Monday, January 28, 2013

On the ‘kaukau trail’ from Goroka


By MALUM NALU
This article was first published in The National Weekender on Friday, June 25, 2013
 
On Tuesday last week, January 15,  I met my good mate, Goroka farmer Tom Solepa, who had just completed selling 156 bags of kaukau (sweet potatoes) at Gordon Market in Port Moresby for K150 each.
Through him, last Friday, January 18, at Gordon Market, I was able to meet some of the growers and traders involved in the intricate kaukau trade which starts in the Highlands, comes down to the port city of Lae, and is then shipped to Port Moresby.
Bags of kaukau being unloaded near Gordon Market after being shipped in from Lae.-Pictures by MALUM NALU

Solepa, a graduate economist who gave up a well-paying government job some years ago to return to the land, will use the more than K7, 000 he earned in just two days to pay school fees for his two children who are attending Goroka International Primary School.
He was very proud, as an executive of Highlands Farmers and Settlers Association (HFSA), to have brought his kaukau all the way from Goroka via Lae to Port Moresby.
“It takes courage, patience, to bring our kaukau to market,” Solepa says.
“As a person who has been trying to promote farmer issues, this gives me a lot of satisfaction.
“I want to tell our people that money is on the land.
“The returns are very good.”
Solepa, 38, from Meteyufa village outside Goroka in the Asaro Valley, says kaukau is a “winner”.
“I see the kaukau trade as a big business,” he explains.
“You bring in kaukau from rural areas to urban areas.
“In Goroka, we do sell the kaukau we grow; however, we feel that we can make better money if we sell in Lae or Port Moresby.
“We stopped growing coffee a long time ago.
“It takes us just three months to for kaukau, from growing to harvesting.
“In a year, we make four harvests.
“If we sell 60 bags, we can make up to K11, 000.”
The process, however, can be expensive, as Solepa has had to pay people to tend his gardens, harvest and bag the kaukau, carry them to roadside, road transport to Lae, sea transport to Port Moresby, and several others.
He has also had to pay for his airfares to and from Goroka.
But true to form, Solepa reaped what he sowed, and what he had earned from this latest kaukau sale will go towards the education of his two children at international school in Goroka.
“My kids are at international school so this money is for their school fees,” he said.
“I pay K5, 000 per child per term, so this money will help me a lot.”
Last Friday, Solepa took me to a house opposite Gordon Market, owned by an Eastern Highlands family, which is used as a storage facility for growers from Goroka to sell their kaukau and vegetables in bulk.
Bags of kaukau and vegetables from Eastern Highlands province being stored open-air next to Gordon Market because of lack of proper storage facilities for growers.
Woman trader, Masam Kulo, lives in Port Moresby and sells kaukau that her brother sends in from Goroka.
“When there is plenty of kaukau, we sell a bag for K120 or K130, but when there is a shortage, we sell for K150, K160, or K170,” she says.
“Our customers are from the smaller markets around Port Moresby, who buy in bulk from us and resell.
“When there is an oversupply, we make a loss.
“When there isn’t much kaukau around, we make a profit.”
Another woman trader, Rose Goiya, is blunt in her criticism of government for lack of support by way of freight subsidies and vegetable storage facilities.
“Farmers are the backbone of the nation but we get no support from the government,” she says.
“They give support to other industries but not this.
“There should be proper storage facilities and assistance with transportation in place.
“The department of Agriculture and Livestock doesn’t support us in any way.
“This is an industry with a lot of potential but there is no support from the government.”
Apart from the kaukau growers and traders, there are also those involved in vegetables.
Janet Mose buys bags of cabbages from farmers in Eastern Highlands and transports them at her own cost to Port Moresby, where she sells the cabbages wholesale to Port Moresby buyers.
Janet Mose with her bags of cabbages.

