Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Bee farmers seek technical assistance

Officers from DAL, LDC and EHP administration conducting a honey bee field survey in the Daulo district, EHP.   

 

By BUSISI SIWAKA of DAL

 

Many farmers in the highlands region are showing interest in beekeeping but they need more technical assistance.

Elias Kopun, from Banz in the Western Highlands province, is one such farmer who is very keen in honey bee industry.

Kopun travelled all the way by PMV bus to the Department of Agriculture and Livestock regional office in Goroka to seek advice.

He believes that honey bee is a viable industry because there is a fixed market available within the country and overseas as well.

However, DAL and relevant agencies must provide more farmer training, regular extension services, improve transportation and other services.

“Beekeeping is a profitable and unique industry,” Kopun said.

“You’ve got to be skilled – it’s not like running a trade store business.

 Bees are insects and you have to take extra care in management practices and it will make money for you.”

Kopun said he had engaged a consultant and was putting together a proposal to seek funding assistance from the government to develop a beekeeping project.

Apiculture (honey bee) industry in PNG has great potential to improve the welfare and livelihood of the rural communities and contribute to the economy.

However, government agencies like DAL and Livestock Development Corporation must provide more funding and resources to promote beekeeping activities in the rural areas.

DAL apiculture programme manager based in Goroka, Joachim Waugla, confirmed that there was potential for the industry and more farmers were showing interest in beekeeping.

PNG only produces 50 tonnes of honey but the demand exceeds 200 tonnes.

The current price is around K10 per kg which is very attractive.

Waugla said there was need to promote and conduct awareness “but we need transport for mobility to carry out extension services throughout the region”.

“DAL regional office assists bee farmers by providing training and advisory services and the interest amongst farmers is growing.

“More and more farmers are coming to our office for advice and assistance. We should be going out to them more often not them coming to us.”

Waugla suggested that DAL should be solely responsible for the honey bee industry and not any other agencies which have been allocated funding for this activity. 

He added surveys had been carried out and there was data available which provided useful information for planning and development of the industry.

Papua New Guinea women farmers invited to Australia

 Members of Australian Women in Agriculture with Markham PM Koni Iguan and Maria Linibi at Mutzing in 2007

 

By SENIORL ANZU of NARI

 

Rural women farmers in Papua New Guinea have been invited to Darwin in Australia in September to attend important events organised by Australian counterparts on promoting rural industries.

President of the PNG Women in Agriculture Development Foundation (PNGWiADF), Maria Linibi, called on registered members of her organisation to prepare to travel down south as there would be a lot of opportunities for information sharing, training and networking with members of the Australian Women in Agriculture (AWiA).

 Linibi said AWiA had officially invited members of the PNGWiADF to participate in the joint national conference and annual general meeting of AWiA and Women’s Industry Network Seafood Community which will take place during September 10-12 in Darwin.

The three-day event will focus on promoting and advancing the interests of rural, remote and regional women in agriculture, forestry and fisheries.

Among the highlights will be exhibitions of rare fruits, forestry, crocodiles, barramundi, Thai market gardens, live cattle exports, fish markets and displays of indigenous culture and agricultural produce.

Participants will also attend training, workshops, meetings, site tours and other functions.

Those interested can contact Linibi on mobile (675) 72765001 and email maria.linibi@nari.org.pg or Roselyn Winston on (675) 72867431 and roselyn.winston@nari.org.pg.

OLIPPAC ruling is exemplary and most welcomed edict

From JAMES WANJIK

 

The Supreme Court ruling on the Organic Law on the Integrity of Political Parties and Candidates (OLIPPAC) is very exemplary and most welcomed.

In a unanimous decision of the Supreme Court, leaders have been reminded of their duties as leaders.

Leaders must and should always uphold the Constitution of Papua New Guinea.

As the leaders walk into the Chamber of Parliament they are free to exercise conscience.

They are to act in the best interest of the people.

Putting up legal obstacles to leaders will not be tolerated by the Supreme Court any more.

Even no quasi-criminal investigating authority can investigate leaders and hold leaders at ransom.

Leaders must take time to study the judgment of our own judges.

Till leaders do so they risk being misled by lawyers and emotional leaders.

At the gist of the ruling is leaders' liberty to freely represent people of PNG.

 Any law to restrict liberty of leaders will not be tolerated.

National Alliance Party is fortunate to have formed the government on the basis of OLIPPAC in 2002.

Somare-Polye Government survived full five years.

Very law that gave tenure to the Somare-Polye Government has been nullified.

Villain in the piece is a Trojan horse.

It is the Mineral Resources Authority (MRA).

 It was created by World Bank and implemented on the insistence of the European Union.

