Sunday, March 08, 2009

We must keep our parks clean

I took my children for a stroll to the park at Gerehu Stage 2 in Port Moresby yesterday and was quite impressed at work on the new basketball court progressing well (pictured).
My kids went to play (pictured), while I sat on the grass, watching them play and taking pictures.
The concept of parks is a great one, long overdue in the national capital, by National Capital District Governor Powes Parkop.
However, what caught my attention was the amount of litter, mainly plastics, in the park.
Littering reflects the no-caring attitude of Papua New Guineans and this attitude has to stop.
We must be happy that we now have parks and recreational facilities for our children and do our bit by looking after them and keeping them clean.

Cry, the beloved country Papua New Guinea

Looking back all those years since 1975, I am now firmly of the view that independence came too early, much too early when Papua New Guinea wasn’t prepared.

We neglected our education and health systems and are now paying a high price for it with the numerous social problems in Papua New Guinea.

Pre-independence, and the early days of independence, there was still a strong colonial impact; strong missionary influence.

The came independence!

We did not have the capability to properly educate all our children, many of whom dropped out of school, and being unemployed, turn to a vicious never-ending circle of crime which continues to this day.

These people, being poorly educated, couldn’t properly educate their children and the problem passed on to the next generation.

We also did not have the capability to manage and improve our health services, which have degenerated over the years.

We are now paying a high price for the many years of neglect by the government and the prime minister – Sir Michael Somare – must now admit to the people of Papua New Guinea that he has just about destroyed us by fighting for early independence from Australia.

A nation’s prosperity is measured by the levels of education, health and general living conditions of its population at large.

All you have at present is a resilient majority as spectators of a politically-powerful and economically influential elitist minority who live in high price apartments and glass houses in exclusive Port Moresby and offshore locations.

The present education and health data in brief are:

 

Education

 

•           55% of people are illiterate;

•           50% of school aged children are not in school;

•           High drop out/low retention rate;

•           Lagging behind in teachers training.

 

 

Health

 

People are still dying from easily preventable and treatable diseases.

•           7,300 babies under 1 year die each day (20 per day);

•           10,200 babies under five years die (28 per day);

•           220,000 babies less than five years have no proper nutrition;

•           3,700 mothers die every day (10 mothers dying per day);

•           Half of all children in Papua New Guinea are not immunised;

•           60% of mothers not properly supervised when giving birth;

•           70% of people have no access to safe drinking water;

•           HIV/AIDS spread rapidly through Papua New Guinea over the last 10 years;

•           Over 14,000 confirmed HIV/AIDS cases;

•           Estimates of HIV/AIDS cases putting infection rate at 1-2% of population

Gender-based violence high in Papua New Guinea

PAPUA New Guinea has one of the highest prevalent rates of gender-based violence in the world, The National reports.

According to a statement by United Nations office in PNG, about 67% of women report experiencing family violence, and in some remote Highlands communities, this figure rises to a staggering 90%.

The report said that in the urban centres, around one in six wives report receiving hospital treatment for injuries inflicted on them by their husbands.

PNG will join the world in observing International Women’s Day today.

The day is aimed at raising public awareness of violence against women (VAW) and what people could do to end it.

This year’s theme is focused on a collective approach “Women and men: United to end violence against women”.

The report stated that PNG also has one of the highest rates of sexual violence in the world where nearly half of reported rape survivors are under the age of 15 and that13% were under the age of seven, and even then, most cases were not reported.

In light of the issue, one of the key features of the UN’s work on gender-based violence was to involve men in addressing gender-based violence through supporting the men’s forums on VAW and children.

The UN system in PNG also identified gender-based violence as one of its key advocacy areas and was also looking at tackling gender-based violence in all its programme activities.

UN resident coordinator in PNG, Dr Jacqui Badcock said that “affirmative action measures will help raise women’s profile so they would become active citizens in all sectors”, especially the areas of political participation and decision making.

