Wednesday, July 07, 2010

Is China sending convicts to Papua New Guinea? Almost certainly!

From Japan Times Online

 

Monday, July 5, 2010


China now exports its convicts

 

By BRAHMA CHELLANEY

 

Relieving pressure on overcrowded national prisons by employing convicts as laborers at Chinese-run projects in the developing world is a novel strategy China has adopted — an approach that is certain to create new backlashes against Chinese businesses overseas, besides highlighting the country's egregious human-rights record.

In addition to being the world's biggest executioner, China has one of the largest prison populations in the world.

 The 2009 "World Prison Population List" compiled by the International Center for Prison Studies at King's College, London, put the total number of inmates in Chinese jails at 1.57 million.

China has evolved in important ways as a result of its economic "opening," with the new social pluralism prompting the state to cut back on totalitarian practices. Yet, with its Soviet-style autocratic structure intact, there is little space for political pluralism. Those who challenge government policies or practices or stage demonstrations against official highhandedness risk long imprisonment.

The forced dispatch of prisoners to work on overseas infrastructure projects raises new issues regarding China's human-rights record.

Thousands of Chinese convicts, for example, have been pressed into service in projects by state-run Chinese companies in Sri Lanka, a strategically important country for China, which is seeking a role in the Indian Ocean. Such is Sri Lanka's vantage location that it sits astride vital sea lanes of communication. China — in return for being allowed to make strategic inroads — provided Sri Lanka offensive weapon systems that helped end its long civil war. Now, Beijing is being rewarded with port-building, railroad and other infrastructure projects.

Chinese convicts also have been taken to a microstate in the Indian Ocean, the Maldives, where the Chinese government is building 4,000 houses on several different islands as a government-to- government "gift" to win influence there. So far, however, Beijing has failed to persuade the Maldivian president to lease it one of the 700 uninhabited Maldivian islands for setting up a small base for its navy.

The Chinese practice in overseas projects, including in Africa, is to keep the number of local workers to the minimum and to bring in much of the workforce from China. The novel twist is that some batches of laborers now being brought in are made up of convicts "freed" on parole for project-related overseas work.

The convict laborers, like the rest of the Chinese workforce, are housed near the project site. The Chinese logic is that if any convict worker escaped, it would be easy to find the runaway in an alien setting.

Chinese firms actually bring in more than just convict laborers and other workers at overseas projects. To help boost Chinese exports, they get all equipment, steel, cement and other construction material from China.

Such practices run counter to the Chinese commerce ministry's August 2006 regulations — promulgated in response to the backlash against Chinese businesses in Zambia following the death of 51 Zambian workers in an explosion at a Chinese-owned copper mine — that called for "localization," including hiring local workers, respecting local customs and adhering to safety norms.

Chinese domestic regulations, however, are sometimes promulgated to blunt external criticism. They are thus seldom enforced, except when a case attracts international attention.

Despite the State Council's 2006 nine good-conduct directives to Chinese companies engaged in overseas operations, the government and corporate priority still is to aggressively boost exports, even if such a push engenders environmental and social costs for local communities abroad. Indeed, as part of the government's "going global" policy, Chinese companies are offered major incentives and rewards for bagging overseas contracts and boosting exports.

The use of convict laborers adds a disturbing new dimension to the "going global" strategy, which was first unveiled in 2001.

As it is, some Chinese projects, especially dam-building schemes, have been embroiled in several countries in disputes with local communities. The pressing of Chinese prisoners into service will create new rifts.

Chinese dam-building projects, for example, have been controversial with local communities in Botswana, Burma, Ghana, Pakistan and Sudan, among others. In Sudan, security forces killed three people and wounded several others in April 2006 to scatter demonstrators protesting the 9.2-km-long Merowe High Dam, while a similar protest against another Chinese dam-building project in that impoverished country, at Kajbar, left four people dead in June 2007.

Last April, several small bombs went off at the site of Burma's Myitsone Dam, whose construction by a Chinese company in the insurgency-torn, northernmost Kachin state is displacing thousands of subsistence farmers and fishermen by flooding a wide swath of land. Located at the confluence of the N'Mai and Mali rivers, the Myitsone Dam is China's project for China, with the local communities saddled with social and environmental costs as the scheme's entire generation of 3,200 megawatts of hydropower is earmarked for export.

Chinese companies also have been erecting dams in an internationally disputed area like the Pakistan-held part of Kashmir, drawing protests from India as well as from local communities that view the projects, including the mammoth 7,000-megawatt Bunji Dam, as potentially benefiting only the dominant Pakistani province of Punjab, located downstream.

China is not only the world leader in building dams at home, but also the top dam exporter. In fact, it has no qualms about building dams in contested territories, or in areas torn by ethnic separatism, or in other human rights-abusing countries.

