prosecution and punishment of perpetrators or the protection of the rights of women, but also a change of mindset- reorienting the mentality of the people. This is because sorcery is 'a problem of the mind'. Sorcery is based on a mentality that imputes magical agency on any instance of evil or misfortune. And magical agency evokes panic, anger and revenge sentiments. Proactive skepticism is needed to help the people of PNG realize their mistaken ideas, notions, associations and imputations. It will help bring an end to witch hunt and other superstition related abuses in the country.
Arise, skeptics in Papua New Guinea.

 Leo Igwe, as a member of the International Humanist and Ethical Union, has bravely worked for human rights in West Africa. He is presently enrolled in a three year research programme on “Witchcraft accusations in Africa” at the University of Bayreuth, in Germany

Manus challenge goes to PNG Supreme Court

 Source: AAP
A legal challenge against the Australian-run detention centre on Papua New Guinea's Manus Island has been delayed, with the case sent to a higher court.
A legal challenge against the Australian-run detention centre on Papua New Guinea's Manus Island will go to the Supreme Court, after lawyers dropped lower circuit court proceedings.
The lawyer acting for PNG opposition leader Belden Namah told AAP on Wednesday he was blocked from meeting with detainees in defiance of a court order handed down last week.
"We seem to be getting bogged down in procedural matters so we will head to the Supreme Court," Mr Henao said.
"We will be filing that reference this week, in the next couple of days, and this matter will be back in court.
"We were denied access (to the centre) and we will be filing contempt proceedings against the officers of the government concerned."
Justice David Canning last week rejected Mr Henao's request for an interim injunction on any more asylum seekers being brought to Lombrum Naval base on Manus.
But he granted Mr Henao and his firm permission to visit the site and interview detainees.
Mr Henao has said he was ordered by his client to interview detainees to see if they wanted to join the legal challenge.
PNG Prime Minister Peter O'Neill on Tuesday denied there was any order given to stop Mr Henao's team from visiting the temporary tent facility, which is home to 274 asylum seekers, including 34 children.
"There is no direction from my office or anybody else about the lawyer trying to visit the premises in Manus," he told reporters on Tuesday.
The legal arguments for and against the facility, set up under a memorandum of understanding between PNG and Australia, depend on the interpretation of two different sections of the constitution.
Mr Namah's lawyers argue the site is illegal under PNG's constitution, while government lawyers say the migration laws give Immigration Minister Rimbink Pato the power to set up a processing facility.
AAP and PNG'S The Post Courier were denied access to the facility last November by security firm G4S and PNG immigration, who told reporters they were following orders from Canberra.
Australian officials had earlier directed all requests to access the site to PNG authorities.

Papua New Guinea 'witch' murder is a reminder of our gruesome past

The killing of Kepari Leniata recalls a history in Europe and North America of scapegoating women for witchcraft

By RICHARD SUGG
Guardian UK

Last week, police charged two people from Mount Hagen, in the western highlands of Papua New Guinea, with the murder of Kepari Leniata, a 20-year-old woman and mother. Accused of bewitching a six-year old boy who had recently died in hospital, Leniata was stripped, tortured with a hot iron rod, doused in petrol, and burned on a pile of rubbish and car tyres.

