Sunday, March 22, 2009

Bulolo MP commits K100, 000 for fight victims as Hidden Valley gold mine comes under tight security

Bulolo MP Sam Basil today (Sunday) committed K100, 000 from his district funds to provide immediate relief for victims of the two-day standoff between Biangai and Watut villagers last Friday and Saturday.

Mr Basil, flanked by Morobe Governor Luther Wenge, Menyamya MP Benjamin Philip and provincial administrator Patilias Gamato, made the commitment at Kaisanek village, which was burned to the ground by raiding Watut villagers last Friday, leaving 300-400 people homeless.

He said K40, 000 would go towards combating the existing law and order problem, while K60, 000 would help the affected villagers to rebuild their homes.

Mr Philip made a pledge of K5, 000 while the Morobe provincial government will have an urgent provincial executive council meeting today (Monday) to discuss its assistance.

Mr Basil urged Kaisanek and other Biangai villagers not to take the law into their own hands after being attacked by the Watuts.

Earlier, the group met with a group of Watuts at Wau, who said they would give their reasons for attacking the Biangai villagers within seven days.

The leaders late yesterday flew into Upper Watut, where tension was running high, and told the 1,000 or so people not to partake in any more violence as the matter was being looked into.

Meantime, the Hidden Valley gold mine is being guarded by a 40-man mobile squad from Port Moresby after being invaded by up to 2,000 Watut villagers last Saturday.

Provincial administrator Patilias Gamato said he and provincial police commander Peter Guiness saw 1,000-2,000 Watut people, mainly youths, converge on Hidden Valley last Saturday only to be turned back by the mobile squad.

“We brought in a police mobile squad from Port Moresby late on Saturday afternoon to guard the mine,” he said.

Mr Gamata said many long-running issues had contributed to the standoff, including a recent incident at the McAdam National Park, where a Watut man was allegedly killed by Biangais.

Just last week, up to 57 Biangai men were jailed, for allegedly fighting against the Watuts and killing the man.

 

Violence erupts in Wau, leaving three dead and Hidden Valley gold mine shut

Caption: Burnout remains of a house at Kaisenik village in Wau yesterday. Picture by SAM BASIL.

 

Violence erupted in Wau, Morobe province at the weekend, leaving three people dead, several injured, houses and property destroyed, and forcing the temporary shutdown of the Hidden Valley gold mine and the evacuation of employees.

The incident comes just before Hidden Valley is to pour its first gold and could have severe repercussions for Papua New Guinea on the international mining scene.

A long-standing land dispute between Biangai and Watut tribes over ownership of the 2076 hectare McAdam National Park between Wau and Bulolo came to a head last Friday and Saturday as the Watuts gathered in Wau in their hundreds and staged an early morning attack on the Biangai villages.

Lae Hospital’s emergency ward today (Sunday) confirmed receiving the bodies of two men and admitting two other with shotgun pellet wounds while several others were said to have been treated in Bulolo for pellet wounds.

Bulolo MP Sam Basil, Menyamya MP Benjamin Phililp, provincial administrator Patilias Gamato and police today (Sunday) held crisis meetings with the Watut people in Wau and later moved to Biangai to meet with the local villages.

The Biangai villages around Wau comprise of Wandumi, Kaisenik, Kwembu, Biaweng, Ilauru, Were Were and Winima while the Watut villages stretch all the way from Wau to the border with Menyamya,

A Watut man was allegedly killed recently by Biangais over a gold-bearing piece of land on the national park, which is said to have sparked the tension.

Commander of Bulolo-based police mobile squad (MS) 15 Michael Tilae said that last Friday, the Watuts gathered in Wau town, and in a well co-ordinated dawn raid, attacked Biangai villages all the way to Kaisinik.

He said a 15-year-old paralysed boy was burned alive in a house and an old man was murdered by the Watuts and other opportunists, who numbered more than 1,000.