“We need increased participation of women in key executive positions in both in the Government and private sectors who will ensure policy decisions and decision making are in line with efforts to achieve gender equality and development towards ending violence against women,” she added.

She said that the persistence of this problem was one of the major constraints to women’s economic and political leadership at all levels

 

Friday, March 06, 2009

The rape of Papua New Guinean women

By ALFREDO P HERNANDEZ of Letters From Port Moresby

 

 MANY YEARS ago, an Asian woman was abducted by a group of five raskols (hoodlums) while she was getting into her car at a parking lot near her workplace shortly after calling it a day.

The woman in her 40s was taken to the settlement just outside of Port Moresby where she was gang-raped. After the original group was done with her, she was again subjected to the same brutal assault by a pile of 10 young and old village men who paid K2 (US$0.70 at current rate) each for a quick, forced-sex, a torture that lasted the whole night.

Just before sunrise, she was brought back to where her car had been parked overnight. To save her from further humiliation, her family kept their silence about her nightlong ordeal.

Obviously, they believed that the local police won’t exert effort in bringing the culprits to justice if ever they filed a complaint. During those days the local police were, and are still these days, having difficulty earning the trust of Port Moresby expatriates.

These days, rape cases are rife across the country. The act is commonly committed within the family. A husband comes home intoxicated, demands for food and when there’s no food to serve, beats up the poor wife and rapes her, after which he turns his lust to the second female in the family – his daughter.

A young girl left alone at home would neither feel safe nor protected because chances are, some nuts from the village who could be her relatives would just barged into her home and assault her.

A lone female – whether she’s in her pre-puberty or old enough to be called a woman – would always face the risk of getting assaulted while working in the food garden or walking home from school. And even if they are in a group that just emerged from a disco house, the chances of attack are even greater, this time involving a bigger gang of usually drunken men.

Horrific stories of torture, rape and other violence against women are a common staple of Papua Guinea’s mainstream newspapers – The National, Post Courier and the Sunday Chronicle.

Over the last several months, the news pages had been dotted by rape stories involving young girls, young women, housewives and even elderly women. And their attackers were both young and older men who were either intoxicated or under the influence of marijuana. And a number of them are family members and relatives.

Take for instance, the rape cases in New Guinea Islands on the northern waters of PNG. (NGI is composed of big and small islands including the West New Britain, New Ireland and Manus provinces.) The island-provinces’ police commander expressed dismay that parents of rape victims – many of them minors – are not cooperating with the police by reporting the culprits, in most cases individuals who have been trusted by the family and the community.

The island provinces’ statistics showed that there were two incidents of “sexual penetration” being reported in one day. These figures are quite alarming, the commander said, and lashed out at parents who are supposed to be taking good care of their young daughters but are not. Most of the offenders were usually under the influence of marijuana and alcohol, usually home-brewed.

Sadly, many women have come to see sexual assaults among violence inflicted on them as “normal”, as have men, confident in the knowledge that the state will not act quickly, decisively or consistently against them.

WHY IS THIS happening in a country of more than 6 million and that is just beginning to make sense of the influences from the Western world brought in by outsiders from about 17 countries?

American researcher Shirley Oliver-Miller*, in a recent three-year study on sexuality in PNG, has observed:

“To most young Papua New Guinean women today, a man with money, a car, or even a schoolboy with promise, is a far more attractive prospect than a poor boy with no obvious future. For many young men, having no money with which to buy sex directly, or simply with which to make a girlfriend happy, is a frustrating state of affairs.

“Some men state that there is no opportunity for them to have sex at all, unless they rape a woman. Group rape is less likely to lead to trouble than individual rape, although most men who state they rape women do both.”

Oliver-Miller has observed that any sort (of raped) is disturbingly common in all areas of the country, rural, town, and city. In addition to commercial sex, there is the issue of “line-up” or pack rapes.

“Often associated with “six-to-sixes” (clubs that remain open from 6pm to 6am) or video showings that run from evening to dawn in both rural and urban areas, a group of men/boys take turns in forcing a woman to have sexual intercourse with them.