Kepari Leniata burned to death
Bystanders watch as 20-year-old Kepari Leniata, accused of witchcraft, is burned alive in Papua New Guinea after being tortured. Photograph: AP
Anyone with a reasonable knowledge of history will quickly think of the legalised witch killings of Europe and North America as comparisons. These offer a sobering broader perspective. In Germany, Switzerland, Britain and New England, perhaps 50,000 alleged witches were tortured and killed by the most educated and powerful men in society. By definition, most of their supposed crimes were sheer impossibilities. But the forgotten history of witch attacks is perhaps more surprising still.
In England, the Witchcraft Act of 1736 outlawed any further prosecutions for witchcraft. Yet in the sleepy Hertfordshire village of Long Marston in 1751, the law did not protect 69-year-old Ruth Osborne. Accused of bewitching cattle, she was watched by a large crowd at the village pond that April, where a man named Thomas Colley ducked and drowned her. Though Colley would hang, many stayed away from the execution in sympathy – but the witch attacks were far from over.
With a present-day population of around 800 and a late-Saxon church, Great Paxton in Huntingdonshire now looks charmingly picturesque. Its past is rather darker. One Sunday in April 1808 the church's minister, Isaac Nicholson, could be heard attempting to talk his parishioners out of their belief that Ann Izzard had bewitched several locals, including three girls who had fallen sick. As Stephen A Mitchell notes, Nicholson was right to fear he had scarcely dented the prevailing superstitions. One night that May a mob dragged Ann, naked, from her bed into the yard outside her house. They scratched her arms with pins and beat her face, stomach and chest with a stick.
When Leniata was burned in Papua New Guinea, a surprising number of onlookers, including police, failed to save her. Though Izzard survived, her vicar had been powerless to help. That night, when she managed to dress and drag herself to the local constable, he too refused to protect her.
If this is a rather startling view of Jane Austen's England, matters were no better in Scotland. Near the church of Kirkpatrick Fleming in Dumfriesshire, a mill and a cottage faced one another beside Bettermont bridge, over the River Kirtle. One night, around 1820, the local minister, Mr Monilaws, was urgently called to Bettermont. In the cottage he found an old woman – the skin of her forehead had been cut and was hanging down over her eyes. The culprit was the miller, convinced that his uncanny neighbour had bewitched his pigs, recently drowned in the river.
His attack was not necessarily angry: he believed that he was "disinfecting" the supposed witch. The same thing was performed in Annan, Scotland, in 1826; and in Dorset around 1915 a woman had 22 wounds stitched by the local doctor for this reason. The old woman at Bettermont had more rudimentary attention; she was sewed up the vicar and his son. As far as we know, the miller was never prosecuted.
It was by a very slight chance that this story survived at all – and many others, if unprosecuted, must now have vanished. Yet similar accounts are all too plentiful. Over in Texas in 1860, a gang rode up to Antonia Alanis, and "lassooed her and dragged her on the ground" before taking her across the border to Camargo in Mexico. Here she was beaten and severely tortured for two weeks. Finally, convinced that her witchcraft still prevailed, her attackers tied her up and had "corn shucks lighted under her feet". She died soon afterwards of her burns. The culprit was a wealthy man named Ramirez, and the cause, yet again, was his sick, supposedly bewitched son Ambroso.
These are just a handful of those who suffered for superstition long after the law had sought to end attacks on "witches". Around 1880 an old Indian woman was stoned to death in Pine Nut Valley, Nevada, as a witch, and in about 1885 two men in southwest England were jailed for killing a woman thought to have bewitched their cattle. Nor were such attacks purely rural affairs. On Sunday 24 June, 1827, a crowd of over 300 people rushed down Marlborough Street in Dublin, literally throwing around a woman amid cries of: "A witch! A witch! Burn the witch!." The victim was narrowly rescued by one brave young man and dragged into a nearby police station.
Come the 20th century, there were witch murders or attacks in Arizona in 1952, Switzerland in 1959, and Bavaria in 1963. At times witch attacks may have involved personal grudges, and at times victims may have been singled out because they looked different (the Dublin woman was said to be "dwarfish and deformed"). But time and again the chief factor, amid the sick children, cattle, or failing crops was still more basic – a problem which needed someone to blame it on. If there is one wider moral of all these tragic events, it is this: those who seek scapegoats – whether witches, outsiders or immigrants – usually hit the wrong target.

