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| Students using the oven |
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| High school teachers' computer laboratory |
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| Male boarding students of Sacred Heart |
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| Students using the computer laboratory |
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| Students using the oven |
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| High school teachers' computer laboratory |
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| Male boarding students of Sacred Heart |
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| Students using the computer laboratory |
From UNRE
Students of the University of Natural Resources & Environment’s Vudal campus have formed a group to promote the sustainable use and conservation of
The environmentalist group will conduct its first awareness this Friday with a major clean-up of the campus.
As part of this initiative they will also be putting up signs to discourage people from littering and spitting betelnut; and will be installing new garbage bins.
Group chairman, third-year agricultural student, Robert Martin, said the bins would be marked for different types of garbage - organic, plastics, tins and paper.
He said this would help slow down the rate which the university garbage landfill is filling up.
“Recycling rubbish is one way of protecting the environment and we want campus residents and visitors to be mindful of how they dispose their garbage,” he added.
After the clean-up, the group will travel to Rabaul to look for plants to beautify the campus.
Mr Martin said a public awareness on the El-Nino induced drought that had been predicted to hit Papua New Guinea in 2012, would be carried out by the group next month in conjunction with officers of the National Agricultural Research Institute’s wet lowlands’ programme in Kerevat.
“Being students of an environmental university, we are concerned about the future of our natural environment because we know that much of its destruction is due to the influence of humans.
“Forming this group and collaborating with likeminded individuals, organisations and stakeholders to promote its sustainable use is our contribution towards educating the people of
University vice chancellor Prof Philip Siaguru, who is a strong advocate of protecting the environment, commended the students for their initiative.
“I commend the students for looking beyond today, as the environment they are helping to protect today will support them when they are employed, have families and live in tomorrow with their children. I am firm in my commitment to the environment and it is pleasing that students see the need to give such attention to the environment,” he said.
Prof Siaguru said the environment we live in today had changed dramatically.
“We hear stories from our parents who speak of the gud taim long bipo when their catch was big and plentiful, whether they went fishing or hunting. Sadly, this has now changed with population increase and disturbances to the natural environment. Land and sea life food sources are either chased away or have simply declined due to human consumption needs,” he said.
“Such student groups will not only educate students in secondary and primary schools but our students themselves because there is still a lot to learn about the environment. I commend them for their initiative.”
This is the second student group that has been formed at the university this year.
The first group, Katalyst, consists of students who promote the concept of being employers, not employees, after they graduate.
From SAM BASIL
BULOLO MP
The National Parliament Speaker Hon. Jeffery Nape has eroded the spirit of democracy for three consecutive years as the Speaker of this eighth parliament and continues to do.
Since becoming a member of this eighth parliament I was given a copy of the constitution, the edited version July, 2007 and started browsing through the speaker’s role and responsibilities when I first started to realise the unprofessional and undemocratic conducts that he possesses.
The constitution stated clearly in Section 108 (1) that, The Speaker is responsible, subject to and in accordance with the Constitutional Laws, the Acts of Parliament and the Standing Orders of the Parliament, for upholding the dignity of the Parliament, maintaining order in it, regulating its proceedings and administering its affairs, and for controlling the precincts of the Parliament as defined by or under an Act of the Parliament.
The Speaker Hon. Jeffery Nape’s decisions and actions so far on the floor of Parliament have clearly shown that he is irresponsible and his conducts were not subjected to as in accordance with the Constitutional Laws, the Act of Parliament and the Standing Orders of the Parliament.
Simply there is no more democratic process in the proceedings of parliament.
In the last sitting of Parliament the Speaker:
A) Failed to entertain the motion of no confidence notice which was officially handed to the speaker’s office at 0930hrs on the 21.07.10.
B) Failed to entertain the Noes call by the opposition followed by division call which was seconded against the leader of government business who proposed that the parliament at its rising be adjourned till November 16, 2010.
C) Failed yet again to entertain the Noes call by the opposition followed by division call which was seconded against the leader of government business who proposed again that the parliament is now adjourned until November 16, 2010.
Surprisingly the parliament clerk Mr Don Pandan has excluded the division calls from the copies of Hansard distributed a week after the session.
The National Parliament clerk has also failed his constitutional duties to properly advice the speaker to act in accordance with the constitutional laws, the Acts of Parliament and the Standing Orders of the Parliament and he must also be referred to the Ombudsman Commission.
We have heard that during the intense lobbying two very influential government MPs spent three hours with the Speaker.
The Speaker’s undemocratic rulings on the floor that week also raise many questions regarding the integrity of the chair.
Is the Speaker above the law?
Why haven’t the relevant authorities stepped in to address all the corruption claims against the Speaker including his undemocratic conduct on the chair beginning from the 7th and into this 8th Parliament?
If the Speaker is clearly above the law then he can be termed as the most powerful MP on the floor which means that if he decides to market his rulings to the highest bidder then he can break all the laws under the sun to do so.
