Friday, April 06, 2012

Australia 'concerned' by PNG election delay


BBC

Australia has expressed concern at a decision in Papua New Guinea to delay elections by six months, amid an ongoing political crisis.
PNG's parliament voted on Thursday to delay the polls because of security and electoral roll issues.
Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard said in a statement that she was "disappointed and concerned".
Two men claim the prime minister role and the polls had been seen as a way of ending the political turmoil.
Ms Gillard said that ''as a strong supporter... of Papua New Guinea, Australia believes elections should be held on time, in accordance with the constitution''.
But PNG's Deputy Prime Minister Belden Namah warned Australia not to interfere.
''You must respect our wishes. You must not intrude into our election process,'' he said.

Judges suspended
The vote in parliament to delay the polls was passed by 63 votes to 11. Elections must be held every five years in PNG and voting had been due in June.
The country's political landscape has been thrown into turmoil by the tussle between Sir Michael Somare and Peter O'Neill for the role of prime minister.
Sir Michael - then prime minister - left the country in March 2011 to receive medical treatment. In August, MPs declared the position of prime minister vacant and elected Mr O'Neill leader.
But a Supreme Court ruling in December 2011 stated that parliament had acted illegally and ordered that Sir Michael be restored to office.
Mr O'Neill, who is backed by the civil service and effectively running the country, refused to step down.
In January a retired colonel staged a failed mutiny with a group of soldiers, taking the chief of defence forces captive and demanding that Sir Michael be reinstated.
The Supreme Court is now looking to rule on the political battle - but in recent days Mr O'Neill's government passed a law allowing it to effectively suspend two of the judges

Sexual violence forcing girls out of school in PNG


PORT MORESBY, 6 April 2012 (IRIN) - In the Pacific nation of Papua New Guinea (PNG) sexual violence against young girls, and the shame and stigma that follows, is forcing many out of school and others into early marriage.
A recent study by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), one of the country’s main providers of medical and psychological assistance to survivors of family and sexual violence, showed that from 2008 to 2011, a significant proportion of patients who received treatment as a result of violence were children, some under the age of five.
Photo: Ana Santos/ IRIN
The threat of sexual violence prevents girls in PNG from attending school

In the rural settlement of Tari, 31 percent of those who reported violence were between five and 12 years old. In Lae, the second biggest city after the capital, Port Moresby, 26 percent were between the ages of 13 and 17.
Almost half of those reporting sexual violence In Lae from January 2008 to June 2010 - some 520 people - were under 18 years old. In Tari, 248 were minors, said Patrick Almeida, MSF’s medical coordinator.
“In both places, in over 70 percent of the cases, the perpetrators were known by the survivors,” he added.
“It’s really bad,” said Ume Wainetti, head of the NGO, Family Sexual Violence Action Centre (FSVAC), based in Port Moresby.
Young girls are already disadvantaged when it comes to education, and the threat of rape and sexual abuse aggravates these inequalities. As it is, parents generally hesitate to send their daughters to school because they will just get married and have babies. Boys will carry on the family name and continue to work,” Wainetti said.
The 2010 UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Education Digest listed PNG as one of 16 countries worldwide with “severe” gender disparities. In PNG, boys are at least 10 percent more likely to start the first year of primary school than girls.
Gross enrolment rates in 2009 were close to 82 percent for boys, but only 74 percent for girls, according to the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
The cost of tuition is one of the main reasons for the gap, according to UNICEF. In 2009 the government adopted a plan to gradually phase out school fees by 2015, when it expects to fully fund basic education. 

A dangerous path
 The remote locations of schools have even greater implication for girls, noted UNICEF. “Some kids have to walk for hours to get to school and the journey on the way to school makes them vulnerable to attack, especially for girls,” said Joseph Logha, Department of Education assistant secretary.
“The experience of sexual violence definitely affects a girl’s education in terms of being able to stay in school and school performance,” said Ruth Kauffman, MSF project coordinator at a Family Support Centre in Lae.
These donor-funded hospital-based centres are intended to be safe houses and “one-stop shops” for survivors of violence for medical, psychosocial and legal assistance.
“If a girl is raped, she may be blamed and beaten by family members. If she gets pregnant, she misses one year of school and may not be able to go back. Even if she doesn’t [fall pregnant], she’s already a different person. The trauma makes it difficult for her to concentrate on school work,” Kauffman said.
In some cases, the girl is married off to the perpetrator for a “bride price”- similar to a dowry. “Some communities see marrying her to the offender as a way to make him accountable for his behaviour, without considering the additional emotional trauma that the child will suffer,” said Elaine Bainard, UNICEF’s chief of child protection in PNG.
Wainetti said one way of ending a culture of violence is to change people seeing violence against women as a given. The NGO has recruited more than 1,000 male volunteers of varying ages nationwide to receive “gender sensitivity” training.
“Some witnessed violence and did not like seeing how their mothers were treated,” Wainetti said. “They want to have a role in ending that cycle, and this is a start.”