    Richard S
    Richard Sugg

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Subsidy to freight copra

Source: The National, Wednesday, February 20, 2013

By MALUM NALU

THE Kokonas Indastri Koporesen (KIK) will subsidise the cost of copra freight to help rural copra producers get their produce to the market in light of current low prices.
KIK corporate affairs manager Alan Aku told The National the government allocated K7 million for copra freight subsidy assistance this year but this money had not yet been received.
"The government has given us K7 million for freight subsidy," he said.
"We’re waiting for the money to be disbursed so we can help the most-isolated places.
"We made a submission for freight subsidy because of the (copra) prices going down.
"We’ve identified five provinces, targeting the most-remote areas.
"For example, in East New Britain, we’re looking at Pomio.
"In New Ireland, we’re looking at West Coast or Namatanai.
"In West New Britain, we’re looking at Bali-Vitu or Kandrian-Gloucester.
"In Madang, we are looking at Rai Coast or Karkar.
"In Milne Bay, we are looking at the outer islands."
Milne Bay provincial government already has a subsidy initiative to assist local producers when copra prices fall.
A subsidy of 70t per kg is paid to producers to prop up what they received.
Governor Titus Philemon has allocated K100,000, while the other MPs have been asked to allocate K250,000 each from their district support grants.
Alotau MP and Planning and Monitoring Minister Charles Abel has allocated K500, 000 to fund the subsidy for his district.
Aku said such support enriched Milne Bay growers in that they received better prices compared to those in other provinces.
"They (Milne Bay) have done well," he said.
"While other provinces have been sitting on K500 to K600 per tonnes, Milne Bay was sitting on K1,000."

Severe violence against PNG women must stop, says United Nations

Women News Network Breaking


(WNN/UN/RW) United Nations, Geneva, SWITZERLAND, EUROPE: The United Nations (UN) system in Papua New Guinea (PNG) is gravely concerned by the torture and killing of Ms. Kepari Laniata, a 20-year-old young woman who was accused of using sorcery to kill a six-year old boy in Mount Hagen on 6 February 2013, and other cases of sorcery-related violence reported by the national media in recent days. 

Woman elder in Papua New Guinea
A rural woman elder looks straight into the camera with the lines of time and hardship on her face. Most women in rural PNG – Papua New Guinea live their lives following the rules of a largely male dominated society that can cause them to face daily dangers that include severe violence and inequality. Human rights and advocacy for all women in PNG is desperately needed for women arbitrarily accused of practicing sorcery, says the United Nations. Image: PJ Ringer

The case of the late Ms. Laniata is unfortunately one of many and illustrates the need for urgent attention and action to address this serious human rights violation. Many such cases go unreported and grave injustice is done to the citizens of PNG.
The UN system in PNG is deeply disturbed with the rising number of cases of violence inflicted upon persons accused of sorcery across the country, the impunity shown to perpetrators of such acts, and the lack of support available for victims and their families. Great concern is also expressed for the large number of women, men and children who are accused of practicing sorcery and subsequently attacked, tortured and killed or banished from their communities.
During her 2012 visit to PNG, the UN Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, Ms. Rashida Manjoo, described the gravity of the situation as a “pervasive phenomenon” and stated that sorcery is often used as a pretext to mask abuse of women and children. The UN is shocked to learn that within a week of the murder of Ms. Laniata, yet another media report appeared on the brutal gang rape and murder of an eight-year-old girl in Mount Hagen. In this case, two women were initially accused of using sorcery to cause the death of the young girl and were subsequently tortured until the post-mortem of the child determined the cause of the death was not sorcery related. These cases also highlight the blatant, brutal and inexcusable acts of physical and sexual violence inflicted upon women and children across the country; a culture of violence which is both undeniable and rampant.
“We urge the Government to take urgent action to end these harmful phenomena and to conduct fair and thorough investigations to arrest and prosecute perpetrators through the Criminal Code, and in accordance with its international obligations and the human rights principles enshrined in the National Constitution,” says the UN Country Team in Papua New Guinea as they ask for a repeal of the Sorcery Act in PNG.
“We also call on the Government to work in partnership with civil society to provide protection as well as medical and psychosocial support services to persons accused of sorcery and their families who often suffer serious injuries and trauma following these attacks,” continued the UN in Papua New Guinea.
PNG is a signatory to the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). During the first periodic reporting on the CEDAW Convention in 2010, the Government made commitments to address sorcery-related violence against women as a priority and within two years report on the status of the problem. Unfortunately, this has not happened and a large number of citizens remain at risk of violence and possible death through sorcery-related accusation.
The UN in PNG is also urging the Government to implement the recommendations made by the UN CEDAW Committee.
“Support must also be given to human rights defenders and service providers who are courageously assisting victims of these attacks, and the prosecution of all cases through the national criminal justice system must be promoted,” says the UN in PNG.
Currently the UN system in Papua New Guinea works with law enforcement agencies in PNG to address violence against women and children and to strengthen system gaps and help with data gathering.