In 2007 the Somare-Temu Government was also formed on the basis of OLIPPAC.

Weapon now remaining to remove the National Alliance Government is its own baby in MRA.

It has created and will create more problems in the mining areas of our country.

Somare-Temu Government was warned since its formation but the fear of miners has made the National Alliance Party very weak.

Very soon the people will arrest MRA with citizens' power of arrest.

When this happens the MRA will turn on the government.

There is no way out for MRA.

 It will kill National Alliance Party to stay in PNG.

The Supreme Court is a friend of the National Alliance Party at this time.

It is ready to uphold the Constitution of PNG.

So why not go there and ask the Supreme Court to nullify the law that creates a Trojan horse in National Alliance Party, Somare-Temu Government, and PNG?

Why Papua New Guinea matters to Australia and the Pacific's regional economic integration aspirations

 By MAVARU HANUA

 

The Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) negotiations between the Pacific and the European Union were indeed an education for many Pacific trade negotiators. 

From the slaughterhouse of Brussels Centra Brochette where former EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson humiliated Pacific Trade Ministers in shouting them down on every negotiating position advanced, to the backstabbing thuggery on Papua New Guinea running parallel negotiations with the EU to cut deals and preference separate from the pacific countries,  hard and tough lessons were learnt. 

Yep, many of us walked away bruised, exhausted and perhaps with greater awareness, there really are no friends in trade.

Quite recently, one senior Pacific trade official commented, “When Africa sneezes, the Pacific catches the cold.” 

Why? Because, the only interest in the Economic Partnership Agreements between the African Caribbean Pacific regions is Africa. 

Now, three years on, one apparent fact remains: the Pacific is eating the scraps of Africa’s progress. 

The Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat has over the years engaged with Africa with the hope to advance similar positions. 

 Built on friendships and contacts, positions flowed freely into the Pacific for the region to abreast themselves on the gains of Africa and more importantly, use them for the negotiations. 

Of course, not everything that flowed from the Motherland was good for the pacific, so quality control measures ensured the pacific position was upheld. 

 Their EPA negotiations have demonstrated major improvements from previous interim texts where the obligations were counterproductive to export and trade policies of the pacific. 

The lesson was simple, if you’ve got more resources, than we will cut deals with you.

 Can we expect anything different from PACER Plus? Hell no. 

 If you’ve got more resources, Australia New Zealand (ANZ) will cut a deal with you. 

So let’s look into the region and see who does have more resources and who ANZ will cut a deal with. 

The obvious suspect is PNG, the land of the unexpected as they say. 

 Well it’s becoming more expected now. 

They’ve got money falling out of their ears from gas, rocks, fish and lumber. 

Yep it’s all boom boom boom and contrary to popular opinion, it’s not the sound of gun totting raskols holding up a bank but the stampede of Australians running across Tories Strait to cash in.   

So for the past two years, PM Gillard and her predecessor being the leaders they are, needed to fix a deal with the black fellas up north so the Blokes and Sheilas can vote them back in. 

They’ve sent officials, high commissioners and heck, almost every public servant in Canberra to PNG to ensure there is a magical yellow brick road from Australia to PNG. 

Where there are no tariffs, no burdensome non-tariff barriers like sanitary-phytosanitary measures, technical standards, no trade in services restrictions, visa requirements, no capital movement restrictions and of course the best part, no taxes to pay. 

Yep, the Blokes and Sheilas have got it all. 

 It’s all ozzie ozzie, oi oi oi in the land of the unexpected

Don’t you love a public service that can deliver to its people?

What about my wantoks trying to come the other way of the yellow brick road?  

 No, they need to comply with complicated market access arrangements such as burdensome rules of origin arrangements, tons of paper work on quarantine, don’t forget the qualifications part, our lawyers, doctors, accountants can’t work their because they’re not qualified. 

 Ohh and the visa requirements, well you can forget that, stand in line like everyone else. 

And yep, you’ll paying shit load of taxes. 

So when Minister Abal talks to his counterpart Stephen Smith in Alotau on PNG not wanting less aid and more trade, but dear minister, for pity’s sake negotiate an agreement. 

Our wantoks must walk on that yellow brick road with the same deal. 

Ok, so Stephen’s old mate Simon Creen said it’s all about development and no one will get smashed.

  Don’t forget Stephen’s old boss Kev, he also told all our Chiefs under a house win Cairns, no one will be worst off. 

And even some guy in Samoa call Misa Telefoni is preaching about PACER Plus will allow his Solei Samoans that they will not only be eating Palusami but Australian meat pies and vegemite as they have comparative advantage on them.

We’ve all heard this shit before, that’s right… from some guys in Europe call Louis Michel, Former Commissioner for Development and his boss Borroso. 