“I buy my cabbages from farmers in Goroka and I pay for the cost of bringing it over to Port Moresby,” she says.
“I pay K50 for a bag of cabbages in Goroka and sell it here in Port Moresby for K150 a bag.
“Sometimes, business is good, but at other times, the cabbages just rot away from not being bought and because of proper storage facilities.”
Patricia Koike, from Iufi Iufa village in the Asaro Valley, grows her own carrots and brings them over to Port Moresby for sale.
Patricia Koike (second from right) with her bags of carrots.
“There is no storage area so our produce can be ruined by sun or rain,” she says.
“The government should look seriously at this and set up a place for us to store our vegetables and sell in bulk.”
Pisin Benjamin, whose family lives in the house used by Eastern Highlanders as a storage area, says it was established by his late father Benjamin Tehe to help growers from their province.
Pisin Benjamin (second from left) and other family members at their house in Gordon  which is used by Eastern Highlanders as a kaukau and vegetable storage area.
In fact, it started off quite well and even had a cold storage facility, which has eventually broken down.
“My father established this facility to help the farmers of Eastern Highlands,” he says.
“This has become a wholesale vegetable shop for Eastern Highlanders.
“In 2007, we made a proposal to the Department of Agriculture and Livestock to set up a cold storage facility, however, this was not enough as there were too many vegetables coming in.
“We charge K3 per bag to store in our yard from arrival to sale.
“We have so much kaukau and fresh vegetables from the Highlands coming in
“We have 300-400 bags of vegetables coming in a week, and 400-500 bags of kaukau.
“These are sold out!”

PNG Attorney-General wants death penalty

AAP


Papua New Guinea's attorney-general says he wants to reactivate the death penalty for aggravated crimes such as treason, murder and piracy.
The death penalty is part of PNG's criminal code but the sentence has never been carried out.
"The reason it didn't move forward to implementation is we did not have the methodology," Attorney-General Kerenga Kua told AAP.
"The mechanism has not been prescribed ... coupled with the political will not being there.
"But it is there now."
He says there are 10 convicted criminals on death row.
The last death sentence carried out in PNG was during Australian colonial rule in 1954.
Mr Kua says crimes such as piracy, aggravated murder and treason should attract the sentence.
"A very narrow band of crimes allow for the death penalty, but it only applies in the most aggravated circumstance of wilful murder," he said.
"Then you have piracy, which is growing in the country.
"We need to stamp it out."
National Capital District governor and human rights lawyer Powes Parkop opposes the plan.
"It is an inhuman form of punishment and therefore should be unconstitutional," he told The National newspaper last week.
"There is no empirical evidence to show that such punishment has been a deterrence to crime generally or the type of crime for which it is prescribed as a penalty."
He said in the United States, where some states have the death penalty, there is no evidence to show it has reduced crime.
The Catholic church of PNG has also voiced its opposition to the death penalty, with General Secretary Father Victor Roach warning it could prolong the practice of payback among tribes.

Disbursement of business grants for LNG landowners stalled

The National
Monday, January 28, 2013

Minister for Trade Commerce and Industry, Richard Maru has announced that payment of  business development grants (BDGs) allocated to Angore PDL (petroleum development license) 8 area in Hela will be delayed indefinitely.
Maru made this declaration in light of unresolved landowner disputes within Angore PDL 8 regarding distribution of the BDGs, and the existence of a court order restraining his department and the state from disbursing the funds.
Richard Maru
 
Maru said he intended to review the past BDG payments made to other PDL areas that were part of the PNG LNG project to ascertain how these earlier payments were utilised and whether or not the groups that received these payments had existing business with the developer Exxon Mobil.
He said this was crucial to ascertain the relationship between the BDGs and tangible developments on the ground brought about by landowner participation in spin-offs from the PNG LNG project.
“I want to put on notice landowner companies who have received BDGs that my department will be doing a review to see what businesses have been started using BDGs paid out in the past” Maru said.
He said that BDGs were public funds and those entrusted with these funds must give an account of the use of these funds and what spinoff businesses were started with the support of Exxon Mobil.
He added that these funds are not for landowner company directors and management to spend on pokies, but to secure long term benefits for landowner beneficiaries including their future generations.
“One day the gas will be all gone and the people will be left with nothing if we don’t invest prudently for them today,” Maru said.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

