Monday, February 07, 2011
Soldiers storm home of provincial police commander
Sunday, February 06, 2011
New Zealand - Papua New Guinea relations hinge on commerce
| New Zealand High Commissioner to PNG Marion Cranshaw enjoying Waitangi Day today.-Pictures by MALUM NALU |
| Guests lining up to be served food straight from the hangi (earth oven) at the New Zealand High Commission today |
New Zealand high commissioner to Papua New Guinea Marion Cranshaw believes that commercial relationships between both countries are the future.
She said that at a traditional hangi (earth oven) picnic at the New Zealand High Commission at Waigani today (Sunday) to mark Waitangi Day.
Aid-wise, PNG is already the second-largest beneficiary of New Zealand aid to the tune of NZ$30 million (K57m) annually, after Solomon Islands.
“I think the future for New Zealand-Papua New Guinea relationships is in commercial relationships,” she said.
“I see that Papua New Guinea is a growing economy, with the ability to purchase New Zealand goods and services and that’s what’s starting to happen.
“New Zealand is still quite relatively small in the (PNG) market but we want to grow New Zealand’s place in the market.”
Cranshaw said a New Zealand trade mission would come to PNG in April to kick-start things.
“We’ll be looking at what other trade activities will follow that,” she said,
“New Zealand’s got good expertise in energy, some areas of infrastructure, engineering, and of course, food and beverages.
“In a way, I think New Zealand can help the development of Papua New Guinea by selling some of our expertise, because in that way, Papua New Guinea has the ownership of what they’re bringing.
“My focus on commercial engagement is not because it’s to New Zealand’s advantage, but it’s a way that we can help the development of Papua New Guinea and the ownership stays with Papua New Guinea.”
Cranshaw said the New Zealand government was making changes to its aid programme globally and PNG would be among those countries affected.
“Our government is looking to shift its aid programme into areas of economic development as well,” she said.
“We are looking at how we can reform our aid programme into economic areas.
“One of our proposals is putting up a wholesale food market in Port Moresby to improve access to market in Port Moresby for fruit and vegetable sellers.
“We are also looking at how we can assist in rural agricultural development, because while Papua New Guinea may make a lot of money from the big projects, agricultural development is important for development.”
New Zealand and Papua New Guinea trade and economic relationship
Papua New Guinea is New Zealand’s second largest market in the Pacific region (behind Fiji, and not including Australia).
| New Zealand Governor General Sir Anand Satyanand being taken around Goroka market by FPDA production and supply manager Robert Lutulule in Sept 2009.-Picture by MALUM NALU |
Sheep Meat 29.88
Iron or non-alloy steel (clad) 18.26
Milk Powder, butter and cheese 13.29
Machinery (Refrigerators) 13.07
Quicklime 10.21
Textiles 8.90
Iron/steel products for construction 8.75
Electrical Products 7.49
Trailers 5.84
Light Aircraft 5.07
Frozen vegetables 3.68
Other 37.36
New Zealand imports from PNG vary because of a purchase of approximately NZ$100 million worth of petroleum is made every second year.
Our other main imports from PNG include coffee, timber, palm oil and cocoa.
In 2008 PNG successfully completed a trial export of ginger to New Zealand, one of the first times PNG fresh produce has been exported to any country for commercial distribution.
Although other Pacific countries already export significant quantities of tropical fresh produce to New Zealand and elsewhere, to date PNG growers and distributors have focused on meeting domestic demand.
PNG is now interested in trialling further produce on the New Zealand market, including coconuts and taro.
To take advantage of market opportunities, however, it will need to boost commercial production to meet potential overseas orders, and encourage local growers and suppliers to consider fully commercialised exports.
Migration and labour mobility
New Zealanders are visiting Papua New Guinea in greater and greater numbers.
At almost 2500, the number of New Zealand visitors to Papua New Guinea is more than double what it was five years ago.
Papua New Guineans are eligible to participate in New Zealand’s seasonal labour scheme, but as yet, none have done so.
That should change soon – New Zealand’s Department of Labour has recently approved participation by two PNG citizens in the scheme.
Private sector partnerships
A range of New Zealand companies do business with Papua New Guinea across sectors including telecommunications, engineering, construction, education and insurance.
The New Zealand–Papua New Guinea Business Council – based in Auckland is the heart of the private sector relationship between the two countries.