PNGSDP: Barramundi project progressing well


By MALUM NALU

A COMMERCIAL barramundi hatchery set up in Daru, Western province, by the PNG Sustainable Development Program four years ago is progressing very well, according to PNGSDP chief David Sode, The National reports.
He said yesterday the hatchery was capable of producing “a couple of million” barramundi fingerlings every year to replenish stocks in the Fly River and other river systems of Western province.
Barramundi fingerlings at the Daru hatchery.-Picture by FLORENCE KUYEI

Sode said the hatchery was one of the major projects in Daru which promised to transform the local economy.
The barramundi hatchery came under the Western Province Sustainable Aquaculture (WPSA), a PNGSDP initiative which had a strong regional development focus, incorporating potential public, private and community partnerships.
Fishing was perceived as the most important industry after mining in Western province.
 In recent years, the collapse of the barramundi fishery in the Fly River due to over-fishing, changes in attitude and environmental degradation had significantly impacted on the income-generating and subsistence opportunities of the river-dependent communities along the Fly.
A number of communities along the Fly River had been affected by the presence of the Ok Tedi Mine (OTML), and are currently receiving payments, which would phase out by the time the mine closes.
WPSA was a K28 million programme made up of a commercial barramundi hatchery facility and three associated social development projects:
·       Commercial trials to develop a barramundi cage culture model for future expansion;
·       Restocking project in which barramundi fingerlings will be stocked into the depleted Fly river system; and
·       Conservation project to raise awareness and protect the wild barramundi fishery.
Sode said a management team from Cairns was in charge of the project, which is situated on an 8.1ha site in Daru.

Agriculture show next month


By SENIORL ANZU

The 2012 Agricultural Innovations Show is set to roll early next month at the Sir Alkan Tololo Research Centre at Bubia outside Lae, Morobe province.
  The annual event, organised by National Agricultural Research Institute (NARI), showcases information sharing and technology transfer on agriculture, rural and national development.
School students observing gardens and taking notes at the 2011 Agricultural Innovations Show at Bubia outside Lae.-Nationalpic by MALUM NALU
 Prof David Kavanamur, new director general of the Office of Higher Education, will be the keynote speaker and guest-of-honour.
 The theme for this year’s show is ‘Investing in Innovative Agriculture for Prosperity’, a phrase which reaffirms NARI’s view that progress through innovative agricultural development is essential if PNG has to realise Vision 2050 and become a wealthy and prosperous nation.
 “NARI plays an important role to facilitate the achievement of PNG Vision 2050 strategic thrust, wherein the challenge to shift the economy structure from heavily extractive industry to agricultural downstream processing into 2050,” Prof Kavanamur said.
 “Agricultural scientific innovation as such is critically important for wealth creation opportunities as espoused in PNG Vision 2050, given 97% of land is customarily owned.
 “With agricultural scientific innovation, this customarily-owned land can be transformed to attract agrarian economic activities, thus creating more employment for Papua New Guineans.”
 During the show, all NARI centres throughout the country will display different research and development activities carried out on various agricultural challenges and opportunities.
 Scientists will also be at available at information booths to meet and answer farmer queries.
 The show organising committee said last week that preparations were on target and already a good number of external exhibitors had confirmed their participation through information booths.
 This included key government agencies such as the PNG Vision 2050, Independent Consumer and Competition Commission, Consultative Implementation and Monitoring Council, National Fisheries Authority, Investment Promotion Authority, Office of Higher Education; international development partners like the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research and World Vision; NGOs such as the PNG Women in Agriculture; farmer groups; and private sector organisations.
 Farmer groups from Jiwaka, Western Highlands and Southern Highlands provinces have expressed their intention to participate with displays of their innovative activities in the highlands and also to learn from other knowledge-based and development organisations.