Mr Tilae said that last Saturday, the Watuts gathered en masse and were trying to advance on Wandumi, when they were halted by police.

“We had reinforcements from Lae and they managed to contain the situation at Wandumi Bridge,” he said.

“The Wandumis shot five Watuts that morning, who were taken to hospital, including one dead.

“Shops are closed, people are not moving around.

“Things are very tense at the moment.”

Mr Tilae said other people took advantage of the situation to converge on the Hidden Valley gold mine.

“We have one mobile squad up at Hidden Valley,” he said.

“There’s a group of Watuts up there demanding things from the company.

“We don’t know what exactly they are demanding.”

A Morobe Mining Joint Venture spokesman said today: “It was just opportunists that were taking matters into their own hands.

“It’s mainly in Wau that the skirmishes are.

“There were those who were looking to get into the mine.

“We beefed up all our security to counter that.

“The situation got volatile last Friday and as a precautionary measure, we had to move the families that were situated in Wau to Lae.

“We’ve secured the entrance to the mine so that only absolutely-essential traffic comes inside the gate.

“I understand that because of the disturbance, and the possibility of opportunists, we’ve just suspended operations for the time being.

“That’s just a precautionary measure.”

 

Christine Anu sings in 'the Haus of Ruth'

During a brief, but moving visit to Haus Ruth during her visit to Papua New Guinea, Australian icon Christine Anu told women and children: "Say it is not ok – I do not appreciate being treated like that, you cannot touch me."
Ms Anu was talking about violence, an issue that affects many communities in PNG.
She said, many times children who witnessed violence in the home ended up being perpetrators of violence themselves but, "it's possible to break the cycle”.
"You can succeed in life. You can say 'this is not what I choose for myself, or my children'. But you must take the stand, and you must believe that you can."
Through its support to the Law & Justice Sector Program's Yumi Lukautim Mosbi, AusAID sponsors three rooms at Haus Ruth for women who experience domestic violence.

Haus Ruth was established in 2003 as a crisis centre for women and children, who can receive counselling during their stay, and get support if they decide to take their cases to court.


Today is World Water Day

INTERNATIONAL WORLD WATER DAY is marked annually on March 22 as a means of focusing attention on the importance of freshwater and advocating for the sustainable management of freshwater resources.

An international day to celebrate freshwater was recommended at the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED).

The United Nations General Assembly responded by designating March 22, 1993, as the first World Water Day.

Each year, World Water Day highlights a specific aspect of freshwater to bring focus on the fast depleting water resources.

This year’s global theme is ‘Transboundary Waters –shared water, shared opportunity’.
According to SOPAC –Pacific Islands Applied Geoscience Commission, this year’s Pacific World Water Day regional theme is: “Connecting the Pacific –Shared Waters Shared Opportunities”.

Nurturing the opportunities for cooperation in transboundary water management can help build mutual respect, understanding and trust among countries and promote peace, security and sustainable economic growth.

Transboundary more specifically means waters that cross borders.

This can not only mean across nations but also across our own provincial and local borders like the mighty Fly River and the Sepik River as well as organisation responsibilities.

With shared water and opportunity, comes a shared responsibility; meaning we all have a part to play to ensure future generation of Papua New Guineans have access to clean water and safe sanitation services.

These include national and provincial governments, local level governments, public and private users and the public at large.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Breaking news! Fighting in Wau and Hidden Valley grinds to a halt

Fighting between rival Watut and Biangai village in Wau, Morobe province, Papua New Guinea, since yesterday (Friday) has seen a number of people killed, several injured and housing and other property destroyed.

The Hidden Valley gold mine has also grinded to a halt and its workers evacuated as Watut villagers went to the mine site.

Details are still sketchy, however, Bulolo Mobile 15 police commander Michael Tilae confirmed today that two villagers from Biangai had been killed and five men from Watut were nursing gun wounds.