Women killed as ‘witches,’ in Papua New Guinea, in 2013

By DIDI KIRSTEN TATLOW

International Herald Tribune

“They’re going to cook the sanguma,” or witchcraft, “mama!”
This terrifying cry by Papua New Guinean children opens “It’s 2013, and They’re Burning ‘Witches,’ ” a long and eloquent report in the Global Mail, an Australia-based online news site.
It was published last week before news shot around the world on Tuesday that the police in Papua New Guinea, in another case, had charged two people with torturing and killing a 20-year-old mother, Kepari Leniata, whom they accused of being a witch. Ms. Leniata was “stripped, tortured with a hot iron rod, doused in gasoline and set alight on a pile of car tires and trash” earlier this month in front of a crowd of hundreds of people, including young children, The Associated Press reported.
Why?
Bystanders, including children, watching as a woman accused of witchcraft is burned alive in Papua New Guinea, earlier this month.
Uncredited/Post Courier, via Associated Press Bystanders, including children, watching as a woman accused of witchcraft is burned alive in Papua New Guinea, earlier this month.

“Leniata had been accused of sorcery by relatives of a 6-year-old boy who had died in a hospital,” The A.P. reported.
The year 2013 or not, such violence against women is not uncommon in Papua New Guinea, where “witches” (in reality just women, often older ones) may be blamed when things go wrong, a reflection of the powerful belief in sorcery in Papua New Guinea, a Pacific nation just north of Australia. Women are often identified as  witches and attacked  when a man, or child, dies unexpectedly.
But there may be other reasons. As the Australian international television station Australia Network reported, in a resource-rich country undergoing a boom, accusing a woman of being a witch is an easy way to take her land.
Dame Carol Kidu, a Papua New Guinean politician, told the station: “There are other things involved nowadays, like greed, acquisition of people’s properties and land, and all sorts of things might be all be tied up in all of this, using killing the sorcerers as a reason to acquire land. So it needs to be investigated and we need to work out how we can deal with it. It is a very complex issue.”
The United Nations also found that accusations of sorcery can be used to kill women for a range of motives. “The U.N. human rights agency says they’ve seen an increase in these types of killings as well as torture and rape,” United Nations radio reported recently. “They say the accusations are often used to deprive women of land and property,”
What lies behind the ferocity? Traditional beliefs, alcohol and drug use among men, and uneven development in a country that is in the middle of a mining boom where, as the Global Mail said, “the wealth bypasses the vast majority.”
It said: “Enduring tradition widely resists the notion that natural causes, disease, accident or recklessness might be responsible for a death. Rather, bad magic is the certain culprit.”
The dead person if often a man; the culprit is a woman. Or a “witch.”
“When people die, especially men, people start asking ‘Who’s behind it?’ not ‘What’s behind it?’ ” Philip Gibbs, a longtime resident, anthropologist, sorcery specialist and Roman Catholic priest,  told the Global Mail.
But in its report, the news site was careful to point out that while many Papua New Guineans believe in sorcery to some degree, that does not mean that they support the lynchings.
“City and country folk alike overwhelmingly ‘recoil in fear and disgust’ at lynch mobs pursuing payback,” it said.
The article mentions Sister Gaudentia Meier, a Swiss nun who tried to save Angela, a woman accused of witchcraft. The article includes powerful photos of accused “witches.”
Hearing the children shout that a witch was about to be cooked, Sister Gaudentia rushed after them. “Two days earlier, she had tried to rescue Angela (not her real name), an accused witch, when she was first seized by a gang of merciless inquisitors looking for someone to blame for the recent deaths of two young men.”
Angela was luckier than Ms. Leniata.
She had no male relatives to protect her (a common profile for accused “witches”) and was horribly tortured, but lived, the article says. A “sorcery survivor,” today she is in hiding with her small son.
“Those victims who lived to tell the tale owe their lives either to individual police members or to a strong church leader who intervened for them,” Father Gibbs told the Global Mail.
“In effect it means that, if sufficiently motivated to act, the power of the police and civil authorities, or the power of the church, can be enough to defend a person who is otherwise powerless,” he said.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Copra output to continue growing

