Friday, September 05, 2008

Where were you in 1975?

Independence proclamation by Governor-General Sir John Guise at 12am on September 16, 1975
Girl guides float in Goroka
In Goroka a possession of floats presented a spectacular display
Return to Goroka...my late wife Hula and I in our vegetable garden in Goroka, 1999
Where were you in 1975?
That is the question many people will be asking each other as Papua New Guinea celebrates 33 years of independence on September 16 this year.
Many others – the majority – will simply say “I wasn’t even born then”.
I was in Goroka in 1975 and can fondly say that it was one of the best years of my life.
The first thing that struck me about Goroka was the beautiful flowers, shrubs and roaring streams.
I was then seven years old, bound to turn eight later that momentous year, but the memories are still there – albeit fading – 33 years on.
The family of my mum, dad, elder sister, elder brother, my younger sister and me disembarked from an Air Niugini F27 Fokker Friendship one cold January morning in 1975.
I took my first breath – fresh, cool and clean mountain air – of what would be our home for the next three years until the end of 1977.
Back in 1975, mum, dad and my elder siblings were no newcomers to Goroka and the then Eastern Highlands District.
Mum and dad came here as newly weds to Iufi Iufa primary school, Asaro Valley, in the early 1960s.
My father Mathias was a school inspector and an ex-Dregerhafen and Sogeri schoolmate of one Michael Somare while my Moasing mother was a missionary-trained nurse.
It was here that my elder sister Alison and my elder brother David were born.
I have so many pleasant memories of growing up in Goroka.
In those pre-independence and immediate post-independence days, colonialism was still in the air, hence, there being so many expatriates.
Goroka was a neat, well-planned colonial town, which – like Lae and Kainantu – was built around the airport.
And the airport then was a hive of activity, especially given Goroka being the base of Dennis Buchanan’s Talair and ex-Vietnam veteran Mal Smith’s Pacific Helicopters.
Throwing Frisbees and flying kites in the park, riding bikes, chasing muna (those seasonal beetles eaten by the locals), buying sweets, comic and books at West Goroka and dreaming on those endless summer afternoons in December were among our great passions.
Comic book trading – Donald Duck, Phantom, Walt Disney, Ritchie Rich, Casper The Friendly Ghost, Wendy The Good Little Witch, Bugs Bunny…and I could go on and on with the characters – was a way of life among us kids in those days.
I have no qualms that I learned more English and the nuances of grammar from those comic books than from school.
Professional boxing was all the rage in those days of inimitable fighters like Martin Beni, the late John Aba, his brother Tony, Mark Apai and the lot.
Through the late Norm Salter – the great fight promoter – Goroka was able to host its share of professional and amateur bouts as well as wrestling matches featuring men, women and even midgets from overseas.
Goroka’s YC Hall was the equivalent of Madison Square Gardens in the US - the true centre of boxing in the country.
The YC was also the centre stage for basketball in those days with national championships being held there in 1975, 1976 and 1977.
The showground, now the National Sports Institute, saw bone crushing rugby league matches as well as aerial rules football contests.
Of course, nothing in Goroka would be complete without the annual show, a colorful extravaganza of singsings, agricultural produce and those wonderful show bags we loved so much.
The West Goroka Theatre, now the NSI gymnasium, was where we would sit on old coffee bags and watch those good old Bruce Lee and James Bond movies, as well as thrillers like Airport ’75, Jaws, Towering Inferno and King Kong – the place being literally packed to the rafters.
Radio then was king – there being no such thing as EMTV or video – and it was a joy to listen to the Sunday night dramas, Grade 10 quizzes and the live coverage of rugby league and other sports on the National Broadcasting Commission’s Medium Wave transmission.
Yes, indeed, life was a wonderful dream for us who grew up in Goroka at the time.
Of course, in 1975, independence was in the air.
Young men who championed the cause, like Michael Somare, were treated with disdain by the lapuns and old colonials, who argued that independence would be a catastrophe.
Little PNG flags and independence t-shirts and caps were very fashionable.
At school the teacher, a beautiful Hula, Central province woman called Mrs Manoka, would ask us, one by one, to give our individual oratories about this thing called ‘Independence’.
That year, in April, there was excitement all around the brand new PNG currency was introduced.
Shiny 10 and 20 toes coins were all the rage among us kids.
The venerable Australian dollars and cents, which had become part of our lives, continued to be legal tender until after independence.
Also that eventful year, by quirk of fate, a big frost in Brazil – the world’s biggest coffee producer – saw prices skyrocket.
It was a cause to celebrate with fortunes being made overnight, especially in the Highlands.
At the West Goroka shopping centre just down the road from where we lived, it was a common sight to see villagers in as tanget (leaf coverings, which were worn widely in those days instead of clothes) with huge wads of cash going on an orgy of spending, buying big cow legs, beer and stereos for the inevitable parties that followed.
My uncle, the coffee tycoon Jack Amos, made millions overnight and celebrated by travelling to the Phillipines to watch that famous ‘Thrilla in Manilla’ world heavyweight championship bout between Muhammed Ali and ‘Smokin’ Joe Frazier.
These all added to the big party that was 1975.
September 15, 1975, was the last day for PNG to come under colonial rule
We sat up until 12am on September 16, when Governor-General Sir John Guise did the Proclamation of Independence, broadcast live over the ever-reliable NBC:
“Papua New Guinea is now independent.
“The Constitution of the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, under which all powers rest with the people, is now in effect.
“We have at this point in time broken with out colonial past and we now stand as an independent nation in our own right.
“Let us unite, with almighty God’s guidance and help, in working together for a future as a strong and free country.”
And then the fireworks exploded into the Goroka night sky to herald the start of a new day, a new era and a new Nation-State.
It was a time for celebration, but also a poignant occasion, as the Australian flag came down for the last time.
In addition, many a tear was shed by the lapun man/meri (old men/women) as that great icon of colonialism was lowered.
Today, 33 years later, Goroka is still a beautiful place.
In fact, I spent four years there from 1998 to 2002, finding myself back on my childhood stomping grounds.
It was like arriving at a place I’d never left!
Memories of another day, those oh-so-happy childhood days, came rushing back.
And nostalgia filled my heart every time I saw something that reminded me of those blissful days.
Goroka still hasn’t lost its basic shape of 1975, 1976 and 1977 and still has that colonial feel about it.
Goroka, to me, is home.
After all, my siblings and I were born, raised and educated here.
In later years, my late wife and I spent four wonderful years in Goroka, and it was there that my two elder sons were born.
I dream of a golden future for this pleasantly agreeable town with its perennial spring climate, majestic sentinel-like mountains and bouquet of perfumed flowers.
Happy 33rd Birthday Goroka and Papua New Guinea and God Bless You real good!