Bulolo MP Sam Basil and Assistant Police Commissioner Giossi Labi are on their way to Wau to meet with leaders of the warring factions.

 

 

Friday, March 20, 2009

Of doles and joblessness in Papua New Guinea

By ALFREDO P HERNANDEZ of LETTERS FROM PORT MORESBY

 

 ONCE AGAIN, Papua New Guinea is on the threshold of another massive bonanza from one of its natural resources – the rich liquefied natural gas (LNG) deposits which will go on commercial production very soon.

And because of this, a ranking government official was already savoring a scenario in which about three million of the country’s jobless out of the 6.2 million people would be living on the dole in the future, according to a news report yesterday.

However, in today’s edition of The National which reported the story, Minister for Petroleum and Energy William Duma said he has been misquoted by the reporter who was present, as he was speaking to his constituents in Mt Hagen in a dialect not familiar with many Papua New Guineans, including the reporter.

Anyway, anybody who had read yesterday’s report would easily deduce that Duma was anchoring his best hopes on the US$4 billion annual tax revenue that the PNG government would earn from the soon-to-start LNG project located just outside of Port Moresby.

Duma approved the US$7 billion LNG project last May so that the country would earn more revenue for the improvement of the country’s basic services like schools, roads, bridges, hospitals, health care clinics, police services and police housing – things most of the citizens have been deprived of since the country gained independence in September 1975.

The LNG deposit is said to be “the biggest natural gas find of the century anywhere in the Southern Hemisphere or the Asia-Pacific at least for the next 20 years”, according to InterOil Corp, which is sharing ownership with ExxonMobil (Esso Highlands) as operator, Nippon Oil, Santos, AGL and Mineral Resources Development Corp, a government entity.

“Our people should be on the dole,” advocated Duma, who is projecting that each of the jobless three million Papua New Guineans could receive from 100 kina (US$34.40) to K200 (US$68.80) every two weeks (fortnight) in the future, media reports quoted him as saying.

So it goes without saying that if three million people were paid K100 each a fortnight, the amount would be K300 million (K103.2 million) every two weeks or K7.8 billion (US$2.7 billion) a year. This year, the government budget amounted only to K9 billion (US$3 billion).

Obviously, it was the best news ever received by a huge crowd in Mt Hagen, the country’s third rural city where Duma presented his dole-out scenario. It could be assumed that most of those present were jobless and were just relying on their food gardens for daily survival.

The dictionary defines dole as an unemployment benefit paid to jobless citizens by rich and industrialized nations (like Australia) that enjoy stable economies.

Despite its massive natural resources – oil, copper, nickel, gold, timber, tuna, coffee and cocoa, among others – whose respective exploitation/commercial development is now delivering hefty revenues to the government coffers (except for the nickel project which is yet to start operation), PNG has remained on the list of United Nation Human Development Index (HDI) as one of the poorest in the world.

It has been projected that once in full operation, the LNG project could boost the government’s annual budget to K21 billion (US$7.22 billion) from the current year’s budget of only K9 billion; it could take care of a number of infrastructure development and livelihood-generating activities, especially for the rural people.

More than 85% of the citizens who are based in the rural areas live in hand-to-mouth existence as there is not much sustainable farm-based livelihood for most of them. Since most of them don’t have employable skills, they could not find employment in the growing number of industries and businesses particularly in Port Moresby, now a burgeoning city of close to half-million people. So far, there are only 300,000 to 500,000 Papua New Guineans who are gainfully employed.

Although PNG began enjoying economic boom seven years ago, the benefits are just reaching the grassroots in trickle, one reason the influx of rural people into the urban centers like Port Moresby has remained unabated.

Frustrated of being unable to land a sustainable job, a number of them have taken the path of lawlessness, thus giving the city government and the police hierarchy unwanted headaches and the usual day-to-day threats on the lives of city residents, both locals and expatriates.