Source: The National, Tuesday,  February 19, 2013 
 
By MALUM NALU

COPRA production, which has become a way of life in the coastal provinces of Papua New Guinea, will continue to grow despite current low prices, according to the Kokonas Indastri Koporesen (KIK).
KIK acting industry affairs manager Alan Aku said this in light of copra prices and production hitting an all-time low last year.
He told The National that PNG last year produced 31,000 tonnes of copra compared with 46,000 in 2011, with export earnings – figures for which were still being finalised – being the lowest ever mainly because of the economic crisis in Europe.
 “The drop in production is not much,” Aku said.
“Irrespective of the price going down (to its lowest levels ever), people are still producing.
“Production is not too bad.
“Our production figures for last year have shown that although the prices have gone down, farmers have continued to produce copra, and we are still exporting.
“Some of those who have export licences have opted not to export because the prices are low, and are both buying and stocking them up, or they are selling to local processing mills like Copra Products Ltd in East New Britain or Pristine in Madang.
“These are the two mills we have operating in the country
The current major producers of copra in the country are Bougainville, East New Britain, West New Britain, Madang, New Ireland and Milne Bay.
KIK’s predecessor, the Copra Marketing Board, had depots in all coastal provinces and had a monopoly over copra buying until its demise.
“Copra Marketing Board was the monopoly copra buyer in the country,” Aku said.
“It set up depots in all coastal provinces and was buying, that’s when the provinces were interested in producing copra.
“But then, government wanted to liberate the market, so they took away the marketing power of Copra Marketing Board and made it available to the private sector.
“They made KIK to become the regulatory body alone.
“That’s when the market was opened up to private entities who wanted to go into buying and selling, it’s all private sector now.
“It happened in 2001; in 2002 KIK came into operation.
“That’s why Gulf has stopped producing copra, Central has stopped producing copra, Morobe has stopped producing copra, East Sepik has scaled down, Manus has gone down, Oro (Northern) has gone down.
“These provinces have stopped producing copra basically because there’s no market.
“Currently, copra production is centred on six provinces – Bougainville, New Ireland, East New Britain, West New Britain, Madang, and Milne Bay.”

Copra output to continue growing

Source: The National, Tuesday, February 19, 2013 
 
By MALUM NALU

COPRA production, which has become a way of life in the coastal provinces of Papua New Guinea, will continue to grow despite current low prices, according to the Kokonas Indastri Koporesen (KIK).
KIK acting industry affairs manager Alan Aku said this in light of copra prices and production hitting an all-time low last year.
He told The National that PNG last year produced 31,000 tonnes of copra compared with 46,000 in 2011, with export earnings – figures for which were still being finalised – being the lowest ever mainly because of the economic crisis in Europe.
“The drop in production is not much,” Aku said.
“Irrespective of the price going down (to its lowest levels ever), people are still producing.
“Production is not too bad.
“Our production figures for last year have shown that although the prices have gone down, farmers have continued to produce copra, and we are still exporting.
“Some of those who have export licences have opted not to export because the prices are low, and are both buying and stocking them up, or they are selling to local processing mills like Copra Products Ltd in East New Britain or Pristine in Madang.
“These are the two mills we have operating in the country
The current major producers of copra in the country are Bougainville, East New Britain, West New Britain, Madang, New Ireland and Milne Bay.
KIK’s predecessor, the Copra Marketing Board, had depots in all coastal provinces and had a monopoly over copra buying until its demise.
“Copra Marketing Board was the monopoly copra buyer in the country,” Aku said.
“It set up depots in all coastal provinces and was buying, that’s when the provinces were interested in producing copra.
“But then, government wanted to liberate the market, so they took away the marketing power of Copra Marketing Board and made it available to the private sector.
“They made KIK to become the regulatory body alone.
“That’s when the market was opened up to private entities who wanted to go into buying and selling, it’s all private sector now.
“It happened in 2001; in 2002 KIK came into operation.
“That’s why Gulf has stopped producing copra, Central has stopped producing copra, Morobe has stopped producing copra, East Sepik has scaled down, Manus has gone down, Oro (Northern) has gone down.
“These provinces have stopped producing copra basically because there’s no market.
“Currently, copra production is centred on six provinces – Bougainville, New Ireland, East New Britain, West New Britain, Madang, and Milne Bay.”