Over 20 New Zealand businesses belong to the Council and are actively engaged in business activities in Papua New Guinea.
The council can be contacted by email on: info@nzpngbc.org.nz.
There is momentum building towards the establishment of a Papua New Guinea-based PNG-NZ Business Council to complement the New Zealand-based organisation, and also momentum building towards a New Zealand trade mission to Papua New Guinea in the first half of 2011.
These are both exciting developments and represent a big step in the already strong relationship between our two countries.
Working together in the wider trade arena
Together, Papua New Guinea and New Zealand are members of the Pacific Islands Forum, APEC and the World Trade Organisation.
New Zealand aid to Papua New Guinea
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| New Zealand coat of arms |
The New Zealand Aid Programme activities in PNG are based on the overall aid programme mandate and the specific development challenges in PNG, and are guided by a 10-year joint strategy (2008-2018) agreed with the Government of Papua New Guinea.
The strategy aims to improve economic development opportunities for rural people and improve social services in education and health.
Gender equality and the empowerment of women are incorporated throughout these activities.
PNG also benefits directly from the New Zealand Aid Programme’s regional programmes that are focused on law and justice, governance, environment, health, education and trade/economy; and through the New Zealand Aid Programme's support to regional agencies such as the University of the South Pacific, the Secretariat of the Pacific Community, the South Pacific Regional Environment Programme, the Forum Fisheries Agency, and the South Pacific Applied Geoscience Programme.
In 2009/10 the value of these non-bilateral sources is estimated to total over NZ$7 million.
Improving rural economic development
New Zealand provides support to strengthen PNG's agricultural sector.
This includes support for:
• Fresh Produce Development Agency, which links farmers and consumers of fresh fruit and vegetables
• Bris Kanda, which focuses on building commercially productive partnerships between rural communities and service providers in Morobe province;
• A government extension programme to help rural farmers improve their agricultural and business skills.
New Zealand is exploring the potential for a fresh produce wholesale market in Port Moresby, due to the increased demand for fresh fruit and vegetables in Port Moresby and from workers involved in the PNG liquefied natural gas pipeline project.
There is scope to see wider social benefits from a market, particularly for women.
In the future New Zealand will look to support other market infrastructure developments in PNG.
Improving social services
New Zealand has a long-term commitment to the Health Sector Improvement Programme (HSIP), a joint approach between the PNG government and a number of development partners to improve delivery of health services.
Support is provided for a number of targeted initiatives in community and reproductive health, and HIV prevention.
One of these is the East Sepik Women and Children's Health Project which is managed by Save the Children.
The project works with over 1,000 volunteers in 800 villages, and a range of health providers to improve standards of health in the remote parts of East Sepik.
The New Zealand Aid Programme supports a large scale household survey that will gain a more accurate picture of HIV prevalence and the behavioural risk factors that are behind the epidemic.
The initiative is important for PNG's response to the HIV and AIDS epidemic.
New Zealand is supporting the development of a sector-wide approach to improve access to basic primary education in PNG.
It is designed to get every primary school-aged child attending school.
The New Zealand Aid Programme currently offers around 250 scholarships per year for study in New Zealand and PNG.
New Zealand will work more closely with Australia to improve the effectiveness of the scholarships provided to PNG citizens.
Bougainville
Over the past 10 years, New Zealand has supported Bougainville in its reconstruction, including strengthening of law and justice systems, and governance.
Through the Bougainville Community Policing Project, the New Zealand Police, funded by the New Zealand Aid Programme, provide training and support to the Bougainville Police Service and Community Auxiliary Police, who help communities deal with law and order problems in consultation with village courts and traditional leaders.
The Bougainville Governance Implementation Fund supports the improvement of government administration and service delivery.
It is a joint initiative between the PNG Government, the Autonomous Bougainville Government, Australia, and New Zealand.
Waitangi Day message from New Zealand Governor General Rt Hon Sir Anand Satyanand
Governor-General of New Zealand
Waitangi Day message
6 February 2011
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| Sir Anand Satyanand GNZM |
Greetings in the languages of the Realm of New Zealand, in English, Māori, Cook Island Māori, Niuean and Tokelauan: Greetings, Kia Ora, Kia Orana, Fakalofa Lahi Atu, Taloha Ni.
On this day, 171 years ago, representatives of the British Crown and New Zealand’s first people, the Māori chiefs, agreed on how this nation should be governed.