The rural people could not understand why, despite government’s boasting of hefty annual revenues for its coffers courtesy of the country’s natural wealth and increased annual budget, the things that would give them economic independence – jobs -- have remained elusive.

One perception that continues to persist until now is that corruption is rife in high places of the government, the main culprit why a big portion of public funds for many rural developments could vanish in thin air even before they could reach the intended beneficiaries.

Which is why the country’s attorney-general and justice minister, Dr Allan Marat, has accused his colleagues in government of being “corrupt”.

To his great awe, he learned of how the culprits are siphoning off government funds intended for rural development, and he did not mince words when he told in this week’s session at Parliament how it was being done.

Dr Marat has alleged that some members of Parliament have been setting up companies that would become halfway homes for the huge funds allocated to them, as in pork barrel, to be used in funding rural projects that would help alleviate the lives of their constituents.

He declared: “You have to be serious about corruption in your districts, in your provinces; some of us leaders are guilty of corruption, and we have set up our own personal companies in our districts and provinces to eat up all the funds that are meant for development.”

“This is a clear example of what we leaders sitting here in this very parliament have been doing.”

While Duma is seeing a future where hundred thousands of Papua New Guineans are living off public money in the form of doles, courtesy of politicians who would be enacting a law to make this a reality, the expatriate community in Port Moresby is also entertaining another scenario:

Once the LNG project starts delivering the moolah in 2012, the time when it would begin commercial operation, expect the influx of more foreigners – individuals and multinational companies -- into the country to partake of the country’s windfall.

Many of them would come in illegally, using fake visas, or by overstaying their travel visa, or by crossing the border between Irian Jaya province in Indonesia and PNG.

There’s no doubt that the bubble of corruption would continue to swell because those with easy access to development funds, which could now triple in amount owing to the influx of more dollar revenue from LNG export, would likewise find new ways to skim the milk for their own cups.

And more and more Papua New Guineans – they include would-be-politicians and practicing politicians -- would do everything to become Members of Parliament, because once they get there, they are considered “made” – as long as they know what party to stick it out with. The right party could always lead them to the path of gold, as many MPs have discovered for themselves.

In some ways, the dole-out system may work as a palliative to relieve the day-to-day crunching economic burdens of most of the people, both in the rural areas and urban centers.

But this is also a sure way to encourage laziness and dependency among Papua New Guineans who, most of them if not all, have the penchant for the easy way out. It is a culture nurtured by the “wantok” system (“wantok” loosely means “one dialect”) in which the lone gainfully employed member of a family suffers the misfortune of feeding an entire, easy-going extended family.

 

Email the writer: jarahdz500@online.net.pg

alfredophernandez@thenational.com.pg

 

A tribute to my late wife Hula

Hula...the apple of my eye

At our house in Goroka in 1999
Hula and kids enjoying the tranquility of the Port Moresby botanical gardens


A year ago, on Easter Sunday, March 23, 2008, my dear wife Hula passed away in Daru, Western province, leaving me and our four young children all alone. This is my tribute to Hula, which was first published last year. I miss her so much...

