From Paul Oates in
Sunday, May 17, 2009
Boonah Show 16th May 2009 ( Chapter 1)
From Paul Oates in
We have been very busy with the annual Boonah Show and here are a few pictures from yesterday. The rest are in Ch 2.
Saturday, May 16, 2009
Pacific Storms Art Exhibition June 3-July 12, 2009
Artwork by Mairi Feeger featuring various social ills such as sorcery, violence and alcohol. It will go on show in BundabergPacific Storms explores the spirit, life, and challenges of the contemporary Pacific peoples. Pacific Islanders are proud of their resources, ocean, land, environment, culture, arts, languages and their traditional knowledge.
The Pacific remains one of the few regions in the world where you can find many hundreds of languages spoken, diverse cultures and some of the most vulnerable communities on the globe.
Being rich in both tangible and intangible heritage provides Pacific people with an endless source for artistic expression.
The unique art forms are evidenced in museum and gallery collections all over the world, collected over centuries.
It is from this valuable artistic source that a selection of well-known and emerging artists across nine countries was challenged to use their heritage to create a contemporary Pacific expression.
In their interpretation of who they are and how they feel about their societies, these new works were developed. In Pacific Storms, the challenge was to draw away from mainstream society’s categories and stereotypes of what is Pacific art and who Pacific people are, to explore new aesthetics.
Pacific Storms is also a platform of contemporary creativity which integrates and addresses the real issues of the modern Pacific society.
The Pacific region is marked by exceptional cultural and biological diversity within spectacular physical landscapes; thus each has their own unique way of building resilience to climate change, globalisation, security and civil unrest, HIV-AIDS and many other social issues.
These expressions are exhibited in hope that wider audiences understand the complex issues through the diversity of art across the Pacific.
In addition, staging Pacific Storms in the Bundaberg Regional Art Gallery links contemporary Pacific expression to the region’s significant history through the Australian sugar industry.
Australia’s sugar industry was founded on the sweat of men and women, some kidnapped and all enticed from more than eighty Melanesian islands including the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, the Loyalty Islands of New Caledonia, and to a lesser extent, the eastern archipelagoes of Papua New Guinea, and Tuvalu and Kiritabati.
Today’s Australian South Sea Islanders are descended from indentured labourers in the nineteenth century.
In the nineteenth century this form of human trafficking was historically known as ‘Blackbirding’ and the individuals were called ‘Kanakas’.
There were about 50,000 Islanders and 62,000 indenture contracts.
Under the White Australian Policy, between 1901 and 1908 Australia ended this migration and deported most of those remaining.
Some were exempted from repatriation, and along with a number of others who escaped deportation, about 2,000 remained in Australia to form the basis of what is today Australia’s largest non-indigenous black ethnic group.
The question of how many Islanders were illegally recruited and how many chose to come remains controversial.
Bundaberg is a major centre for Australian South Sea Islanders.
Pacific Storms re-unites these communities with their ‘wantoks’ (relatives and friends) through a collaborative community engagement at the Bundaberg Regional Art Gallery.
Friday, May 15, 2009
ABAC steps up efforts to uphold anti-protectionism commitments
Issued by the APEC Business Advisory Council (ABAC)
Bandar Seri Bangawan,
At their second meeting in
“While applauding the G20 Leaders’ pledge to promote trade and reject protectionism, we are greatly concerned that more and more trade-restrictive measures are being put in place and that protectionism seems to be on the rise. We asked Leaders to abide with their commitment not to introduce any new barriers to trade in response to the crisis even if these appear to be WTO-consistent. This is the time for APEC to show its leadership and to reaffirm the APEC spirit of free and open trade and investment,” said Mr. Teng Theng Dar, the ABAC Chair.
The business leaders also expressed their frustration that the Doha Round remains uncompleted after eight years of negotiations and ask Leaders to push the WTO to set a deadline for the conclusion of the Round in early 2010.
In a separate communication to APEC Ministers Responsible for Trade, ABAC has set out its views and recommendations related to APEC’s agenda: regional economic integration, strengthening capacity building, sustainable development and enhancing connectivity in the region.
An APEC SME Summit “SMEs in a Turbulent Global Economy: Crisis, Challenges and Opportunities” was held on 12 May, and the three more that will be organised by ABAC in 2009 underline the importance ABAC attaches to the growth of small and medium enterprises (SME) in the region .
ABAC brings together up to three business leaders from each of APEC’s 21 economies. They provide APEC Leaders with business sector priorities and concerns.
The ABAC members met for the second time in 2009 on May 12-15 in Brunei Darussalam.
For more information, contact:
Mr. Martin Yuoon, ABAC Executive Director 2009 at (65) 6827-6886 or mkhyuoon@sbf.org.sg
Mr. Antonio Basilio, ABAC Secretariat at (63 2) 845-4564 or abacsec@pfgc.ph
Ms. Tran Bao Ngoc, APEC Secretariat at (65) 6891 9616 or tbn@apec.org
Carolyn D. Williams
Media Manager, APEC
35 Heng Mui Keng Terrace /
D: (65) 6891 9671 / M: (65) 9617 7316 / F: (65) 6891 9600
What goes round comes round
Betha Somare explains her father and brother's purchase of property in Australia
This article was first posted on November 14, 2008, however, because of the interest in it, I have decided to repost...Malum
Hi people.
It maybe a sad fact but it is a fact anyway that apart from the fortunate Papua New Guineans that have access to the internet there are scores of Papua New Guineans out there that trust my family.
This is because in all the years of my father’s politics he has not dipped into public coffers to fund family investments.
There are many facts out there that confirm my assertion and if he had, I believe he would not have lasted these 40 years.
In the same way that all my siblings were educated in
I cannot speak for my nieces and nephews but I hope that they will also do the same.
If you are interested in checking where my father got his money to get a place close to his grandchildren, please call the National Parliament, Retirement Benefit Funds office and I am sure Graham Whitchurch can help you.
My brother has also explained that he sold his house to get a loan in the interest of his children.
That is his personal choice.
We will always be a public family whether we want to be or not.
I urge you to begin from the premise that not everybody is a thief that is in government.

































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