Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Chinese immigrant found guilty by court

Controversial Chinese immigrant Gu Kai was found guilty by the Boroko District Court last week for illegally working in the country without a valid work permit.
Gu Kai was ordered by Boroko district Court Magistrate Paul Beeu to pay a fine of K5, 000 and was ordered to leave the country within 14 days.
Assistant Commissioner of Crimes Raphael Huafolo said Gu Kai was employed as an accountant by a company owned by a former Gulf province politician at the time of his arrest, prosecution and conviction.
He appeared in the Boroko District Court today for another charge of breaching PNG Immigration laws but the matter was adjourned to February 24.
 ACP Huafolo commended government officers from the department of Foreign Affairs and Labour who assisted police to prosecute Gu Kai in court.
Mr Huafolo said persistency and collaboration involving all relevant line agencies resulted in Gu Kai’s conviction.
He said the operation and Gu Kai’s conviction showed that all line government agencies are working vigorously in harmony to protect the country from being exploited by illegal immigrants.
Gu Kai was arrested in 2002 after failing to produce a valid PNG passport and work permit but the case was struck out in court by his lawyer.
He was hired on numerous occasions as interpreter by various Chinese illegal immigrants until he was rearrested in December 2008.
In another related investigation, ACP Huafolo said detectives have now obtained a letter purportedly written by a national lawyer representing Gu Kai and addressed to the Prime Minister on January 28 containing grossly defamatory and false information about certain people including a police officer attached to the Crimes Directorate.
We are investigating this matter and once we confirm the source of the letter, the persons responsible for spreading false rumours will be arrested and prosecuted in accordance with the law.  
 
Raphael Huafolo
Assistant Commissioner Crimes
Police Headquarters
Konedobu

 

Police Commissioner condemns policeman's shooting

Commissioner of Police Gari Baki has condemned the shooting of a policeman in Lae Morobe province and has vowed to review existing gun laws in an effort to combat crime in the country.
The Commissioner strongly expressed these views today following a shooting incident in which a police constable and a civilian were both shot and injured by a crime suspect at Eriku on Monday night.
First Constable Amos Kowar attached to the Lae Metropolitan station was shot in the face and back when he was about to arrest a crime suspect at Eriku yesterday.
The gunman also shot a man in his right thigh before decamping.
Kowar is in a critical condition at the Angau hospital and police in Morobe have launched a massive man hunt for the suspect identified as Gideon Pokatou in his early twenties from Busuma village Lae in Morobe province.
The injured policeman and his comrades went to Eriku to apprehend Pokatou, a suspect in various crimes including armed robbery and motor vehicle thefts when they were attacked. 
Pokatou was previously arrested and charged for armed robbery and being in possession of a home made gun and live ammunition in 2005.
The suspect allegedly breached a K500 bail condition and was linked to various other crimes.
While condemning the shooting, Mr Baki said mandatory sentences, hefty fines and lengthy jail terms should be introduced and imposed on people who violate gun laws in the country.
He said criminals who use firearms against the people and the state should be thrown into jail and locked away for very long periods.
He said the latest shooting resembles the grim realities faced by policemen and policewomen in their line of duty.
He said he would vigorously pursue the certain recommendations contained in the information paper compiled by the Guns Control Committee in 2005.
As part of efforts undertaken by the Constabulary to control the use of guns in the country a moratorium banning the issuance of new firearm licenses was imposed in 2001.
The moratorium is still effective but we need to amend certain laws to severely punish offenders in our effort to deter gun violence in the country, Commissioner Baki said today.
Commissioner Baki said tougher gun laws will help deter crime and reduce the greater risks faced by police. 
Police investigations into the shootings are continuing.

 

Mr Gari L. Baki, OBE, DPS, C.St.J, QPM

Commissioner of Police

 

Balsa is the wood of the future

Caption: Gunter Isensee of Gunter Balsa Ltd at work with his men at the University of Vudal balsa mill.