In life, my wife, Hula, often talked about the natural Eden-like beauty of her remote Iruupi village in the Western province, just across the Torres Strait from Australia.
We had talked many times about visiting Iruupi during our 10 years together, however, this was not to be.
My dear wife told me many-a-time of the natural beauty of Iruupi – a virtual Garden of Eden - with its waterways, barramundi, prawns, deer, wild pig, wallaby, cassowaries, taro, bananas, greens, melons, pineapple and other fruits.
She implored me to go and write a feature article of the place and take pictures of its breathtaking scenery.
Sadly, this would never be, as my beloved wife passed away so suddenly and tragically at Daru hospital on Easter Sunday, March 23, 2008, so far away from me and our four young children Malum Jr (7), Gedi (6), Moasing (3), and baby Keith (9 months) in Port Moresby.
Hula had been suffering from suspected post-natal complications following the birth of Keith last June.
She visited Iruupi to be with family, however, in the process, fell ill and was admitted to Daru hospital on Easter Saturday, but died the next day, leaving behind a broken-hearted husband and four young children.
Memories of another day came swirling in my mind as I struggled to come to terms with the reality that Hula, who was only 31 years of age, would never grow old with me and watch our four wonderful young children grow up.
My thoughts went back to 1998 in Lae, when I met the most-beautiful woman I had ever seen, and fell head-over-heels in love with her.
Hula, who was then living in Australia with her uncle and auntie, was in Lae for holiday when I first courted her and would not take ‘no’ for an answer.
We started dating, and our love blossomed, to the point that she left for Australia with the promise that she would be back to live with me as my wife.
Towards the end of 1998, I secured a job with the Coffee Industry Corporation in Goroka, and Hula joined me in early 1999.
We had a big three-bedroom house at the Rotary Park in West Goroka, with a big backyard and garden, and life was a dream to a young couple like us.
We’d roll on the grass like children, grow our own vegetables, take long walks along the streets of Goroka, go to market, have long lunches at the Bird of Paradise Hotel followed by a dip in the pool, lie in the park at the airport watching planes land, and catch a PMV or take a long drive to Lae as I pointed out places of interest to Hula.
Yes, indeed, life was a wonderful, carefree dream for us star-crossed lovers.
We were active members of the St John’s Lutheran Church at West Goroka, with Hula being a member of the church choir, and I have so many fond memories of watching her practice and then walking back home with our hands around each other on those cold Goroka nights.
Hula’s radiant personality and friendliness won us so many friends among the people of Goroka.
In early 2000, she became pregnant, and on Saturday, November 4, 2000, I held her at the Goroka Base Hospital and cried after she gave birth to our first son Malum Jr.
We regaled in the joy of becoming parents and enjoyed every minute of Jr growing up at our new home at North Goroka.
Our second son, Gedi, was also born in Goroka on February 13, 2002.
The laid-back lifestyle of Goroka, however, was to end later in 2002 when the CIC underwent a major retrenchment exercise in which about 75% of its staff, including me, was laid off.
We moved to the big smoke of Port Moresby, and although life was good, we never quite got to enjoy the privacy and happiness we once had in Goroka.
Hula, being the good wife that she was, stuck with me through thick and thin.
We were blessed with a third child, a girl named Moasing after my mother, in August 2004 and she brought so much joy to our hearts.
Keith came along in June 2007 to complete our hat-trick of boys and complete our basketball team.
At the end of 2007, when my three-year contract was up, I decided – after consultation with Hula – to move on to The National where we both believed I could contribute more to the country.
To mark the occasion, we family celebrated by booking a room at the Holiday Inn, where we ate and drank as much as we wanted to.
At the beginning of this year, Hula started complaining of burning sensations in her body, which doctors said was heartburn brought about by child birth.
She was put on medication, however, the sensations continued, by which time Hula insisted that she go home to her village in Iruupi.
I tried to stop her, as she was due for an internal scan and x-ray, however, she would not be moved and flew to Daru, with a relative of hers as babysitter to take care of our children in Port Moresby.
I would never see her alive again.
On Easter Monday, my daughter Moasing and I traveled to Daru with Hula’s coffin, helped to dress her up, I kissed her for the last time, and it was homeward bound on the dinghy hearse for Iruupi.
I held Moasing and cried all the way from Daru Island to Iruupi on the mainland, as all those charming places Hula had told me so many times about, came into view.
We buried her the next morning, next to her beloved father, amidst a throng of mourners.
Before I very reluctantly let her off to Daru, Hula held me, and told me: “Darling, I love you very much.
“ If I do not come back, I want you to take the children to Church every Sunday, and to make sure that they all go to university, because I never went to university.”
I know Hula is in God’s arms, away from all the evil of this earth, and will do everything I can to honour her memory.
Minji, Mamne, Ato!