Domestic use keeps coconut growing

Source: The National, Monday, February 18, 2013 
 
By MALUM NALU

DOMESTIC consumption of coconuts, widely used as a food ingredient in Papua New Guinea, is a multi-million kina business that is keeping the coconut industry alive, according to the Kokonas Indastri Koporesen (KIK).
This, according to KIK acting industry affairs manager Alan Aku, was the saving grace for the coconut industry as copra prices and production hit an all-time low in 2012.
He told The National last Friday that contrary to popular belief, the industry was not “dying”.
“We estimate that about 300 million nuts are consumed in this country (per year),” Aku said.
“That’s very conservative.
“Looking at 50t per nut, you’re looking at a K150 million industry.
“Looking at this domestic industry (coconut), people don’t realise how much coconut is consumed in this country.
“That’s increasing largely because the consumption in the Highlands has increased.
“Coconuts are moving up by the thousands into the Highlands in containers
“Although we may ask ‘how much is this contributing to the economy’, it’s a domestic trade in itself.
“It’s a big, big industry.
“We (at KIK) plan to institute a market survey this year to establish how much coconut is brought up to the Highlands as a food commodity.”
Aku said the industry had so much untapped potential in other products such as virgin coconut oil (VCO), coconut coir fibre and coconut lumber, among many others.
“Some people say it’s a dying industry but there’s a lot of potential in it,” he said.
“We still believe the coconut industry is a sleeping giant.
“We really need government support to revive the industry.
“We are also looking at quality controls on the coconut products.”

Angau hospital stops services as nurse raped

Source: The National, Tuesday, February 19, 2013 
 
By PISAI GUMAR

ANGRY staff and management have stopped services at the Angau Memorial Hospital in Lae as the rape of a staff nurse brought to a head constant ill-treatment of staff and equipment.
The staff have given the management, police and the community, where the rapists allegedly reside, 48 hours to apprehend the four youths responsible for raping one of their colleagues.
Hospital administration lambasted the cruelty of some in the community, describing their behaviour as “animalistic”.
“Enough is enough!” hospital board chairman Benson Nablu declared.
“The hospital gates will be closed until the suspects surrender to police.”
Hospital chief executive Dr Polapoi Chalau said: “I am sick and tired of such inhuman attitude and strongly condemn their cruel attitude.”
As a result of Saturday night’s rape, the hospital had locked out some patients and closed gates to the hospital.
The hospital’s management, doctors, union executives, nurses and Lae School of Nursing teachers, students and staff are demanding justice and closed off services too yesterday.
About 500 people in all stopped work and protested at the Gware Memorial wing, highlighting the constant cruel and inhuman treatment of health workers.
They wanted the hospital management, police and the East Taraka community to bring the suspects to face the full force of law within 48 hours.
The incident took place at East Taraka at about 4am last Saturday.
Hospital union president Steven Nawik said the suspects must surrender or be apprehended and detained within 48 hours as staff had demanded.
“The admitted patients and outpatients now pay the price – being turned away from treatment due to the culprits’ cruel behaviour,” Nawik said.
Three hospital entrances were locked yesterday and were closely monitored by security guards. There were more outpatients outside and they had to resort to private clinics for treatment.
Car thefts, breaking and entering, theft and burgling of valuable items from doctors and nurses and stoning of hospital vehicles during nightshift drop-offs and pick-ups have been constantly experienced by staff.
They were simply fed up and wanted the community to take responsibility.
Warnings by the authorities to respect state property, facility and servants had fallen on deaf ears.
Nablu and Chalau appeared before the staff and workers yesterday.
“I am angry with those culprits – stupid and idiots – who have no respect for the tireless and dedicated health workers. They continue to harass them,” Nablu said.
“She (rape victim) is psychologically traumatised and physically affected; her family and relatives are devastated.
“The public in Lae continues to disrespect state properties and services such as hospital, water and electricity (supplies) that are here as services for human.
“I am sick and tired of such inhuman attitude and strongly condemn the cruel attitudes.
“The East Taraka community is responsible, they must assist police to bring the suspects to justice while families of the suspects should be evicted.
“The health workers and Lae communities are fed up of such cruel, animalistic attitudes and the behaviour of perpetrators that commit such crime on innocent humans.
“Let us rise up and tell the government enough is enough,” Nablu said.