But at least for the cultured Europeans, they made it look cool by saying “we are generous but not naïve.” 

That was before they massacred us at Centra Brochette. 

I have no doubt Sam’s chat with Stephen will set in motion a trade relationship that PNG will negotiate a trade agreement bilaterally with Australia.  

 But what about the outcomes of the Forum Trade Ministers in Ponopei earlier this year?  

What about the Office of the Chief Trade Advisor that will be developing a regional trade pact with all forum countries negotiating collectively with ANZ? 

Well, that was all for a show mate

Gotta tell these backward islanders we’re one big family.

These developments remind me of a piece of history in a faraway land called Matabeleland Kingdom, which has one of the richest gold deposits in the world.  Facing growing pressure from hungry land grabbing Boers, adventurous Englishman and superpowers cutting up Africa, King Lobengula sent emissaries to London to get guidance from Her Majesty Queen Victoria, on why they, in particular Mr Cecil Rhode’s British South Africa Company Agreement, is good for his country. 

After gauging wise counsel from her advisors, she wrote a truthful letter that the contract Mr Rhodes was pushing for will destroy his kingdom as all minerals, land, trade, and every other possible international relationship will be under the exclusive right of Mr Rhodes’ company. 

She explicitly wrote to not enter into the contract. 

A couple of months later after Mr Rhodes effectively bribed the entire political system, she rescinded the advice. 

King Lobengula told his advisors, “This woman speaks with two tongues.”   

A couple of months later, Matabeleland was conquered by mercenaries and Rhodes’ company raped and pillaged the land for the next 100 years. 

Pacific’s Matabeleland is indeed PNG. 

As they forge to run deals with a superpower, they are binding their people to live in a relationship with Australia for eternity.

Ok so the PACER Plus contract is not as controversial as Rhodes’ one, but it is potentially just as poisonous. 

Canberra will speak in various tongues to seasoned WTO and EPA PNG negotiators. 

Our officials will no doubt try their best to fight for my wantoks so that when our people want to walk on that yellow brick road from PNG to Australia, they are free to trade. 

Past experiences will also show wannabe trade gurus will find some excuse to be in the frontline to negotiate. 

Thinking they are the voice of our people, they will push agenda that Kanage, Agnes and Mr Roots will suffer. 

Why?  Because the interest they push is not in their interest but long whiteman na kongkong tasol

But the most destructive result in all this is that PNG will set the bar for the rest of the pacific. 

 That’s right: the framework for PACER PLUS will be determined in Alotau. 

 Why? Because PNG has a whole lot more resources than any other Pacific island country and the blokes and Sheilas want to be part of it. 

So it’s up to PNG. 

Will you lead the region and champion the cause or cut the deal of a lifetime so that Canberra gives you more. 

Gee, I wonder what option the Lubengula’s of PNG will opt for.

 

Foreign aid ripped off

By STEVE LEWIS in the Herald Sun

AUSTRALIA'S $4 billion foreign aid program is plagued by fraud, with 134 "active" investigations into possible corruption in 16 countries.

Most cases of fraud are in Indonesia and Papua New Guinea, who jointly receive $740 million a year in Australian aid.

A Herald Sun investigation can reveal that at least $100,000 in taxpayers' money has been "misused" - and possibly siphoned off - on one project in PNG's overflowing jails.

Millions of dollars are being illegally used by corrupt officials, with AusAID revealing 68 cases of "alleged, suspected or detected" fraud investigated in the past year.

Adding to the problems for AusAID, its head Peter Baxter conceded that many of the countries receiving Australian money didn't have sufficient legal and police grunt to properly pursue alleged fraud.

The peak aid agency - which will see its budget double to nearly $8 billion by 2015 - would not comment on particular cases of fraud while investigations continued.

But the Herald Sun can reveal that the flagship $160 million PNG Law and Justice Sector Program is under serious scrutiny after the misuse of funds.

Documents seen by the Herald Sun show PNG's Department of Correctional Services is investigating a $200,000 contract to supply vital radio equipment to prisons.

An investigation by the department's internal auditor, Wailyo Pindao, has uncovered "serious weaknesses" with the project, which has been backed by AusAID since 2003.

Mr Pindao said he wanted Aarons Security Service, the firm contracted to supply repeater equipment, formally investigated.

And he said it was possible some money had been stolen or siphoned off by corrupt government officials.

Radio equipment purchased for the jails did not comply with PNG standards. This caused a "total breakdown of the entire radio communication system", Mr Pindao wrote.

The faulty equipment meant that radio coverage was restricted to 10m. This was leading to "great risk in the movement of prisoners".