PNG rugby league administrator Kevin Murphy dies



By MALUM NALU

Well-known Papua New Guinea rugby league administrator, Kevin Murphy, died of a massive heart attack in Orange, New South Wales, last Friday at age 63.
Murphy, who is known the length and breadth of this country for his passion for the “greatest game of all”, passed away at 7am in the home of an elder brother, Brian, who is a Catholic priest.
Kevin Murphy

Murphy, a kiap (patrol officer) in the late 1960s who later moved into education, commerce and became president of the PNG Rugby Football League, reluctantly moved to Australia in 2008 because of diabetes and had his right leg amputated.
Kevin Murphy minus his amputated right leg

His first emergence from hospital was to attend a barbecue for his beloved PNG Kumuls, who had travelled to play a Cairns team, and till the day he died Murphy was always passionate about rugby league in PNG.
Murphy’s wife, Wendy, whom he married in 1972, died of cancer while he was recovering and he could not return to the land he called “home” and loved so much.
“For the last four years, he has lived in Tamworth,” Murphy’s second son, Daniel, told The National.
“He was always torn between two cultures: the PNG culture and the Australian culture.
“He always carried a bilum everywhere.
“He passed away in Orange on Friday morning, at about 7am, at the place of his brother, Brian Murphy, who is a Catholic priest.
“His last job was at Niugini Oil in Mt Hagen, but due to his health, he could not work again.
“He did some voluntary work at a youth centre here in Tamworth.
“For the last four years, he has been recovering with his family in Australia, as well as being emotionally attached to rugby league back in PNG.”
Murphy, of Irish origin, was born on May 10, 1949, came to PNG as a fresh-faced 18-year-old in 1967, and stayed here for the next 42 years.
After his stint as a kiap, Murphy was a primary school teacher in remote Henganofi and Kainantu areas of Eastern Highlands, Department of Provincial Affairs, National Sports Institute in Goroka as rugby league administrator, Rothmans, and Niugini Oil.
Kevin Murphy in his role as a counselor for Transparency International before the 2007 national elections.

He is survived by his three sons Adrian (39), Daniel (36), and Anthony (33).
Murphy is the last of five brothers – Patrick, John, Brian, Bill, and himself – and is the first to die.
His remains will be cremated and his funeral services held at St Joseph’s Catholic, Orange, NSW, at 2pm on Friday.
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In Port Moresby today

By MALUM NALU

Below are some pictures of my wanderings around Port Moresby, not today, but yesterday.
Yesterday, my kids and I travelled fom our home at 8-Mile to Korobosea, where we spent an enjoyable afternoon at my elder brother David's place at Pipigari Street.
We took a stroll up to Malaoro Market and bought some fresh vegetables and fish for a barbeque.
A wonderful day for my kids and me!
Fresh vegetables on sale at Malaoro Market. I'd like to see more of these fresh veggie and fruit markets flourish all over the city rather than filthy buai and cigarette markets. Veggies and fruits make us healthy while buai and smoke contribute towards our early death, apart from littering the city.All pictures@MALUM NALU

Kaukau galore at Malaoro Market. To think that growers in the Highlands truck their produce to Lae, ship it to Port Moresby, and then sell in bulk to retailers to resells in markets around the city. I wrote a feature article on the kaukau trade in The National Weekender last Friday.





Mouth-watering aibika on sale at Malaoro Market today. Cook it with coconut juice and fresh fish...nothing beats that!

Fresh vegetables on sale at Malaoro Market. I'd like to see more of these fresh veggie and fruit markets flourish all over the city rather than filthy buai and cigarette markets. Veggies and fruits make us healthy while buai and smoke contribute towards our early death, apart from littering the city.

Fresh fish on sale at Malaoro Market. I bought a big tuna for K30 and we had it at big brother David's place at Pipigari Street, Korobosea






Tuna steaks on the barbie at big bro David's place, Pipigari Street, Korobosea.

Pipigari Street Korobosea, one of my favorite streets in Port Moresby, and a model for the rest of the city because of its cleanliness.