China's declaratory policy of "noninterference in domestic affairs" serves as a virtual license to pursue projects that benefit governments known to repress their citizens. For example, in Sudan, where China has emerged as the principal backer of a regime accused of committing genocide in the arid western region of Darfur, 13 of the 15 largest foreign companies operating are Chinese, with Beijing making huge investments in the Sudanese economy — from hydropower to oil. It also has sold hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of weapons, including tanks and fighter-jets, to help prop up President Omar Hassan Ahmed Bashir, wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes in Darfur.

Chinese companies on their own cannot get prisoners released in the thousands, let alone secure passports and exit permits for them. It is obvious that the controversial practice of making use of convicts overseas has been initiated at the instance of the Chinese government.

Until Beijing's treatment of its own citizens and those of other countries is guided by respect for basic human rights and the rule of law, it is doubtful that China will command respect on the world stage.

Brahma Chellaney is the author of the international best-seller, "Asian Juggernaut" (HarperCollins, New York, 2010).

Backyard gardening on Manus

ROSELYN ELLISON

                                                                             

Nancy Niakakes Kusunan, from Pokali Island, Manus province, showing the fresh and juicy water melon she harvested from her backyard last Saturday morning.

It takes three minutes to travel to the main Mbuke Island by dinghy.-Nationalpic by ROSELYN ELLISON

Tax crackdown

Company faces K20mil fine in customs probe

 

FOREIGN companies operating in the country that have evaded paying customs tax can be expected to be exposed and prosecuted, The National reports.

A crackdown is underway by the PNG Customs Services and already one oil company has been told it owes the state K20 million, while a mining company was forced to pay more than K1.5 million recently.

If successful, the state can expect something of a windfall in revenue from the Customs Services by the end of the year.

The oil industry company, which has not been named at this stage of its investigations, has been slapped with a bill of K20 million in outstanding duties to be settled within a deadline or face prosecution, Customs boss Gary Juffa said yesterday.

The company has also been advised to produce documents, which the company refused saying its records were kept offshore.

In a stern warning to corporate giants operating in PNG, Juffa said no one was above the law and all efforts were being made by Customs to ensure revenue due to the state of PNG and its people were paid up.

Juffa said the company was operating in PNG for the last decade and had substantial investments in PNG and abroad.

“If the company does not pay up, it faces the consequences which include refusal by Customs to clear its vessels or imports, or have its bank account garnisheed.

“If the ordinary Papua New Guinean is required to pay his taxes and duties every time he purchases a good or a service or imports or exports, then I don’t see why companies which have the means to and are obliged by law to pay their duties, avoid doing so,”  Juffa said.

The oil industry company has told Juffa it would take time to bring their documents into PNG for scrutiny.

Under Customs laws, they were required to ensure they hold all documents in relation to their business in PNG for five years.

Meanwhile, Simberi gold mine has been fined more than K700,000 for alleged failure to declare goods and evasion of customs duty.

A further K700,000 in import duty was also collected for a total of more than K1.5 million.

“The company had brought in machinery for its mine in New Ireland without declaring and paying the necessary duty until they were caught.

“Many companies in PNG that operate and reap significant profits ignore paying their duties and behave with contempt for PNG laws and its people.

“We welcome them with open arms and yet they deem it their right to ignore our laws.

“Multinational companies in PNG that import are coming under the spotlight of Customs and where they are found to have evaded duties due to the state, they will pay with heavy penalties,” Juffa said.

He also said an expatriate working at the Mineral Resources Authority, who attempted to interfere with Customs was under investigations, and could be prosecuted.

“He is employed by the state and is to maintain state’s interests and the interests of the people of PNG and not lobby for companies that err and fail to respect our laws,” Juffa said.

Stop being overly generous: Bakani

THE country’s chief banker has warned the national government against making excessive commitments with landowners and to discourage the free handout mentality, The National reports.

Bank of Papua New Guinea governor Loi Bakani also warned yesterday that the government’s previous unsettled commitments were likely to prompt a supplementary budget this year due to the exerted pressure by landowners, especially the liquefied natural gas project area landowners.

Bakani was concerned this might lead to an increase in the government’s total debt.

His warning was contained in the central bank’s Quarterly Economic Bulletin for the March quarter released yesterday.

Bakani said: “While high mineral export prices will lead to higher taxes for the government, the unsettled commitments to various landowners have exerted pressure on the 2010 budget.

“If the revenue is not sufficient to meet these outstanding commitments, the government will have to introduce a supplementary budget with new financing plans.

“The government, through departments that are directly involved in the LNG project, should refrain from making excessive commitments with landowners and avoid free handout mentality,” he said.

Last month, the government moved for a supplementary budget to accommodate landowner commitments but it was not clear whether the budget would be introduced in this month’s Parliament sitting.