Two charged in 'witch' murder in Papua New Guinea: report


AFP - Two people have been charged with the murder of a young mother in Papua New Guinea who was accused of being a witch and set upon by a mob that burned her alive, reports said Tuesday.
Kepari Leniata, 20, was stripped naked, doused with petrol and set alight atop a pile of rubbish on a main street on February 6 in the town of Mount Hagen in the Western Highlands.

A woman accused of sorcery is burned alive on a pile of rubbish in Mount Hagen city, Papua New Guinea, February 6, 2013. Two people, a 28-year-old woman and 33-year-old man, have been charged with the murder of the young mother, reports say.
A woman accused of sorcery is burned alive on a pile of rubbish in Mount Hagen city, Papua New Guinea, February 6, 2013. Two people, a 28-year-old woman and 33-year-old man, have been charged with the murder of the young mother, reports say.
Local media said a 28-year-old woman and 33-year-old man were charged with wilful murder after police rounded up 40 people for questioning.
The pair are reportedly relatives of a six-year-old boy whose death set off allegations of sorcery against Leniata.
"We are not finished," provincial police commander Martin Lakari told The National newspaper.
"If any evidence or reports come in later saying other people involved are still at large, we will also arrest them."
In a separate incident, a man was charged with the torture of two elderly women following the rape and murder of an eight-year-old girl in the same town last week, Associated Australian Press reported.
The two women, alleged to have killed the girl through sorcery, were about to be set on fire when police intervened on February 11.
The witchcraft burning drew condemnation from the United Nations, the United States and Australia, while PNG Prime Minister Peter O'Neill branded it "barbaric".
Police have appealed to the public not to take the law into their own hands in the Pacific nation where there is a widespread belief in sorcery and many people do not accept natural causes as an explanation for misfortune and death.

Monday, February 18, 2013

Critically thinking about sorcery and magic in Papua New Guinea



By LEO IGIWE

* Leo Igwe, as a member of the International Humanist and Ethical Union, has bravely worked for human rights in West Africa. He is presently enrolled in a three year research programme on “Witchcraft accusations in Africa” at the University of Bayreuth, in Germany.
 