Inquiries to the PNG Investment Promotion Authority showed that Aarons Security Service has not filed an annual return for two years.

The company would be deregistered within months, a spokeswoman said.

Phone numbers for Thomas Waim, Aaron's principal director, have been disconnected.

National Alliance holds key

Opposition admits to lack of numbers

 

THE opposition admitted yesterday it does not have the numbers, and needs a faction of the National Alliance party splitting away to help it topple Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare, The National reports.

The opposition wanted to move a vote of no-confidence next Tuesday, when Parliament sits.

But political watchers said that was unlikely to happen until a few issues within NA were settled.

The prime minister also had a few aces up his sleeves which he had not played yet, one said.

Deputy opposition leader Bart Philemon told reporters yesterday they had only 21 MPs, and were talking to people within government and NA.

“We can’t change (the government) on our own. We need people on that side. We are talking to them. We have been talking to them for months now,” Philemon said.

He said whoever brought in the numbers would lead them.

A political observer told The National that the different factions within NA, especially those not happy with Sir Michael, would be reluctant to make their move now until the NA convention is held next month.

During that meeting, the party is expected to elect a person to succeed Sir Michael as parliamentary leader of the party.

“After this agenda is decided, many will decide whether it is worthwhile to hang around or move on. The real test of the solidarity of the party will come here, and key to all this is who takes over,” he said.

“So, if a vote is going to happen, and maybe succeed, it would have to be during the November session of parliament. The cracks in NA will become apparent then.”

He said the prime minister had aces up his sleeve he could play now, including reshuffling and expanding his cabinet.

There were talks of secret meetings over the weekend, in Port Moresby and Australia, where ministries were offered to a number

of people, including opposition MPs.

Mendi MP Pastor Isaac Joseph, an opposition MP who was allegedly offered a cabinet post, said he would remain in the opposition, and would not be bought by money, job offers or other promises.

Meanwhile, Unggai-Bena MP and Environment and Conservation Minister Benny Allan has denied claims of a political camp called the “Eastern bloc” in Goroka.

Allan said the report in the Post-Courier, naming him as being in the “Eastern bloc”, was not true.

“I was with Arthur Somare, Paul Tiensten and Sam Abal for the forum (in Alotau) and we all agreed that there was no need for a change of government.”

One government insider, who was on the flight from Goroka to Port Moresby on Monday morning, said Simbu Governor Fr John Garia and one of his henchman were on the flight to Port Moresby without any other MPs.

Allan described the article as a “cooked-up story” by Garia and the Post-Courier to mislead the public.

Philemon: Stability must bring better quality of life

POLITICAL and economic stability will count for nothing if it does not bring tangible development and a better standard of living for the people, deputy opposition leader Bart Philemon said yesterday, The National reports.

He admitted that there had been economic growth for the past few years but said that this had not improve the lives of the majority of the population.

He also said the growth was due to improve commodity prices which were determined by global market forces.

“They are not dictated by PNG or the government,” he told a press conference at parliament house when calling for the government to be replaced.

Philemon, who was at one stage the finance minister before he was removed, claimed that the government had spent some K60 billion in the past eight years, but social indicators were worsening, with PNG ranking 148 out of 186 countries.

“Despite the economic growth and substantial increase in government revenue, the sad fact of life is this did not translate to the social indicators,” he said.

“The nation wants to know where all the billions gone to. The NA government spent over K59 billion in the last eight years since taking office in 2002. Yet there is no tangible evidence on the ground to equate such huge amount of money.”

Philemon expressed grave concern that hundreds of lives were lost each day as a direct result of government inaction.

He said records showed that each year, 7,300 babies less than a year old and 3,700 mothers died.

Studies also showed that 220,000 children under five do not have proper nutrition and that half of them are not immunised.

“About 60% of mothers are not properly supervised when giving birth, 70% of people have no access to safe drinking water; HIV/AIDS is ravaging like bushfire PNG-wide with 90,000 confirmed cases; and estimates of HIV/AIDS cases putting infection rate at 2-3% of population.”

He warned that that the government was setting a time bomb that would explode anytime with wider social and economic ramifications.

“The news is also not good on the education sector, where 55% of the population is illiterate.”

He said this was happening because 50% of the children were not sent to school.

Other reasons, he said, were a high dropout rate, poor teachers training and the government’s failure to maintain most education facilities and institutions.

Philemon said the law and order situation remained poor.

“In the last 10 years, 13,453 youths were involved in robbery, 9,389 harmed citizens, 8,435 broke into people’s houses and businesses to survive, 5,079 also stole from people to survive and more than 5,000 were involved in drugs.”

Philemon said these were the reasons why the prime minister and his National Alliance party must be removed from government.