By VERONICA MANUK

Communitiesin Papua New Guinea, particularly those in East New Britain, now have the opportunity to receive training on balsa planting and management, processing and mill management.
This follows the establishment of a balsa sawmill at the University of Vudal for training and also to expose farmers to an alternate crop that can support cocoa production.
This sawmill was developed jointly between the University and Gunter Balsa Ltd,  a balsa company from Germany.
This project is geared to promote the  balsa industry in PNG.
The company, Gunter Balsa Ltd, arrived in the campus four months ago to begins its sawmill operation.
Gunter Isensee, the principal of Gunter Balsa Ltd, comes from a family that owns a balsa company in Germany, the Insensee Modellbau.
The Insensee Modelbau Company processes and supplies balsa wood to European markets for furniture making and other industrial products.
With extensive knowledge and skills he has from working with his mother company, he is preparing to train and assist students and local farmers to establish good balsa plantations, harvesting, processing and marketing knowledge and skills to supply overseas and local markets
“We are not only here to mill and produce balsa wood for our mother company,  but the most important aspect in this project is to educate and train students and farmers to plant balsa, process and manage balsa mills in their own communities,” Mr Insensee said.
He believes in future that there will be a big market for balsa wood products and PNG balsa wood will be in high demand.
 “We must be prepared to have a large number of balsa sawmills in PNG to supply the market.
To achieve this, the university and the company aim to produce very skilled and experienced PNG mill managers and technical support who will need to be well trained, not only in mill management, but in technical skills and safety management within the industry.
The company will not be planting its own balsa plantation but will buy from the University and local growers.
“We want to build a long term business relationship with the community,” Mr Insensee said.
Unlike other companies operating the balsa trade, the company will be purchasing and milling the entire tree into blocks, packed and exported to Germany for further processing for the market.
 Recovery from this mill operation is targeted at 80-90%, as branches will also be processed. 
The first balsa house in the Pacific region and the world built from balsa wood will be erected near the mill in few months time.
Vudal University’s head of Forestry Department in the School of Natural Resources, Neville Howcroft, said that although the balsa industry was small, since 1995 the industry had grown significantly and it had diversified from hobby balsa production to industrial balsa, with most of the PNG balsa wood exported to overseas markets
Mr Howcroft said the establishment of the University of Vudal’s balsa mill would provide a good income both for the local balsa growers and the university, and excellent opportunities to train farmers in the establishment and management of balsa and how to mill and market this product.
“Training to support the rural community and industry will also assist keeping us to be competitive on the world markets, because balsa wood products is now fast replacing products developed with asbestos as an complimentary substance for cooling or heat protection” he said .
This provides an alternative as balsa wood products will one day replace plywood and other plastic products.
Asbestos associated products have been banned in many developed countries around the world as it is toxic to humans.

Monday, February 16, 2009

From Balimo to Port Moresby

Captions: 1. The 1979 PNG Pukpuks rugby union team in Suva, Fiji, with Badi Seyawa (second from left, front row). 2. Badi Seyawa (white beard) surrounded by his seven children and nine grandchildren. Picture by AURI EVA. 3. Waliya’s Badi Seyawa does his famous ‘flying tackle’ on University’s Arnold Amet.

 

The opening lyrics of that great song by Bruce Springsteen, Glory Days, came immediately to my mind as I sat down and enjoyed a beer with long-serving Telikom employee and former PNG Pukpuks rugby union legend Badi Seyawa at the Paddys Bar.

I had a friend was a big baseball player

back in high school

He could throw that speedball by you

Make you look like a fool boy

Saw him the other night at this roadside bar

I was walking in, he was walking out

We went back inside sat down had a few drinks

but all he kept talking about was

Glory days,  well they'll pass you by

Glory days, in the wink of a young girl's eye

Glory days, glory days

Seyawa, 59, from Saweda village in Balimo, Western province, leaves Telikom next month after a distinguished 42 years of service to the organisation – from an age of telegraphs to the internet, from the glorious colonial era to what is now a ramshackle Papua New Guinea.

But for all that he has done for the organistion, Seyawa has not been duly recognised,

something that he is somewhat bitter about.

And apart from his career, he also excelled on the rugby union paddock in the halcyon days of the 1970’s and 80’s, as a feared centre for the much-vaunted Waliya team from the Western province, against men like Mekere Morauta, Anthony Siaguru and Arnold Amet,

Those memories of another day, including the loss of his beloved wife Renagi last August, came back as we downed our beers.

“Waliya was ‘the’ team then,” Seyawa reminisces.

“Waliya was the team to beat.

“I was captain/coach and I did some magic things for Waliya.

“We were premiers in 1973, 1974 and 1975.

“In 1977, 1978, we tried and we failed.”

Seyawa, in fact, represented Papua New Guinea at the 1979 South Pacific Games with other great names like Kainantu’s Barevo Amevo, Milne Bay’s Sab Doiwa, Western Highlands’ Philip Num, and fellow Western province ‘barramundis’ Kolesi Mili, Tagala Nago, Wagubi Pilisa and Toby Warapa.