Says Oliver-Miller: “As they watch each other, the sexual dynamics of rape and homosexuality mix to produce, for some, a highly erotic event. In some communities, line-ups are reported to take place every weekend. Older men, many of whom are married, are also frequently involved. Younger men and even boys of 11 or 12 are able to join with their elders in sexually abusing a women.

A 17-year-old guy she interviewed described his village: “In here, rape and forced sex exist just like in other parts of the province. It happens especially during disco nights and video shows. When we brought our village girls to the disco or video show, the boys from other places came and took our girls for dance and sometimes take them home to sleep with them and have sex with.

“We thought they slept only with their friends, but somehow, the boys arranged it with their village boys and made single file on them (line-up). When the girls come back, they never tell us about it because they are afraid and ashamed. Then, we do the same to their sisters in return.”

Oliver-Miller noted that this type of sexual practice is extremely dangerous because the men involved are exposed to the semen of many of the men, thus raising the risk of acquiring STIs and AIDS, not from the woman, but from the other men involved. And the woman is placed at extremely high risk of acquiring STIs and HIV as well.

But even up to these days, many Papua New Guineans still do not like to admit that such things are going on. However, there is now a great deal of evidence from studies conducted in selected urban areas (like Daru, Port Moresby, Lae and Goroka) and may rural villages that such sexual activities are widespread.

These sexual activities are highly dangerous from a public point of view because they spread diseases very quickly, not just among the people who participate in them, but among all those other persons, wives and husbands, new and old boyfriends and girlfriends, with whom these people have sex. These activities are also responsible for many STIs, including HIV, among newborn babies.

In most areas of PNG today, pornographic magazines, picture books, and videos are available, despite laws to the contrary.

Many adults and young people seem to enjoy looking at pictures of people having sex. They consider it educational, and given the dearth of printed or other media on sex, this is hardly surprising.

To some young people, however, the experience is frightening, because they find themselves sexually aroused with little understanding of how to manage their desires.

And oftentimes, this leads to rape.

 

Email the writer: jarahdz500@online.net.pg

alfredophernandez@thenational.com.pg

 

*SHIRLEY OLIVER-MILLER is Senior Program Officer II, at Margaret Sanger Center International, Planned Parenthood of New York City. Since 1980, Ms Oliver-Miller has been responsible for managing government and non-government projects, and developing and implementing program strategies around reproductive and sexual health issues. She has worked in 37 countries, most recently Papua New Guinea, developing programs for government and non-governmental agencies around population health.

 

InterOil gears up to build gas plant

Oil company obtains five-year petroleum prospecting license extension

 

By SHEILA LASIBORI

 

THE discovery of a “world record” natural gas reservoir in Gulf province has now set the foundation for the construction of a natural gas liquefication plant in Port Moresby, The National reports.

The plant, to rise next to the InterOil Corp-owned Napa Napa oil refinery on the outskirts of the city, would set the infrastructure for the exportation of the condensate (gas in its condensed state) next year.

William Duma, minister responsible for Petroleum and Energy, made this known yesterday at Parliament where he turned over Government documents to InterOil formalising the announced “declaration of location” at Antelope One.

The documents also included a five-year extension of the company’s petroleum prospecting licences (PPL) No. 236, 237, and 238.

With these documents, the company will now expand its current exploration sites at Elk and Antelope One in Gulf province.

“InterOil has more than satisfied its commitment to maintain and extend its licence through investment in seismic data acquisition and drilling of wells over six years, which ultimately resulted in the largest discovery in the country’s history and the world’s largest vertical section of reef at 792m,” Mr Duma said.

Petromin Holdings Ltd, responsible for the State’s full 22.5% equity interest in the upstream and 10% in the mainstream of the project, said the declaration of location and the extension of the licence areas had paved the way for Petromin and InterOil to commercialise the project.