UK trek group to return

A UNITED Kingdom (UK) based volunteer group Trek Force, will return to Papua New Guinea in November to explore more of PNG’s exciting sites, The National newspaper reports.

The group left last month after completing a two-month tourism trekking project along the Black Cat Trail in the Morobe province.

Black Cat Trail extends from Wau to Salamaua.

While trekking, the group also provided basic health and education services to the locals along the way.

Trek Force leader Dr Tom Sheddon said Black Cat turned out to be a very challenging feat for the young volunteers, most of who were in their early 20s.

Dr Sheddon said his team also did jungle survival training, trekking and diving and were looking forward to returning to PNG in November.

Defence says no Kokoda Track airman, just a mossy branch

An image of what was thought to be a moss-covered skeleton. Photo: Lisa Fabre
An Australian trekking party's hopes of having found remains of a World War II airman hanging from a tree on the Kokoda Track have been dashed - in fact they discovered a moss-covered branch, The Age newspaper reports.

Australian Defence Force staff from the Australian High Commission in Port Moresby yesterday reached the isolated site in Papua New Guinea to check on the sighting, but found no human remains.

"While the location near Kagi is below a flight path that was commonly used by allied aircraft during WWII sorties, the find has been confirmed by ADF staff as a moss-covered branch," Defence said in a statement last night.

"It appears the branch has broken off the main tree and fallen across some vines which, from the ground, could have been confused with the body of an airman."

The find last month - by a Victorian police officer who was photographing flowers - had sparked hope of closure for a family somewhere in Australia, Japan or the United States.

Guide David Collins, from the Australian company No Roads Expeditions, was leading a trek when the suspected human remains were discovered.

"We had a few police officers on the 19-man trek. One was taking photos with a large lens of the trees and flowers," he said last week.

"He then discovered what looks like the remains of a body.

"I couldn't make it out at first. It wasn't until the wind blew that you could really see it is in a harness. There are goggles and it appears to be caught up in cables, so presumably it is an airman."

Mr Collins said the supposed remains were found in the jungle canopy at the top of the Owen Stanley Range, almost halfway along the 96km track.
AAP

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Google launches open source web browser to compete with Internet Explorer and Firefox

Google this week launched an open source web browser to compete with Internet Explorer and Firefox.

 

The browser is designed to be fast, and to cope with the next generation of web applications that rely on graphics and multimedia.

 

Called Chrome, it will launch as a beta for Windows machines in 100 countries, with Mac and Linux versions to come.

 

Using Google on Wednesday this week, I noticed that Chrome was available for immediate download, and managed to do just that.

 

Chrome is designed to handle not just text and graphics, but more complex computer programmes.

 

Chrome, which Google made available in 43 languages in 100 countries at http://www.google.com/chrome , has been designed to download software and render Web pages faster than existing browsers.

 

And it allows users to keep working even when one of its open windows crashes.

 

This is Google's long-anticipated bid to compete with Microsoft Corp, whose rival Internet Explorer dominates three-quarters of the Web browsing market.

 

Google has backed Mozilla Corp's Firefox browser, which holds about 18 percent of the market.

 

"We realised... we needed to completely rethink the browser,” Google’s vice-president of product marketing Sundar Pichai said in a blog post.

 

The new browser will help Google take advantage of developments it is pushing online in rich web applications that are challenging traditional desktop programs.

 

  It's certainly the biggest news in the browser space since Firefox started to dent Internet Explorer's lead and many people see this as a re-ignition of the browser wars

 

Google has a suite of web apps, such as documents, Picasa and maps which offer functionality that is beginning to replace offline software.