In his photo album is a newspaper cutting of him making a flying tackle on University’s Arnold Amet, team manager of the 1979 SP Games, and who was fated to one day become Chief Justice of PNG and Governor of Madang.

“University beaten in rugby union” screamed the Post-Courier headline of that story by renowned sportswriter Graeme Boyd.

“Last year’s unbeatables University had their colours lowered for the first time in 14 months when they met Waliya in the Port Moresby pre-season rugby union competition on Saturday,” wrote Boyd.

“Waliya ran out winners 16-10.

“The men who made the game for Waliya were Badi Seyawa and Kapiya Mase.”

The Balimo warrior has come a long way since he started school at the Evangelical Field Mission in 1955.

“I completed grade 4 there and then I was selected to government school at Balimo Primary School,” he recalls.

“From Grade 5, I was selected for Grade 6 with my brother.

“Four of us were selected to go to Daru Post-Primary School in 1962.

“Out of the four of us, I was selected to go to Kerema Junior High School.

“I spent three years there and graduated in 1965, with Sir Mekere Morauta being my senior at that time.

“I was selected to come to Sogeri Senior High in 1966.

“As soon as I completed Form 4 in 1966, Post & Telegraphs got me.

“I was on holidays when they sent me a letter, and I joined them on March 22, 1967.

“I grew up with a Christian family and I wouldn’t have achieved all this without a Christian upbringing.

“I must thank them (family) and thank God for bringing me up to what I am today.”

Seyawa started off very humbly in those far-off days.

“I started off as a clerical assistant,” he tells me.

“I started off at the post office in downtown Port Moresby.

“That’s where the P & T head office was.

“My job was to bill the customers who were using our system.

“P& T was under the Australian government.

“In 1970 and ’71, I was selected to go down to Sydney for the Commonwealth practical scheme.

“There were two of us from P & T selected to do this training for six months in Sydney.

“I was attached to the Post Master General’s billing office in Sydney.

“After I came back, I was given the responsibility of looking after telephone accounts.

“I was in that job for about two years.

“After the two years, I was given another position as administrative officer, which was basically recruitment, training, and everything human resource.

“Organisational changes saw me promoted to divisional administrative officer of finance, the position which I’ve been holding for 37 years now.”

The technological changes which have taken place over the last 42 years, including the growth of Port Moresby and PNG, have been phenomenal for Seyawa.

“Technologically, there have been very big changes over the years,” he says.

“Whatever has taken place from when I started up to now is hard to describe.

“My life within the Telikom organisation has been like a family, which I grew up in.

“The changes have been remarkable.

“My simple advice to our young people is to be committed, dedicated, honest and respect your superiors.

“That’s what I did and all my friends have all the respect for me.

“These four things made me what I am today.”

Badi Seyawa officially finishes from Telikom on March 14, 2009, exactly 42 years after he started with the then P & T.

The loss of Renagi, from Gagagaba village outside Port Moresby, his beloved partner of many years last August, brings tears to his eyes as he brushes his white beard.

“I’ve got a lot of plans for my kids,” Seyawa says.

“I’ve got seven kids and nine bubus (grandchildren).

“Coming from Balimo to Port Moresby is a long way.”

 

Port Moresby morgue bodies finally laid to rest

Those of you who have been following the Port Moresby morgue saga would be pleased to hear that the rotting corpses - which caused a big stink recently - were finally laid to rest at Nine-Mile Cemetery last Friday.

A total 75 corpses, including 26 babies, and various body parts (limbs) were mass buried.

I spent the day at the morgue and later at Nine-Mile with two Australian photographers and it was a very 'smelly' affair.

In traditional Papua New Guinea society, bodies of the dead are treated with respect, however, this seems not to have been the case.

My apologies

My apologies to the many readers of this blog from all over the world for what seems to have been a deliberate attempt by outside forces to hack this blog and post junk.
Those of you who read this blog over the weekend may have noticed the two junk postings from Nigerian scammers.
This was not my doing and I sincerely apologise if you thought it was my doing.

Malum

Friday, February 13, 2009

A thought for Valentine's Day


Hula, my Darling,

Today, I will see all the lovers having a good time, but you are not here to share with me.
Why, why, why?

The times we spent together, in Lae, Goroka, Port Moresby, will be cherised forever.
You left me all alone on March 23, 2008, with our four lovely young children.

This picture is one of the happy times we had in Goroka in 1999.

Hula, I WILL ALWAYS LOVE YOU!


Malum