They managed to reach this accord without the accompanying conflict that has been seen in so many other countries.
From the very first Waitangi Day observance in 1934, many differing views have been expressed about the significance of the Treaty and its role and place in our nation.
The fact that people continue to debate the importance of the Treaty is a positive sign, as it is evidence of New Zealanders increasingly talking to each other rather than past each other, thus maintaining a process of real communication and understanding.
Our country also continues to address the wrongs of the past. New Zealand is all the stronger for having the courage to attempt to reconcile its past with its present, and to make some amends, often after recourse to the Waitangi Tribunal.
I believe that our prospects as a nation are worth rejoicing.
Ours is a young country, but in a short time New Zealanders have conquered the world’s highest mountains, achieved breakthroughs in science, and excelled internationally in sport, literature, film making and the creative arts.
New Zealanders have also served with honour in many conflict zones, sometimes far from home, to defend democratic freedoms.
As Governor-General of New Zealand I send my best regards to all New Zealanders on Waitangi Day, New Zealand’s national day.
No reira, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, kia ora, kia kaha, tēnā koutou katoa.
Rt Hon Anand Satyanand, GNZM, QSO
Governor-General of New Zealand
Saturday, February 05, 2011
Growing local business in Papua New Guinea
By GLICK D LAMBEA
Sydney, Australia
I'm writing in regard to the article "NDB to back more local business" in the Post Courier 04/02/2011".
I appreciate the National Development Bank for taking the initiative to support the inaugural Papua New Guinea indigenous business summit proposed to be held in Kokopo.
I hope the summit will become the forum to discuss government policies and business model that have worked in other countries similar to PNG's settings.
In the same article NDB managing director Richard Maru claims that 20% of PNG businesses are in the hands of nationals.
I think this is a good percentage to start with to increase the level of indigenous ownership.
In terms of government support, at the least I am yet to see a comprehensive government policy that talks about supporting small business in PNG.
The Vision 2050 is very ambiguous on small business and the document was written by people who are elitist and far removed from a coffee farmer in the Highlands or a cocoa producer in the New Guinea Islands.
So this piece of document is a load of cow manure written for other elites like the authors themselves!
What we need is a strategy and a road map to guide us on how to execute the strategy to increase indigenous ownership.
For instance, in 20 years we want to increase indigenous ownership of business to 30%.
The question is how do we achieve that?
Well, we need a team of people headed by someone from the Department of Trade and Industry to write the strategy paper.
The team should be comprised of people from the finance and banking industries, small-medium business owners, Finance and Treasury officials, civil society and a senior statesman in the likes of Sir Rabie Namaliu.
The strategy owner will be the Department of Trade and Industry and they must be convicted that it is the right strategy and it will work.
Message from Dr Wari Lea Iamo, Secretary of the Department of Environment and Conservation, on World Wetlands Day
The International World Wetlands Day falls on the 2nd of February each year.
As the secretary of the department responsible for protection and the sustainable use of natural resources I launch this day as a significant day for us to remember that wetlands and forests are important for our economic and social wellbeing.
Papua New Guinea as a sovereign country signed up to the convention and became a member on the 16th July 1993.
PNG, being a member to the convention, shows that it is committed to raising awareness locally, in the region and globally that PNG has very significant areas of wetlands that are important to its people.
By being a signatory it has enlisted two sites as significant wetlands in PNG: Tonda wildlife management area in Western province and Lake Kutubu wildlife management area in the Southern Highlands province.
Wetlands are all about water, the continuous supply of water and its natural resources. Recognising wetlands and its importance is very essential for the supply of fresh water, maintenance and use of biodiversity, mitigation of the effects of climate change and the hydrological cycle of water, livelihoods of communities who depend on all wetlands ecosystems from coral reefs, coastal ecosystems, peat lands, and swamps to lakes and rivers to alpine wetlands.
There are many benefits that we all derive from these wetlands.
Simple things that we do everyday involve water.
In PNG, these wetlands provide for us tremendous economic and conservation benefits through fisheries production, flood control, maintenance of shoreline stabilisation, estuarine systems for our coastal fisheries, water quality and provision of recreational opportunities and large quantities of varieties of food.
We wash or fish in the seas or rivers or reefs or look for crabs or shells or dig for mud crabs in the rivers, mangroves, mudflats, marshes and sea grass beds.