InterOil (IOC) under heavy pressure on PNG election delays, major downgrade

From StreetInsider.com

Shares of InterOil Corp. (NYSE: IOC) are getting hammered early Thursday after long-time bull Pavel Molchanov at Raymond James flipped on the stock and downgraded it.

Molchanov took his rating from Outperform to Market Perform citing a vote by Papua New Guinea's (PNG) parliament to postpone the country's general election by six months. 
He notes that this is entirely beyond the company's control and management cannot be held responsible. Nonetheless, it is a major setback.
The analyst said he was "stunned by this news," as this has never happened before in PNG's history.
He cites three specific consequences that could be negative for InterOil.

1. given management's prior insistence that the election would be a catalyst for getting LNG project approval from the government, this appears to create an additional six-month delay until the final investment decision.
2. the explicit threat of economic sanctions from Australia (and perhaps other countries too) could scare away prospective partners.
3. Third, and most importantly, the damage to PNG's reputation as a stable, democratic country could be severe, and at a minimum it raises the relevance of "country risk" in how investors perceive the InterOil story.
Molchanov also removed his $80 price target and is taking a wait-and-see approach. Despite this, his proved NAV estimate remains $103 per share, and he sees no reason to change it at this time.
Shares of IOC are down 11 percent to $49.49 on the election delays and downgrade.

Belden Namah warns Australia after poll delayed



From Sydney Morning Herald and AAP

PAPUA NEW GUINEA'S decision to delay national elections by six months has raised concerns in Canberra and prompted questions in Port Moresby about the constitutionality of the move.
 A vote in the national parliament, by 63 to 11, in favour of the delay came yesterday with a blunt warning to Australia from the Deputy Prime Minister, Belden Namah, not to interfere.
 ''Whatever [the Foreign Affairs Minister] Mr Bob Carr says about sanctions, I want to say … do not threaten the independent state of PNG,'' he said. 
''You must respect our wishes. You must not intrude into our election process.''
"Whatever [the Foreign Affairs Minister] Mr Bob Carr says about sanctions, I want to say ... do not threaten the independent state of PNG" ... Deputy Prime Minister Beldan Namah. Photo: Jason South

The Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, said last night that Canberra was ''disappointed and concerned'' by the delay. She said that ''as a strong supporter of Papua New Guinea, Australia believes elections should be held on time, in accordance with the constitution''.
 Last month Senator Carr threatened to consider sanctions against PNG if it abandoned plans to hold elections in June, saying that to do so would create a ''shocking model'' for the Pacific.
 Later he said he was speaking hypothetically and Australian officials said assurances had been received from the PNG Prime Minister, Peter O'Neill, that the election would take place in late June as scheduled.
 The election postponement followed a vote by parliament on Wednesday to suspend the Chief Justice, Sir Salamo Injia, and another top judge, under a controversial new law that drew a large student protest in Port Moresby and was criticised by veteran politicians as damaging the independence of the judiciary.
 The O'Neill government is still facing court hearings on complaints from the former government of the independence leader Sir Michael Somare that it was illegally ousted last year.
 Sir Michael was declared to have forfeited his seat through non-attendance while undergoing lengthy treatment in a Singapore hospital.
 Officials familiar with PNG elections say a six-month delay appears unconstitutional. The constitution stipulates elections be held within three months before the fifth anniversary of the return of writs from the previous election. This would give at most a few weeks' leeway.
 Before the vote, the minister assisting the Prime Minister on electoral matters, Waka Goi, said election funding fell short by about $30 million, electoral rolls were not ready and police were also not ready to provide security.
 Mr Namah said polls must be delayed to allow for proper security to be implemented in the Southern Highlands region, where construction is under way to bring natural gas by pipeline to a liquefaction plant on the coast.
 But election officials say the rolls are in comparable shape to those used before the last elections in 2007.
 Security is a perennial problem in the highlands provinces but has never delayed elections since independence in 1975.
 The PNG Electoral Commissioner, Andrew Trawen, recently said the updating of electoral rolls was progressing well and would be delivered on time for polling on the tentative date of June 23.
 ''Planning, preparing and conducting an election is the sole constitutional duty of the Electoral Commission every five years and we are confident of complete updating the roll and delivering another successful election in June,'' he said.