Joshua Kalinoe, Petromin’s managing director and chief executive, said the flaring of Antelope One last Monday underpinned a first train 3.5 million tonnes per annum capacity plant at an estimated cost of US$5 billion (K14 billion).

 

New Britain Palm Oil Limited: Revenue soars to US$352m

NEW Britain Palm Oil Ltd has increased its revenue by 56.5% to US$352.2 million (K994.9 million) for the operational year ending Dec 31 last year, The National reports.

Profit after-tax was US$106.3 million (K296.93 million).

NBPOL also reported a record 1.27 million tonnes of fruit processed and 320,000 tonnes in aggregate crude palm oil (CPO) and palm kernel produced.

Crude oil production was 7% higher than the preceding year and palm product extraction rates remained about 28%.

An average CPO selling price achieved by the company for the year was US$926 (K2,587) per tonne as against the previous year’s price of US$686 (K1,916.20) per tonne.

Forward sales of roughly a quarter of its production for this year of 82,000 tonnes of CPO averaged US$849 (K2, 371.51) per tonne.

As of yesterday, the production figure was now at 156,000 tonnes of palm oil output at an average price of US$780 (K2, 178.77) per tonne.

Dividends paid during the year totalled US$0.4180 per share, including an interim dividend for last year of US$0.14 per share.

A final gross dividend of US$0.14 will be paid this coming May.

 

Bloody end

Two suspects shot dead after hold-up

 

By SAMSON KENDEMAN

 

NCD police shot dead two suspects while three others sustained gunshot wounds after a daring daylight robbery at a store in Gordon, Port Moresby, yesterday afternoon, The National reports.

Police recovered one home-made gun after confronting the armed criminals around 3.45pm yesterday.

The bodies of the two suspects were taken to the Port Moresby General Hospital mortuary, while the three injured suspects were admitted to the POMGH emergency ward for treatment.

POMGH yesterday confirmed receiving the bodies of the two suspects, said to be from Kairuku-Hiri and Goilala districts of Central province respectively.

Traffic along the Poreporena Freeway, Boroko Drive and several adjoining roads came to a standstill yesterday for almost an hour as residents and bystanders flocked to the scene to get a closer look, before an ambulance arrived and removed the two bodies and the injured suspects to POMGH between 5pm and 5.30pm.

Police said the suspects had held up staff of Seeto Kui Holdings at Gordon around 3.30pm and took off with the day’s takings from the two cash registers in a stolen white motor vehicle.

Unconfirmed reports said the suspects had carjacked the vehicle of a person attending the funeral of Lady Miaru Amet, wife of ousted Madang governor Sir Arnold Amet, at the nearby Sione Kami Memorial church before proceeding to Seeto Kui to commit the robbery.

Witnesses said the suspects were armed with pistols and a home-made gun when they held up staff at the cashier’s desk.

Workers and security guards at the store swiftly called police.

The police then chased the suspects along Geauta Drive, Gordon.

Police said as the suspects were speeding from the scene, their vehicle collided with an oncoming vehicle.

The suspects then got out from the vehicle and jumped into the Gordon roundabout drain, where police shot dead two of them while the other three sustained gunshot wounds.

NCD metropolitan commander Chief Supt Fred Yakasa last night confirmed that two suspects were dead and three others were admitted to POMGH.

Supt Yakasa said the suspects were in a stolen motor vehicle when they committed the robbery.

However, he said full details of the incident would be available today, including the suspects’ identities and how much money was stolen.

“The public is fed up with lawlessness in the city.

“Police will come down hard on them and that’s the kind of retaliation that happened today (yesterday),” Chief Supt Yakasa told The National last night.

“Enough is enough!” he said.

Supt Yakasa urged unemployed youths to join the team Yumi Lukautim Port Moresby to work and sustain their living in the city.

“Lay down your arms and you must seek those kinds of opportunities to make yourselves useful rather than getting involved in illegal activities,” he said.

Chief Supt Yakasa also urged all citizens to cooperate with police to curb escalating crime in the city.