 

“At Google, we spend much of our time working inside a browser,” according to Google.

 

“We search, chat, email and collaborate in a browser.

 

“And like all of you, in our spare time, we shop, bank, read news and keep in touch with friends - all using a browser.

 

“People are spending an increasing amount of time online, and they're doing things never imagined when the web first appeared about 15 years ago.

 

“Since we spend so much time online, we began seriously thinking about what kind of browser could exist if you started from scratch and built on the best elements out there.

 

“We realised that the web had evolved from mainly simple text pages to rich, interactive applications and that we needed to completely rethink the browser.

 

“What we really needed was not just a browser, but also a modern platform for web pages and applications, and that's what we set out to build.

 

“So today we're releasing the beta version of a new open source browser: Google Chrome.

 

“On the surface, we designed a browser window that is streamlined and simple.

 

“To most people, it isn't the browser that matters.

 

“It's only a tool to run the important stuff - the pages, sites and applications that make up the web.

 

“Like the classic Google homepage, Google Chrome is clean and fast.

 

“It gets out of your way and gets you where you want to go.

 

“Under the hood, we were able to build the foundation of a browser that runs today's complex web applications much better.

 

“By keeping each tab in an isolated ‘sandbox’, we were able to prevent one tab from crashing another and provide improved protection from rogue sites.

 

“We improved speed and responsiveness across the board.

 

“We also built V8, a more powerful JavaScript engine, to power the next generation of web applications that aren't even possible in today's browsers.

 

“This is just the beginning - Google Chrome is far from done.

 

“We've released this beta for Windows to start the broader discussion and hear from you as quickly as possible.

 

“We're hard at work building versions for Mac and Linux too, and we'll continue to make it even faster and more robust.

 

“We owe a great debt to many open source projects, and we're committed to continuing on their path.

 

“We've used components from Apple's WebKit and Mozilla's Firefox, among others - and in that spirit, we are making all of our code open source as well.

 

“We hope to collaborate with the entire community to help drive the web forward.

 

“The web gets better with more options and innovation.

 

“Google Chrome is another option, and we hope it contributes to making the web even better.”

 

I found out that the range of software available on ‘Google Pack Software’ includes Google Earth, Google Toolbar for Internet Explorer, Norton Security Scan, Spyware Doctor Starter Edition, Google Desktop, Picasa, Mozilla Firefox with Google Toolbar, Google Photos Screensaver, Adobe Reader, Google Talk, Skype, RealPlayer and StarOffice.

 

The launch of a beta version of Chrome on Tuesday, September 2, 2008, will be Google's latest assault on Microsoft's dominance of the PC business.

 

The firm's Internet Explorer program dominates the browser landscape, with 80% of the market.

 

National Pledge

We, the people of Papua New Guinea,

pledge ourselves united in one nation.

We pay homage to our cultural heritage,

the source of our strength.

We pledge to build a democratic

society, based on justice, equality,

respect and prosperity for our people.

We pledge to stand together as One People, One Nation, One Country

God bless Papua New Guinea

 

 

 

National Emblem

The National Emblem or Crest adorns all official documents, stationery and even buildings.

 

It features a Raggiana Bird of Paradise, perhaps the most popular and distinctive bird of paradise known with its plumes in full display.

 

The Raggiana holds a kundu drum and a ceremonial spear.

 

The words Papua New Guinea are often inscribed in a shallow arc immediately below the emblem.

 

The emblem is described in the National Identity Ordinance of 1971.

 

The emblem is representative of all parts of the country since the symbols on it are well known throughout all regions of Papua New Guinea.

 

The emblem was designed under the direction of Hal Halmann, who was a senior designer for the Office of Information during the years leading to Independence.

 

Mr Holman’s more recent works include the busts of Sir Michael Somare outside the entrance to Parliament and the metal sculpture of the Raggiana on Waigani Drive in the centre of the Holiday Inn Roundabout.

 

 

Singing Of Joy to Be Free

The national song calling the sons (and daughters) of Papua New Guinea to arise and to “sing of our joy to be free” was adopted by the Constituent Assembly to be sung on Independence Day.

 

Unlike the National Flag and Emblem which were adopted four years earlier, the National Anthem was not decided until just a week before Independence Day.

 

It was even mooted that there would be no national song until after Independence, even though this song and others had been submitted in a nationwide competition well ahead of Independence Day.

 

The National Executive Council decided only on September 10, 1975, to adopt the song whose words and music were composed by Chief Inspector Thomas Shacklady, the then bandmaster of the ever-popular Royal Papua New Guinea Constabulary Band.

 

The words are:

 

O arise all you sons of this land

Let us sing of our joy to be free

Praising God and rejoicing to bee

Papua New Guinea

 

Shout our name from the mountains to sea

Papua New Guinea

Let us raise our voices and proclaim

Papua New Guinea

 

Now give thanks to the good Lord above

For His kindness, His wisdom and love

For this land of our fathers so free

Papua New Guinea

 

Shout again for the whole world to hear

Papua New Guinea

We’re Independent and we’re free

Papua New Guinea