Wetlands also house extensive biodiversity, ranging from corals, sea grasses, fishes of all sorts from small ones to very huge whales and sharks in the deep oceans, crocodile in our rivers, shorelines and swamps, crustaceans, mollusks, from microscopic organisms as bacteria, algae and lichens, mosses to varieties of mushrooms to higher plants, thousands of insects, varieties of birds that fly in the sky or on the ground, water snakes that use the wetlands to breed, all kinds of animals that also live in the wetlands and in the forests. These animals also are a significant part of the wetlands ecosystem.
The 2nd of February, however, should have special meaning for everyone in this country. For anyone who has ever jumped into the river on a hot day, paddled a canoe through some mangroves to collect crabs or shellfish from mudflats, dived or snorkeled over a brightly coloured coral reef, or simply stood by to see a reef heron awaiting the arrival of its next meal, or watched a sooty oyster catcher search for its meals on the shoreline or a masked lapwing in the swamps or flocks bar tailed godwits in their thousands using our wetlands on their way to the north of Siberia where they breed .
In fact, for every Papua New Guinean, the 2nd of February is a time to celebrate a very special part of our natural environment – the "wetlands".
So for us we can focus on all types of forest, those that are often or always wet, such as mangroves, flooded forests, peat swamp forests and lowland rainforests often inundated with water for most part of the year.
What better occasion for us to look at the importance of these forested wetlands, whether we live near them or not, because of the many benefits they bring?
It is also a good opportunity to focus on the many threats they face too.
As we reflect on the immense economic, social and ecological value of our wetlands, we are also painfully aware of the rapid rate at which many of our wetlands are being degraded and disappearing.
Impact projects occur mainly in our wetlands also as too often we wrongfully think of them as wastelands.
In other parts of the world they are used as waste dumping grounds resulting in toxic and harmful substances entering the waterways and ocean, or they are used as landfills for housing projects.
Furthermore, wetlands tend to be over-used through excessive withdrawals of water for townships or cities or through the removal of key species from the area, thus losing biodiversity species that are importance to maintain healthy waterways.
Losing our wetlands means losing the valuable services they provide and this almost always impacts negatively on humans.
Tourism, food security and coastal protection are often the most-obvious losers when wetlands die.
In small islands, marginalised people, often live very near to and depend directly on wetland ecosystems for their livelihood.
They are also the least able to cope with the impacts of wetland loss.
Climate change adds another dimension to the continuing destruction of our wetlands but it brings a greater concern for their preservation.
Across the country, there is growing evidence that climate change is resulting in more frequent cyclones and storm surges, coastal erosion, loss of fish breeding grounds and reduced water quality on many small islands resulting in loss of community's livelihoods.
However, it is also becoming clear that better management and protection of our wetland ecosystems could help our most vulnerable communities whether coastal and inland; build resilience and adapt better to the impacts of our changing climate.
Strong mangrove areas, for example, act as highly-effective buffers against storm surges and cyclonic waves; healthy coral reefs and seagrass beds provide breeding grounds for fish and other marine animals, thus strengthening food security of coastal dwelling populations; healthy and strong coral reefs are also the first line of defense against storm surges and waves associated with the changing climate.
The interaction between healthy coral reefs and healthy mangroves can therefore not be discounted as a major defensive asset of our islands, and one that we need to protect.
Protecting and conserving the diversity of life, including conserving our valuable wetlands and adapting to and building resilience to climate change impacts are inextricably interlinked.
Our mandated role as a government agency recognises that we cannot realistically address one without the other and, more importantly, that human activity is as much to blame as climate change for the continuing destruction of our natural ecosystems especially focusing on the impacts of logging on forests.
This year, the International Year of Forests, presents us with an opportunity to take stock of our ongoing contribution to nature conservation and work towards building resilience to the ever-increasing impacts of climate change.
It may seem all too simple, but if we strengthen our commitment to conserving mangroves, coral reefs and seagrass beds; improve waste management and prevent marine pollution; and reduce our consumption of fossil fuels and destruction to forests, we have hope that we can save our forested wetlands and possibly set our communities in preparation to withstand the impacts of climate change.
This World Wetlands Day, I challenge every one of you, no matter who you are or what you do, to take stock of what is happening around you and make a change in your life for the well-being of the unique water-based environments in which half of the population of Papua New Guinea lives.