Last week’s denial of the opposition’s rights to call for the division has seen the Speaker’s office denying the rights of almost three million people that those 45 members of parliament represent in the opposition.
If the Speaker of the National Parliament is marketing his rulings on the floor then he must come clear to the 6.5m people of this nation.
Maybe it is time now for the ordinary people to directly vote a Speaker of Parliament into office who can be independent from political influences.
The candidates must go through a series of stringent screening processes and criteria with educational qualifications and most importantly ex convict and criminals should be excluded from day one.
I will also take to the ordinary grassroots people to explain the Speaker’s conducts on the floor while he will be called to open forums to explain his undemocratic conducts.
There is no hope anymore for us the elected MPs to exercise our rights and freedom on the floor on behalf of our people.
From PAUL OATES
Advice from the Bard. Bill Shakespeare offers some advice from the grave to today's
The emergence in PNG of what appears to be a nascent dictatorship seems similar to many other events in history.
Human history appears as the ebb and flow of the tides. In Julius Caesar, that most-perceptive of social observers, William Shakespeare wrote of that famous Roman dictator, who some felt needed to be brought down before he took over completely:
"There is a tide in the affairs of men, which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune; Omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries"
Those PNG parliamentarians who might be wondering what they can do about their situation should perhaps be considering their position. These members
have been elected to represent their people and yet they have now been effectively sidelined.
Representative parliamentary government in PNG has now been suspended a second time and in what appears to be an unconstitutional manner. But what might happen if members of the PNG parliament convened somewhere outside the Haus Tambaran and discussed their virtual dismissal.
Surely there is a legal right to meet and discuss the issues affecting their country. If the Speaker's actions are unconstitutional, then perhaps parliament has not yet officially been dissolved.
One wonders what PM Somare would or could do if members did meet and discuss their situation and if the results of these deliberations were reported in the PNG media.
Finally, in what seems like an appropriate quote in regard to MP Sam Basil, the one elected voice who has spoken out publicly against the 'sacking' of his parliament, Shakespeare also wrote:"There is a time in the tide of a man's life, if taken at the ebb, leads on to better things." - John o' Gaunt in Richard II
The
Pushing the barriers with Google Earth technology, the multi-platform and interactive map shows some of the changes that might occur and highlights the UK Government’s commitment to keeping global temperatures low to avoid dangerous levels of climate change.
The map was developed using peer-reviewed science from the UK Met Office Hadley Centre and other leading impact scientists.
At the
“We are committed to being the 'greenest' government ever and engage with new audiences.
“This Google Earth map supports that commitment to tackling climate change and will hopefully communicate with a bigger audience globally about why the UK Government is being activist in championing the transition to a low carbon economy,” he added.
According to Google’s Ed Parson, the map was an example of the benefits of using the latest web technology to visualise scientific information and promote better understanding of the potential impacts of climate change.
“Allowing scientists to talk about their research to the general public is a way to enable the public to fully understand how the process of scientific investigation works,” he said.
British High Commissioner to PNG, David Dunn, said the map reinforced the UK Government’s determination to act against dangerous man-made climate change.
“We know the stakes are high and that’s why we want to help secure an ambitious global climate change deal,” he said and added that PNG’s role – as the custodian of the third largest rainforest on the planet - was pivotal to the overall goal set by the international community.
A continued rise in greenhouse gas emissions could trigger global average temperatures to increase by 4°C by the end of the century or as early as 2060.
The map uses latest climate and impacts science and illustrates some of the potential impacts of such a rise.
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| Share of noni market value by smaller |
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| Ripe noni fruits |
From JAMES WANJIK
Leaders want power at any cost.
There is no shame for name and fame.
Apart from the period 1972- 1977 and 2002- 2007, there is no other time in modern PNG history where leaders worked for PNG people without fear of no confidence votes.
From 1980 and later years, leaders' war paths were made by love of money.
Money and more of it.
At independence in 1975 our leaders were people's leaders.
People were reason for leadership.
Now we take leadership as a business venture.
Leaders and their advisers see leadership as a means for money.
People wait while leaders fight over positions for money.
In only 34 years after independence leaders have made our people leaderless.
No leader will be without blame. Love of money has left no leader blameless.
Now more people know this truth.
Nasty politics of leaders are well known.
They are very troubled.
Scandals, lies, deceits and plots are starting to emerge.
Even vulgar language of leaders is paraded.
When a lawyer warned leaders about many bad behaviours leaders went berserk.
Money and more of it was what leaders work for.
Many about-faced leaders will do anything for money.
In the July 2010 session of Parliament, leaders were at different camps for different reasons but with one purpose; money.
Lending credibility to this circus-like game was a Deputy Prime Minister of a ruling coalition.
He left his leadership and ran after Prime Minister's position with media hype.
Leaders who left with him are reportedly going back to their vomits.
For the first time leaders are openly parading their lack of integrity.
No more will people let their leaders run wild for money, name, fame and position.
Very soon leaders will face the truth.
Truth is people will not tolerate leaders without integrity.