Leo Igiwe
Critical thinking is one of the powers and abilities which we humans have, can exercise and apply in our daily lives. It enables us to identify gaps in our thinking, ideas and outlook. Critical mindedness is humankind’s most potent weapon against erroneous credulous notions and superstitions. It helps us to explore new frontiers of knowledge, explode myths, debunk claims, dispel mistaken ideas and beliefs that darken and destroy our society. Critical consciousness drives our curiousity and ability to generate new ideas, renew our society and enhance human enlightenment. Most importantly, critical thinking saves- and can save- lives. Many lives are lost or wasted due to dogma, blind faith and unreason. History is replete with instances of wars waged and killings perpetrated due to irrational beliefs. In fact, right now many people around the world suffer and die or are subjected to so much suffering due to fanatical creeds and mistaken notions of the world.
As Socrates once said, an unexamined life is not worth living. Critical thinking can propel us to examine and re-examine our lives. It shields us from the terror and trauma of worthless existence. We need to spread the Socratic wisdom around the world.
Recently, Papua New Guinea has been in the news. The report of the brutal killing of a 20-year-old woman Kepari Leniata, has outraged the world. But it was not the first time such killing had taken place in the country. There have been reports in the past of horrifying abuses, torture and murder of alleged witches in PNG. So the belief in witchcraft is strong in the country. Witch belief is taken seriously. Witch hunting persists across the nation. Clearly efforts to tackle the problem over the years have not been so effective. They have yielded the desired results. As a matter of urgency, we need to critically examine the belief in witchcraft and the notions associated with it. We need to identify the gaps in witch thinking, and highlights the absurdities therein. We need to publicise the gaps, the illogicalities and absurdities of witch mentality so as to weaken the grip of witch belief on the minds of the people. Witch burning is informed by certain beliefs about witches. And those beliefs are grounded on certain notions of the world. We need to identify these notions, and the grounds on which witch belief rests, and then shine the critical light on them. We need to shake the foundation of witch-based epistemology and cosmology.
We need to promote the critical evaluation of issues and encourage people to cultivate and apply the value in all areas of human endeavour. We need to spread the message of reason and make the logic of critical thought a permanent feature of the society.
First of all it is important to stress that the belief in sorcery is not peculiar to the people of PNG. Witch belief is found in most cultures of the world. It is not only in PNG that people burn witches. Witch burning is still taking place in many parts of Africa and Asia. For centuries witches were burnt at stake in Europe and in America. Drawing lessons from societies is important in putting the case of sorcery related murder in PNG in proper perspective.
The belief in sorcery is founded on the idea that some people have supernatural powers and that these supernatural powers can be used to perpetrate evil- cause death, diseases, accidents etc. Witches are believed to be those who can kill or harm others through magic. Hence in many communities, many people attribute their misfortune- death or disease- to the malevolent magic of sorcerers.
People embark on witch hunting to identify, smell out and eliminate these ‘enemies within’.
And now let’s critically look at this. Is there any evidence that some people have supernatural powers? What does supernatural power actually mean? How do we differentiate supernatural from natural powers? Is there any prove to demonstrate that people actually exercise their alleged supernatural powers for good or evil?
If actually there are people with supernatural powers to do anything, why do we need to set up institutions to educate our children, secure our streets, carter for the needy? Why do we need to set up factories and employ factory workers? Why do we have humanitarian organisations? Why do we have infrastructure? Many people believe that witches have the powers to flying around in the night? Then why do we have aircrafts? Won’t it be cheaper or easier to travel across the country and the world using spiritual means than by boarding planes, ships and trains?
It is true that people can inflict harm on others. People can kill or harm others using knives, matchetes, guns, stick or by lynching them. But where is the evidence that people can harm others using the supernatural means of sorcery? If we cannot explain how a particular harm is done or who did it, does that mean it is witchcraft, or that the harm is inflicted through supernatural means? And if some people can really inflict harm- death or disease on- others through sorcery why do people still employ gun, bullets and bombs to kill others? If witchcraft truly exists, there will be no physical arms; there will be no need for arms. There will be no market for arms.
Witches, not the police or soldiers will be employed by the state to protect and defend it.
In most cases, people invoke the belief in witchcraft to explain instances of death or illness. But death and diseases have natural explanations and do not need supernatural agencies to take place. The imputation of spiritual agency on human experiences is no longer necessary. Supernatural explanation of misfortunes like deaths or accidents is flawed, absurd or nonsensical.
For instance, Kepari Leniata was accused of killing a 6-year-old boy through sorcery. The boy reportedly died in a hospital. If one may ask, what does killing someone through sorcery mean? What is the evidence that anybody can be killed through this means? If a human being can be killed through sorcery, can an animal or an insect be killed through sorcery too? If yes, how many insects or animals did Kepari kill using her alleged magical powers? If no, why not? And again why is it that it is often women who are accused of sorcery related crimes and it is often men who constitute the witch hunting gang or the lynch mob?
To end the wave of sorcery related accusations, abuses and killing in Papua New Guinea, people need to rethink and re-examine their belief in sorcery, magic and supernatural powers. People should have the courage to probe and inquiry into sorcery related claims. Sorcery is a belief- mere belief, a make belief. Sorcery is a belief which people entertain due to fear and ignorance. It is a scapegoating mechanism used in occasions and under circumstances where people are looking for somebody to blame for their woes and ills. So we need to get people to begin to question and demand evidence for sorcery from those who make such accusations including those who claim there are supernatural powers or that they have supernatural powers. The burden of proof lies with the claimant, so it is with witchcraft or sorcery.