Southern Highlands Governor Anderson Agiru said last month there was more than K1.3 billion in claims from landowners for various commitments, including the K120 million seed capital and other memorandum of agreements commitments.

Meanwhile, JP Karai Landowners Association from petroleum development licence (PDL) 1 has welcomed the change in bringing the K60 million seed capital to the project sites for payment.

JPKLA general secretary Thomas Hengebe said:  “We, the majority landowners at home, support the move by Agiru because we fear our money might disappear in Port Moresby into the hands of unidentified city-based landowners.”

 

 

Second chance at life

FOUR-year-old Bainam Palo has survived her second heart operation, this time under the operation open heart (OOH) involving Australian doctors and nurses and their PNG colleagues, The National reports.

Palo, of mixed Morobe and Goroka parentage, was first wheeled into the operating theatre for a closed heart surgery last year.

However, when her condition did not improve, further tests revealed that she had a hole in her heart that needed open surgery.

Doctors at the Goroka Base Hospital had her listed as a candidate for this year’s OOH and, hence, Palo’s second surgery which went smoothly to the relief of her mother, Nafil Palo.

She said her daughter was diagnosed as having a heart defect at two years of age.

“I thought my daughter would die. She had recurring shortness of breath and, sometimes, seizures; and she would collapse. She could fall asleep all day from 8am to 7pm faced down and not wanting to be moved around,” mum Nafil said.

Mother and daughter first made the trip to Port Moresby in 2008, but were referred to surgery last year.

“We returned last year and my daughter had a closed heart operation because of a lack of oxygen circulating in her body. After careful examination, she was confirmed to have a hole in her heart,” Nafil said.

“The feeling of pain when your child is going through such a condition is very painful.

“I am thankful to God for giving my child another chance at life and for blessing the medical staff at PMGH with lovely hands to carry out this extraordinary work,” she said.

Meanwhile, Australian High Commissioner Ian Kemish and his family visited PMGH yesterday.

The family’s visit was a morale booster for the Australian volunteer doctors and nurses and a clear indication of the Australian government’s support and commitment for the OOH programme in PNG.

Kemish said OOH was supported by the Australian government through AusAID’s PNG health programme which provided about A$100,000 per year since 2002. To date, this amounts A$820,000, which is inclusive of this year’s A$140,000.

The family toured the two operating theatres – Kangaroo and Kumul – the emergency ward and the intensive care unit.

They were accompanied by Prof Nakapi Tefuarani, OOH coordinator Russell Lee and board member of the Sir Buri Kidu Heart Foundation Marilyn Ward.

The Australian doctors and nurses, the largest OOH contingent so far, arrived last Thursday and will leave for home on Sunday.

The team included 53 volunteers ranging from surgeons to scrub nurses from hospitals in Alice Springs, Newcastle, Brisbane and Sydney

Officials said 24 OOH patients had gone through surgery and were recovering at the PMGH.

Tuesday, July 06, 2010

Manus plants new coconuts


By SOLDIER BURUKA of DAL

Coconut is the tree of life for rural communities in the coastal areas of Papua New Guinea.
 It provides for the people's livelihood as well as cash income and is a major export earner for the country.
 In some areas, especially the island communities, coconut trees are dying out and need to be replanted.
On M'buke Island on the south coast of Manus, the community has rallied together and sought technical assistance to carry out replanting and revitalising the coconut industry. 
But their main priority is to ensure that coconut continues to provide for their sustenance on a daily basis.
In these photos, Department of Agriculture and Livestock regional director for Mamose, Masayan Moat, does the honor to replant a young coconut plant to signal the start of the replanting exercise.
DAL in collaboration with the Manus provincial administration is embarking on a programme to do replanting and redevelop the coconut industry on the island and other communities.

Politics Down Under

From JOHN PASQUARELLI

Malcolm Turnbull has written a soppy,  silly piece about Rudd's execution in the SMH – will he be just as soppy about John Howard – losing his seat of Bennelong and now not even making the cut for his seat on the international cricket board – or whatever it is!

Howard has been done over by racist bongo bongo African despots and Asians – for Asians read Indians and Pakis(oops) – let's call a spade a spade - I can't remember any tall,  ferocious real Asians belting down sound-barrier breaking body-liners at Old Trafford! 

Fancy a murderous mongrel like Mugabe being listened to. 

Cricket has now been captured by Indian and Pakistanian racists who will do anything for dollars.

Howard should have been more perceptive and not put up his hand in the first place but his love of cricket overcame his decision making. 

Where to now? 

We should fight back and only play cricket with England,  New Zealand and South Africa(?) but political correctness and gutlessness will win the day for sure. 

How many of our MPs will support Howard and attack the disgraceful racism that has been directed at him? 

The racist bastards didn't even have the decency to cast a vote!