Hi all,
Follow the link below and read about an article on Rountable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) published in Reportage Enviro.
It features what’s happening in the Northern Province of
Hi all,
Follow the link below and read about an article on Rountable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) published in Reportage Enviro.
It features what’s happening in the Northern Province of
By RUSSELL DEKA HARADA
ICT Manager
University of Goroka
Since the University of Goroka (UOG) was established in 1997, it has had 17 Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) volunteers, which included eight juniors and nine senior volunteers.
They have especially been involved in the ICT department, several technical fields of the Science Faculty and teaching Japanese language.
I was the first person to attach to UOG to set up the Library Automation System at the old library and this was the first point to set up the campus-wide computer networks (UOGNET) at UOG.
During my volunteer period from 1997 to 1999, the people of Goroka including UOG staff and students looked after me very well and I didn’t feel I had left my home country
My mother in
My father and I travelled to Goroka with her ashes to make her tomb and this was first time my father visited Goroka.
Japanese Government assisted with a lot of technical/ non-technical assistance through JICA to UOG after my volunteer period expired.
For example, they donated over K10 million worth of education improvement equipment including computers, science lab equipment, library bookshelves, etc, in 2005.
Since JICA started sending Japanese language teacher to UOG, there have been so many students and staff who could get into basic Japanese conversations like Kon-nichiwa (hello), Arigato (thank you) and Sayonara (see you).
In October 2000, one of my best rugby friends in Goroka passed away in the bush on the border of
Iufi-iufa village people and I hired a light aircraft and speed boat at
His family was very pleased and named me Russell after him.
After my volunteer period expired, I thought of ways to repay the village people and the people of Goroka for their kindness.
Since 2001, my family in
We have already invited three boys, including Paul David Barora, a younger brother of the late Russell to study Japanese culture from 2002-2005.
After he completed his studies in
He can speak Japanese very fluently.
In May 2006, I married a
Last year, we lost our three-month-old son to and unknown illness and we buried him next to my mother and late Russell’s tomb.
Since December 2007, I have been working at UOG as an ICT manager to develop the ICT facilities at UOG.
I have many connections with the people of
One of our new computer laboratories for post-graduate students is called KCG Lab.
The UOG is the only government institution for tertiary education in PNG, so I believe from the starting point here, we can provide a better education for future generations.
I am deeply concerned about education in PNG, which is why I became a board member of
Many Japanese friends have donated learning material include school textbooks, dictionaries, sports equipment and computers.
During World War II, many Japanese troops died in this beautiful country, PNG.
We cannot forget this sad contact between PNG and
I have already applied to become a citizen of PNG and I am awaiting response from the government.
My future dream is to set up a technical high school in Goroka and to invite Japanese technical people to come and teach Papua New Guineans.
I really want to become a bridge person between two countries at grassroots level.
Arigato (thank you).
From Tony Flynn
You may wish to look back through at viable nation states of the various sizes throughout history.
They all had some form of farm tenure that allowed the farmers to support the entire society, and the leaders recognised this in the way they ran the state.
The farmers may have been treated badly but they were the underpinning of the state.
Sustainable farming is built on a permanent and stable farming system.
From this base we may develop a stable government.
In PNG most of our politicians are joined at the hip in their greed for aid money and the money from external exploiters of PNG resources.
My point is that, until there is a big change in the farming system away from shifting agriculture, the whole country is based upon exploitation.
Developers exploit the minerals, fisheries and forests.
The PNG farmers exploit the soil; they exhaust the soil and move on to a fresh area.
This is the situation that has to change before our society changes.
By ROSELYN ELLISON
The training was held at the Chauka Conference room in Lorengau last week.
The aim of the training was to utilise local resources to produce stock feed as currently commercial stockfeed is very expensive.
Alex Botu, who facilitated during the training, said: “We have a lot of potential resources but it is just that farmers are lacking the technical knowledge on how to prepare them.”
Words and picture by ROSELYN ELLISON
Ms Popan said chicken meat was in very high demand in Manus.
"I can also see that it is a good business,” she says.
Ms Popan is selling her chickens for K30 each